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A25478 A supplement to The Morning-exercise at Cripple-Gate, or, Several more cases of conscience practically resolved by sundry ministers; Morning-exercise at Cripplegate. Supplement. Annesley, Samuel, 1620?-1696. 1676 (1676) Wing A3240; ESTC R13100 974,140 814

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2. Temptations also have their season and must just then be resisted lest many a year repair not an hours loss And they are very many And narrow-sighted careless persons who avoid two and fall into the third or avoid nineteen and are conquered by the twentieth are always scandalous 3. And rash adventures on any Opinions or actions but especially of publick consequence are usually most scandalous and pernicious to the Church As in Military Affairs and in Physick ubi non licet bis errare mens lives must pay for our temerity and errour and all the World cannot remedy the effects of one mistake So in matters of Religion if we mistake by our rash conceitedness and take not time for necessary tryal and proceed not as a man on the Ice or among Quick-sands with great care and deliberation the shaking of Kingdoms the ruine of Churches the silencing of Ministers the corruption of Doctrine Worship and Discipline and the sin and damnation of many Souls may be the effect of our proud presumption and temerity But the humble self-suspecting man that suspendeth his judgment and practice till he hath throughly proved all doth preserve the honour of Religion and avoid such late and dear repentance XVIII The man whose works shall glorifie God must be devoted to the Vnity and Concord of Believers and be greatly averse to dividing and love-killing Opinions words and practices and as much as in him lies he must live peaceably with all men 1 Cor. 1.10 Phil. 2.1 2 3. Eph. 4.3 4 14 15 16. Rom. 16.17 and 12.18 1 Thes 5.17 Joh. 17.24 When Paul saith that Dividers serve not the Lord Jesus but their own bellies he intimateth to us that though Truth and Purity be in their mouths and really intended by them as they take it yet there is usually a secret self-interest that is carried on that byasseth the judgment And when he telleth them Act. 20.30 that of their own selves should men arise speaking perverse things which they called and it 's like believed to be the Truth yet self-interest lay at the bottom to be some-body in drawing Disciples after them For it is so notorious a truth that Unity and Concord are indispensably necessary to the Church as it is to our Body to Families to Kingdoms that men could not do so destructive a thing as dividing is if some sin had not first caused the errour of their minds It greatly honoureth Christ and Religion in the world when Believers live in love and unity And their discords and divisions have in all Ages been the scandal of the World and the great reproach and dishonour of the Church When Christ's Disciples are one in him it is the way to the Infidel-world's Conversion that they may believe that the Father sent him Joh. 17.24 And here the Devil hath two sorts of servants 1. The true Schismatick or Heretick who fearlesly and blindly divideth the Churches 2. The over-doing Papist and Church-Tyrant who will have a greater unity than Christ will here give us that so we may have none And when Christ prays that we may be one in him the Pope saith that we shall also be one in him or we shall be accounted Schismaticks and destroyed as such And when the Ancient Church according to Christ's Institution united all in the Baptismal Covenant explained in the Creed and Paul numbreth the necessary terms of unity Eph. 4.4 5 6. 1. One Body or Church of Christ into which we are baptized 2. One Spirit of Holiness in all 3. One Hope of the Glorious Reward 4. One Lord by whom we do attain it 5. One Faith even the Christian Verity 6. One Baptism or Covenant of Christianity 7. And One God and Father of all and in these God would have all his Servants to be One then come in these Over-doers and they must have us to be all One in all their Papal policy and all the Decrees of their Popes and Councels de Fide and in their multitude of corruptions and ceremonious impositions which is as much as to say You shall have no Vnity For he that saith to all the City or Kingdom You shall be destroyed for discord or reproached as dividers if you are not all of one Complexion or have not all the same Appetite Age or Bodily Stature doth pronounce reproach or destruction on them absolutely So is it with all others that put their self-devised terms on their Brethren as necessary to Unity and Peace on how pious or fair pretences soever Impossible conditions make the thing impossible These are the Church-tearing scandals These are the snares by which Satan hath made the Church a scorn and our Religion a Stumbling block to Turks and Heathens But had the Peace-makers been heard who learned of the Holy Ghost Act. 15. to impose nothing on the Brethren but necessary things and who have laboured to revive love and shame emulations and divisions God had been more glorified by men and the reproach of the Churches and solemn Assemblies taken away When all Sects and Parties have busled and raised a dust in the World to foul the Church and blind each other if ever the Churche's Glory be restored and our shame taken away it will be by men of Love and Peace by healing uniting reconciling principles and means XIX He that will glorifie God must live in and to the Will of God and seek to reduce his own will wholly into God's and to destroy in himself all will that striveth against God's Will 1. The disposing Will of God our Owner must be absolutely submitted to and the bounteous Will of God our Benefactor thankfully and joyfully acknowledged 2. The ruling Will of God our Law-giver must be with daily study and care obeyed and his punishing and rewarding Justice glorified 3. The final felicitating Will and Love of God our ultimate end and object that we may please him and be everlastingly pleased in him love him and be loved by him must be totally desired and sought as the only and perfect Rest of Souls O! that is the holy the joyful the honourable Christian who daily laboureth and in some good measure doth prevail to have no Will but the Will of God and that which wholly is resolved into it who looketh no further to know what he should do but to know by his Word what is the Law or Will of God who believeth that all that God willeth is good and had rather have his life and health and wealth and friends at God's will and disposal than his own who knoweth that God's Will is love it self and that to please him is the End of all the World and the only felicity of men and Angels and resteth wholly in the pleasing of that will What can be more wise and just than to have the same will objectively with him who is infinitely wise and just What can be more honourable than to have the same Will as God himself and so far as his Children to be like
heart Psal 4.5 Out of these premisses we conclude that Christianity is a glorious thing which is the second particular 2. Particular or vindication which I call a Vindication of the Truth Religion is not a little formality in duties joyned with some morality in life but it consists in the new creature or Faith working by love Gal. 5.6 6.16 It consists in the exercise of Repentance self-loathing hatred of Sin as such for these are necessarily implied Faith actual in Jesus love to him obedience before him communion with God by him peace and comfort from him and well grounded hope of eternal life through him the smell of his garments Psal 45.8 the savour of his oyntment Cant. 1.3 the taste of his preciousness makes a Believer think he can never do enough for Jesus If his Holiness were as an Angel and his days as the days of Heaven yet all were too short too little for such a Saviour the love of Christ constrains him He is a debtor to the Spirit to live after the Spirit and what ever is not this in truth there is a difference in degrees is as you heard before but nature raised and varnished and modified with distinctions still it is but nature Wash and dress a Swine as you please 't is a Swine still The Fathers when the breaking out of Pelagianism made them more studious in the point of grace and more wary in their expressions have left us their judgment in this case you bring in a kind of doctrine saith Austin to the Pelagians that men do righteousness and please God without Faith in Christ by the Law of nature this is that for which the Church doth most of all detest you Hoc est undè vos maximè Christiana detestatur Ecclesia Lib. 4. Cap. 3. contr Again saith he far be it from us to think that true vertue should be in any man unless he were righteous and far be it from us to think that any man should be truly righteous unless he did live by Faith for the just shall live by Faith absit autem sit justus vere nisi vivat ex fide and again who would say that a man Diabolo mancipatus a slave to the Devil were a righteous man though he were Fabricius or Scipio To cloath the naked saith he is not sin as the fact is considered in it self but of such a work to glory and not in the Lord none but a wicked man but will grant this to be sin thus far Austin with more to the same purpose in the same place and upon this account he did correct some expressions Lib. 1. Cap. 3. Retract The whole Chapter is seasonable the sum this Austin had called the Muses Goddesses had highly advanced the liberal sciences now corrects it upon this reason viz. that many Godly men knew them not and many that did know them were ungodly the same he doth about Pythagoras his books in which saith he are Plures many errors iidemque capitales Especially this he recants that he formerly said the Philosophers who were not pious were yet shining in vertue no Faith in Christ no vertue 't is spectrum 't is but simulacrum but imago virtutis it is not vertue painted fire is not fire Hierom to the same purpose in Cap. 3. Galat. Paul saith he blameless did not live he was dead while blameless Paul the Christian was indeed alive Men speak of temperance and justice without Faith that cannot be none live without Christ sine quo omnis virtus est in vitio without Christ all vertue is accounted vice thus he 'T is most evident there dwelleth no vertue in the minds of ungodly men their wisdom is not heavenly but earthly not from the Father of lights but from the prince of darkness ac sic vitium quod putatur virtus and so that is a vice which is accounted vertue Non Deo serviunt sed diabolo they serve the devil not God Prosp Con. Coll. Cap. 28. tota vita infidelium est peccatum the whole life of unbelievers is sin idem sent 106. to the same purpose saith Fulgentius with others The Scripture is full and clear an evil tree cannot bring forth good fruit The carnal mind cannot please God Rom. 8.7 1 Cor. 1.2.3 the Apostle doth raise his discourse to the highest strain Though I speak with the tongue of Angels which no man doth if I had all knowledge which no man hath if I could move mountains which no man can if I give all my goods to feed the poor the highest beneficence and my body to be burnt the greatest suffering yet if I have not love I am nothing he doth not say these things are nothing he doth not say knowledge is nothing or giving to the poor is nothing but I am nothing I have no profit I am a hollow tub an empty vessel I make a noise amongst men while I live and go to hell when I die And according to Scripture and Fathers the doctrine of our Church hath determinated in her thirteenth Article thus Works done before the grace of Christ and the Inspiration of his Spirit are not pleasing to God forasmuch as they spring not from Faith in Jesus Christ yea rather for that they are not done as God hath commanded them to be done we doubt not but they have the nature of sin and this is the judgment of the reformed Churches also Sirs be sure you get and exercise this Faith unfeigned in Jesus Christ and love sincere to him A fair deportment with great gifts and splendid performances without Christ is but a more gentile way to perdition everlasting 3. Resolution of the case I come now to the resolution of the practical case How a Christian may get that Faith by which he may live comfortably as well as die safely Where this I think fit to premise first he must not only get such a Faith but he must keep it in exercise for without this there is no living comfortably then this also I premise that to get and keep comfort or that a Christian may have comfort two things are necessary viz. proportion and propriety ex parte objecti it must be a good proportionable and then ex parte subjecti it must be mine it must be commensurate and adaequate to the soul and it must be the souls own tolle meum and tolle gaudium The comfort and sweetness of the Gospel lyes in pronouns as the common saying is as for instance suppose the conquests of Alexander and triumphs of Pompey nay all the world were thine there is propriety 't is thine but herein would be no comfort at all to thee because here is no proportion no sutableness to an immaterial vast and immortal soul on the other side Christ is proposed to thee and in him there is proportion for in him dwelleth all fulness he is an infinite spiritual and eternal good but what comfort is this without propriety unless he be thine
wont of the Puritans which were the most pretious Christians to Eccho forth the praises of the great Jehovah in this Duty especially upon the Lord's Day Then was there a holy Quire in their houses their Children were the little birds to sing the praises of the Creator the Servants likewise joining in the harmony to make up a fuller Musick But alas Now the voice of the Bride singing to her Beloved is not heard in the places of our abode there is silence instead of singing and prating instead of praising frivolous discourses instead of joyous praises It might behove us to ponder how much of Heaven do we lose in neglecting this Service In singing Psalms we begin the work of Heaven In Heaven we read of the Song of Moses and of the Lamb Rev. 15.3 And of a new Song Rev. 14.3 And the Angels though they have not Tongues yet they have voices to sing the praises of the Most High and therefore that this Heavenly service is so neglected and unexercised is a lamentation and shall be for a Lamentation Ezek. 19.14 This likewise checks those who formalize in this Duty who Act a Part not a Vse 4 Duty they make a noise and not Musick and more provoke the Eyes than please the Ears of God Hierome pathetically Exclaims against those Formalists We must not saith he Act as Players who stretch their throats to accommodate their Tongues to the matter in hand but we must sing Psalms as Saints praising God not only with our Voice but with our Heart not only with a sweet voice but with a melting heart Bernard makes two conditions of grateful singing 1. We must sing purely minding what we sing nor must we act or think any thing besides there must be no vain or vagrant thoughts no dissonancy between the Mind and the Tongue 2. We must sing strenuously not idly not sleepily or perfunctorily we must sing ex animo most heartily and Energetically Vse 5 Let us get an interest in Christ If we are not in Christ we are certainly out of tune The singing of a sinner is natural like the singing of a Bird. But the singing of a Saint is musical like the singing of a Child Saints in singing perform a grateful duty But sinners offer a vain oblation Isa 1.13 It is Christ must put an acceptation upon this service as well as others Here the Altar must sanctify the gift Christ perfumes the prayers of the Saints Rev. 5.8 And he must articulate the singing of the Saints Indeed he alone can turn our tune into melody and though in our selves we have Esau's garments yet he can give us Iacobs voice We are accepted in Christ in this offer of love Therefore let us get into Christ he can raise our voice in singing to a pleasing Elevation Let us be in him and then our steps shall be metrical our pauses musical and our very Cadencies shall be Seraphical Our singing of Psalms shall be the musick of the Sphears Vse 6 Let us sometimes raise our hearts in holy Contemplation Let us think of the Musick of the Bride-Chamber There shall be no crack't strings displeasing sounds harsh voices nothing to abate or remit our melody there shall be no willows to hang up our harps upon Psal 137.2 In the Bride-Chamber there shall be no sorrow to interfere when we sing the song of the Lamb Rev. 21.3 No grief to jar our harmony These pleasing Meditations should sometimes possess and sweeten our Spirits that while we are walking in the galleries Cant. 7.5 we may be nearer to the Palace of the great King Psal 45.15 How ought We to Improve our Baptism Serm. X. Acts 2.38 Be Baptized every one of you in the Name of Jesus Christ for the Remission of Sins THis Chapter gives us an account of the pouring out of the Spirit according to the promise presently after Christ's Ascension as soon as the Spirit was poured out the Apostles were enabled to speak in various Languages to the astonishment and wonder of the Hearers This was for the Glory of God the Confirmation of the Gospel and to authorize them as Special Messengers sent by Christ At the sight of this Miracle some wonder others mock as if this speaking with divers Tongues had been a confused jabbering that proceeded from the fumes of Wine rather than the gift and operation of the Holy Spirit To satisfie both Peter declares in a Sermon the effect and intent of the Miracle proving Jesus whom they had Crucified to be Lord and Christ When they heard this many of the most obstinate among them were pricked at the heart and relented An happy Sermon it was that Peter preached it brought in thousands of Souls to Christ the first hansel of the power of the Spirit and success of the Gospel 'T is good to observe what course they took for ease and relief after this piercing and brokenness of heart they said to Peter and the rest of the Apostles Men and Brethren what shall we do This is the usual Question of men under a sound and thorow Conviction To their serious Question Peter makes a seasonable Answer v. 38. 'T is the part of a good Physician not only to discover the Disease but also to prescribe a Remedy especially should spiritual Physicians be tender of broken-hearted Sinners and willing and ready to give them Counsel In Peter's Direction and Counsel to them observe first What he perswades them to do Secondly By what Motive and Argument what they should do and what they should receive In the Advice he perswades them to Repentance and to be Baptized in the Name of Christ The latter we are upon For Explaining it we may enquire First Why is Baptism mentioned rather than Faith and other things more internal and necessary to Salvation I answer Certainly Faith is implied for Mark 16.16 He that Believeth and is Baptized shall be Saved Baptism is an open and real Profession of Christ Crucified So that Be Baptized in the Name of Jesus Christ is as much as Be Baptized Believing on the Name of the Lord Jesus for the Remission of Sins Secondly Baptism is mentioned because it was the visible Rite of receiving Proselytes to Christ Now it imported them who were convinced as Persecutors to turn Professors if they would have ease for their Consciences and therefore not only to Believe with the Heart but to make open Profession of Faith in Christ Rom. 10.10 Quest 2. Why in the Name of Christ only the Father and the Holy Ghost is not mentioned according to the Prescript-form Mat. 28.19 I answer he speaks not of the Form of Baptism but the use and end thereof Now the great use of Baptism is that we may have benefit by the Mystery of Redemption by Christ therefore elsewhere we are said to be Baptized into Jesus Christ Rom. 5.3 And to put on Christ Gal. 3.27 He is the Head of the Church and by Baptism we are planted into his Mystical Body This being
humiliations more affectionate and evangelical As in that fast I mentioned before Neh. 9. The Levites did stand up among the people and begin the day with blessing God Blessed be thy glorious name which is exalted above all blessing and praise ver 5. and so they proceed to recite a catalogue of God's mercies even from the first call of Abraham to their settlement in the Land of Canaan which reacheth to ver 25. And all this was to bring in the Nevertheless mention'd v. 26. with the greater Emphasis to their humiliation Nevertheless they were disobedient and rebelled against thee and cast thy Law behind their backs and shew thy Prophets c. and the same we may observe in Ezra chap. 9. He takes notice of the reviving God had given them in their bondage and the Nail in his holy place and the Wall in Judah and Jerusalem ver 8 9. the more to aggravate the peoples sin in doing according to the abominations of the Canaanites and mingling themselves with the people of the Land ver 1 2. The goodness of God is said to lead men to Repentance Rom. 2. And therefore mention is to be made of it upon a day when the exercise of Repentance is specially in season Yea Thanksgiving also is requisite as an attendant of supplication for the giving thanks for mercy received is an effectual way to obtain New mercy According to that known saying Efficacissimum genus rogandi est gratias agere Giving thanks for mercy received is the most effectual way to obtain new mercy Thanksgiving carries supplication in the spirit of it And if according to the Apostle Phil. 4. We are in every thing to make known our request with supplication and thanksgiving then when ever we come to God with Supplications we are to couple them with thanksgiving 6. The last duty I mention which is the Appendix to the rest is that of Alms-deeds for when we come to beg mercy from God we should not forget to shew it to men And he that stops his ear to the cry of the poor Prov. 21.13 he may cry but shall not be heard yea his prayers are so far from coming up as incense before God that they are an abomination Cornelius that was a man much in prayer and fasting also as is noted of him Act. 10.30 was full also of Alms-deeds Act. 10.31 and both together came up as a memorial before God Alms-deeds as they are not to be confined to a fast day so surely are not to be excluded He that vvill on such a day shut up his purse let him take heed least God shut up against him his ear his heart and his hand The People complain Isa 53.8 Wherefore have we fasted and thou seest not God tells them they fasted but shewed not mercy and therefore fasted not aright and then tells them what was the fast that he had chosen ver 7. Is it not to deal thy bread to the hungry and when thou seest the naked that thou cover them c. Certainly those duties that ought to follow our fasting or else it avails nothing with God ought not to be shut out of the duties of such a day if there be call and opportunity thereunto Thus I have shewn the duties of a fast day which are external with respect to the outward performance And next I shall shew what frame of spirit is requisite to such a day without which all these duties may be externally performed and yet the fast not accepted Rom. 2. ult For as the Apostle saith of Circumcision It is that of the heart and of the spirit so is that fasting that is well pleasing to God There may be confession supplication renewing the Covenant Thanksgiving Alms-deeds and yet if there be wanting a suitable frame of heart all this may be but as a body without the soul or matter without form that may have praise with men but none with God Now this frame of soul consists in 1. Self-debasement 2. Godly sorrow 3. Filial fear 4. Ingenuous shame 5. Inward purity 6. Evangelical faith and hope I shall speak briefly to them all 1. Is self-debasement God complains of the Jews fasting Isa 58.5 they did hang down their heads like a bulrush but their souls did not bow down within them We call a fast day a day of humiliation but we have the name but not the thing if the soul be not humbled What is it for the body to wear sackcloth if Pride cover the heart or to spread ashes under us if the soul lye not down in the dust or to fast from bodily food if the soul be not emptied of self-fulness 2. Godly sorrow A fast day is for afflicting the soul and how is the soul afflicted without true sorrow The Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that signifies a fast is derived from a root that signifies to afflict so essential is the afflicting the soul to the day It was a charge against the Jews Isa 58.2 Behold in the day of your fast ye find pleasure What kind of pleasure it was is not there mentioned but it was some sinful pleasure that was not congruous to the day Daniel speaks of his fast ch 10.3 I sat full three weeks mourning As at our funerals many enter the house of mourning and wear black but there is no mourning within nor no garment of heaviness covers their soul So do many enter the day and duty of fasting but no godly sorrow enters with them into it or attends them in it Every thing is beautiful in its season Eccl. 3.11 A fast day wants its beauty if no true sorrow attends it We make confession of sin but if there be no sorrow we feel not what is spoken and what will words of confession avail Ephraim is said to bemoan himself Jer. 31.18 And God is said to hear it and he bemoaned him also But how can we think God's heart should be affected with our confessions when our own are not The Jews upon their solemn days had their solemn sacrifices A fast day is a solemn day and it is not to be without its sacrifices and the great Sacrifice or Sacrifices of the day is a broken and contrite spirit psal 51. 3. Filial fear Natural fear hath sometimes brought a people to the duty and a filial fear is to be exercised in the performance of it as Jehoshaphat feared and then proclaimed a Fast 2 Chron. 20.3 And so did the King of Nineveh Jonah 2. when God's judgments are abroad we ought to fear and this fear should lead us to meet him in the ways of his judgment by prayer and fasting for all our serving God is to be coupled with fear Psal 2.11 our rejoycing is to be with trembling much more our mourning In a fast day we especially deprecate God's wrath and therefore we ought to have such a sense of it as may cause sacred fear There is no affection of the soul but ought to be
then follows song and praise This streams from the sense of divine love and love is the fountain of thankfulness and of all spritely and vigorous services that prayer that does not end in chearful obedience is called by Cyprian ●e Orat. p. ●7 oratio sterilis and preces nudae barren and unfruitful naked and without ornament and so we may glance upon the expression of holy James the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jam. 5.16 a working prayer within will be working without and demonstrate the labour of love 2. Obs The principal subject-matter of prayer the mark the white that the arrow of prayer is shot at the scope it aims at there 's usually some special sin unconquer'd some untamed corruption some defect some pressing strait that drives the soul to prayer and is the main burden of the spirit take notice how such a sin withers or such a grace flourishes or such a need supplied upon the opening our hearts in prayer Watch unto prayer Eph. 6.18 watch to perform it and then to expound the voice of the divine oracle and to know that ye are successful Cry to thy soul by vvay of holy soliloquy Watchman Isa 21.11 what of the night 3. Obs Ensuing providences Set a vigilant eye upon succeeding passages examine them as they pass before thee set a wakeful centinel at the posts of vvisdom His name is near his wondrous works declare His name of truth Psal 75 1. his glorious title of hearing prayers When prayer is gone up by the help of the spirit mark hovv all things work together for good Rom. 8.28 v. 27. Isa 58.9 11. and note the connexion there the working of things together follows the intercession of the Spirit for all Saints God is pleased often to speak so clearly by his vvorks as if he said here I am I will guide thee continually and thou shalt be like a watered garden whose waters fail not Secret promises animate prayer and open providences expound it Isa 45 4 11 19. Cyrus was promised to come against Babylon for the Churches sake But Israel must ask it of God and they had a vvord for it that they should not seek his face in vain Psal 107.19 20. and then follows Babylon's fall in the succeeding chapters When we cry unto the Lord in trouble he sends his vvord of command and heals us There 's a set time of mercy a time of life when Abraham had prayed for a son the Lord told him Gen. 15.2 18.10.14 Esth 4.16 6.1 Psal 3.4.5 Eliezer Gen. 24.15 at the time appointed I 'le return In a great extremity after the solemn fast of three days by the Jews in Shushan and the Queen in her Palace on the fourth day at night the King could not sleep and must hear the Chronicles of Persia read and then follows Haman's ruine Prayer has a strange vertue to give quiet sleep sometimes to a David and sometimes a waking pillow for the good of the Church When Jacob had done wrestling and the Angel gone at the springing of the morning then the good man saw the Angel of God's presence in the face of Esau Sometimes providence is not so quick Rev 6.11 the Martyr's prayer as to compleat answer is deferred for a season but long white robes are given to every one a triumphant frame of spirit and told they should wait but a little season till divine justice should work out the issue of prayer the thunder upon God's enemies comes out of the temple the judgments roar out of Zion Rev. 11.19 Joel 3.16 the place of divine audience but the means and methods and times of God's working are various such as we little forethink Submit all to his infinite wisdom prescribe not but observe the Embroidery of Providence its difficult to spell its characters sometimes but 't is rare employment (d) Isa 64.5 Psal 111 2● Eccl. 3.11 2 Sam. 23.4 His vvorks are searcht into by such as delight in his providences for all things are beautiful in his season 4. Mark thy following communion vvith God Inward answers make the soul veget and lively like plants after the shining of the Sun upon rain lift up their heads and shoot forth their flowers A Saint in favour does all with delight Isa 61.3 Answer of prayer is like oil to the spirits and beauty for ashes The sackcloth of mournful fasting is turned to a wedding garment He grows more free and yet humbly familiar vvith heaven This is one I vvould wish you to pick acquaintance vvith that can come and have what (h) Joh. 16 23. Gen. 20.7 he vvill at Court. As the Lord once told a King by night that Abraham was a Prophet and vvould pray for him he vvas acquainted vvith the King of heaven O blessed person I hope there 's many such among you vvhose life is a continued prayer Psal 109.4 As David that gave himself to prayer Heb. But I prayer he 's all over prayer prays at rising prays at lying down prays as he walks he 's always ready for prayer like a prime favourit at Court that has the golden key to the privy stairs and can vvake his Prince by night Christians there are such whatever the besotted profane world dreams vvho are ready for spiritual ascents at all seasons besides the frequency of set communions His wings never vveary his willing spirit is flying continually and makes God the rock of his dwelling 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into which he may upon all assaults have holy retirements Psal 71.3 But so much for the main Question with its branches There be many particular queries of some weight that may attend the princ pal subject and such I shall briefly reply to as Qu 1. What 's the proper time for secret prayer Ans Various providences different temperaments and frames of spirit motions from heaven opportunities dictate variously Some find it best at even others in the night when all is silent others at morning when the spirits are freshest I think with respect to others that conscientious prudence must guide in such cases when others are retired and the spirit in the best frame for communion Qu. 2. How often should we pray in secret Ans If we consult Scripture-president we find David at prayer in the morning our blessed Lord early before day in the morning Psal 5.3 Mark 1.35 Chrys in Psal 5. p. 542 Etim Mat. 14 23. Gen. 24.63 Psal 55.17 D●n 6 10. Psal 119.164 Chrysostom advises 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. wash thy soul before thy body for as the face and hands are cleansed by water so is the soul by prayer At another time our Lord went to secret prayer in the even and Isaac went to prayer in the eventide David and Daniel pray'd three times a day and once 't is mentioned that David said seven times a day will I praise thee that is very often Such cases may happen that
that shine upon our Israelites in the night and darkness that inlightens solitudes full of heavenly company and tears brim-ful of joy and holy sighs like a cooling wind in harvest sweats of love and sick fits that are symptoms of health and holy faintings that are the soul's cordials a weariness to the flesh that is the healthful exercise of and vigor to the spirit and a continual motion that never tires it Ge●s T. 2. K. K. 4. As Austin said of divine love illò feror quocunque feror pondus meum amor meus it 's the weight of my soul it carries me up and down in all that I speak and all that I act Quae major voluptas quam fastidium ipsius voluptatis Tertul. Eccl. 2.2 c. 7.6 4. Cant. 5.10.2.3 Rev. 2.7 1 Sam. 14.26 2. Its extasies and heavenly raptures which allure and draw the heart from earthly vanities when the soul shuts its eyes to worldly delights and says of laughter with Solomon it is mad and of mirth what dost thou can't warm its thoughts at the crackling of thorns under a pot nor be joyful in the house of fools 'T is the soul's pleasure to loath pleasure it self none so beautiful to him as Christ the chiefest of ten thousand no sweetness like that of the tree in the midst of the Wood the tree of life in the midst of the paradise of God he sits under it with great delight while it drops sweeter than hony into his closet 3. It s admirable prophesies Prayer stands upon mount Zion with a divining presaging spirit It foretells great things to the Churches joy and its enemies terror (f) 1 King 19.6 Elijah at prayer in Horeb receives answer of the ruine of the house of Ahab and bid to go and anoint Jehu the son of Nimshi King over Israel The two witnesses under the (g) Rev. 11. Romish defection have power to smite the earth with plagues as oft as they will consonant to what Tertullian said of old (h) de orat votum Christianorum confusio nationum the prayers of Christians confounded the nations and so it will shortly prove the doom of Babylon comes out of the Temple When the sanctuary is full of the smoak of the incense of prayer Rev. 15.7.8.16 1. the seven Angels come out with the seven last vials full of the wrath of God to pour them out upon the Anti-Christian world Prayer calculates and hastens the ruine of Rome When the spirit of prayer (a) Joel 2.21 32.3.1 2. is once poured out it brings deliverance to mount Zion and gathers the nations into the vally of Jehoshaphat unto judgment Let 's never be discouraged if prayer fall to work and awaken Christ in the ship (b) Luk. 8.24 of the Church her storms will cease in a halcyon calm 4. Its comforting evidences Secret prayer duly managed is a notable evidence of adoption pray to thy Father who is and sees in secret who knows the secrets of thy heart thy groanings are not hid from him Psal 44.21.38 9. None but a child of promise has this sweet freedom with God as a Father 5. Its rewards and revenues Nothing revives and chears the spirit so much as answers of love and mercy from Heaven As it feasts the conscience with the royal dainties of sincerity so it sets a lustre upon every mercy as being the child of prayer our closets influence upon our shops our ships our fields and all we enjoy that they smell of divine blessing as David said of precepts Psal 119.56 the soul may say this I have because I urged the promises Vse 4. To pity the miserable blind world that know not where true comfort Vse 4 joy and strength is to be found that see no beauty in the ways of God Gen. 27.27 and feel no sweetness in communion with him that find no pleasure in closets but play-houses which Tertullian call'd the Devil's Churches that cry out with Esau they have enough Alas what enough can be in the Creature Gen. 33.9 Tertul. de spect c. 25.26 unless of dunghils rattles and vanities Oh how ignorant of Heavenly treasures of that fountain of mercies whereof prayer drinks and resreshes the spirit of a Saint That know not that blessed enough whereof Jacob speaks Gen. 33.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mibi omnia that Ocean of all things to be found in God Now Europe's in flames and the ark in danger he cares not though the one be burnt and the other in ashes so he be safe But if his concerns catch fire he knows not to repair but (f) 1 Sam. 28.7 2 King 1.2 to Endor or Ekron Such have no acquaintance with no help from God no interest in the keeper of souls The world 's a deplorable hospital the great Lazar-house of sick lame and impotent persons as Gerson terms it Gers To. 2.76 6. that have no face nor heart to go to the physician of souls But ah most lamentable is the state of some prostitute wretches of our age that are I fear almost incurably gone with spiritual ulcers in their lungs and eating putrid cancers in their tongues that breath nothing but venom and openly spit out their rotten Atheistical jeers against the spirit of prayer and make a mock at communion with God That scoff at what God hath promised as one of the choicest tokens of his love to the Church Zech. 12.10 Joel 2.28 32. Rom. 10.13 Joh. 7.39 and symptoms of the glory of the latter times when God will turn such Ishmaels into the desert Amos 8.10 Job 30.31 and their drunken Songs shall expire in dreadful howlings Prophaner than many heathens that in the Primitive times had some reverence for Christian worship though they persecuted But those of this adulterous Romish age 2 Pet. 2.12 like brute beasts speak evil of what they are ignorant and are in danger to perish utterly in their own corruption pity such if there be yet hope and commend their condition to God's mercy and penitent sorrow that they may weep here where tears prick not in hell where they scauld and burn and swell that river of brimstone Gerson T. 2. 49. KK 3. In the mean time O ye that fear the Lord be diligent to observe and interpret messages after secret prayer for the life and joy of a Christian is improved by it God has declared himself graciously pleased with secret prayer Dan. 9.21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 V●lans in lassitudine so as to send an Angel that glorious creature to fly into Daniel's chamber and he weary with flying he moved so swiftly volans in lassitudine as the original text expresses it What a high expression is this that even Angels are represented weary with hasty flights to bring Saints their answers and of what great account does the Lord esteem his praying people that Angels are exprest to be tired in bringing tidings of mercy 6. Meditate on
of hating him in his heart (y) Lev. 19.17 then certainly not upon his child whom he is oblig'd not only to admonish verbally but chastise really but first he should do as God did with our first Parents convict him of his nakedness (z) Gen. 3.11 c. i. e. shew him the evil of his lying railing idleness or c. faults he is chargeable with as opposite to the Word of God (a) Prov. 12.22 and prejudicial to his own Soul (b) 8.36 and that he is made to smart for the cure of this evil Which 3. Parents may let their children know they dare not suffer to remain longer uncorrected sith delays may prove dangerous to the Patient if the rod be withheld (c) 23.13 The festering wound may rankle and come to a gangrene if not lanced in due time Parents love is seen in chastening betimes (d) 13.24 both in respect of the age of the child and of its fault If it be not too soon for children to sin it should not be thought too soon for Parents to correct and that seasonably before the sin grow strong get head and sprout forth The child should be taken while there is hope (e) 19.18 The twigg may be bent whiles it is young and the sin mortified if nipt in the bud God we find hath been very severe in remarking the first violations of his Statutes as for gathering sticks on the Sabbath day (f) Numb 15.25 and Aaron's sons offering strange fire (g) Levit. 10.2 so Parents should timely curb the first exorbitances of their children Hence 4. They should let them see they are resolv'd after serious deliberation not to be diverted by the pullings and passions of their unhumbled children from inflicting due punishment fith the Wise man chargeth Let not thy Soul spare for his crying (h) Prov. 19.18 so that they may not remain fearless yet it must then be in compassion that they may conceive as the Father of Heaven is afflicted in the affliction of his (i) Isa 63.9 so are they in the affliction of their children and as the Lord doth it in measure though he will not suffer them to go unpunished (k) Jer. 30.11 so do they My Text bounds the correction that it may not exceed a just proportion to the discouraging of children whose different tempers as well as different faults are to be consider'd so as no more be laid upon them than they are able to bear (l) 1 Cor. 10.13 There should therefore be a special care took that the chastisement be no other than what is meet Physicians endeavour to apportion the Dose they give to the strength of the Patient and the peccant humour they would correct There must be a rational consideration of the age sex and disposition of the child the nature and circumstances of the fault and what sati●faction is offer'd by the delinquent upon ingenuous confession or possibly some interposition of another so that the offended Parent may keep up his authority be victorious in his chastisements and come off with honour and good hopes of the child's amendment For a Parent should be ever ready to forgive and to connive often at smaller failings wherein there is no manifest sin against God in confidence of gaining the child's affections by tenderness and kind forbearance towards the things that are most desirable This pleasing policie is they say much in request at this day in Japan ‖ Varen Descript Regn. Japoriae c. xv where Parents do educate their children with a great deal of softness very rarely punishing them with stripes though they follow their diligent informations with frequent admonttions And they tell us among the Grecians the best means the Mother used if a Boy was stubborn in committing a fault to perswade him to leave it was to shew him her breasts as the most powerful motive she had † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Schol. in Scrip. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But the Fathers it seems amongst them were more sharp and therefore Prometheus in Menander is said to be tyed like a Boy to the racks where he prettily pleads his cause as if his punishment had not been proportioned to his fault but he had been too hardly dealt with Be sure our Apostle both in my Text and to the Ephesians is altogether against any discouraging chastisement and requires moderation Thus for nurture the first branch of Education The 2. is in the admonition of the Lord without vvhich the former will not be effectually prosperous This according to the notation of the original word (m) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph 6.4 with 1 Cor. 10.11 Tit. 3.10 is a putting of things into their Childrens minds an informing of the judgment in and pressing upon the will and affections the principles of the Christian institution vvarning them to take heed of deviating from these principles vvhich they are oblig'd to live up to and is the principal thing in the educating of Christian Children So that Parents are mostly concern'd to get the fear of God planted in their Childrens tender souls that they may know and love trust in and obey their Maker Redeemer and Sanctifier and have timely preservatives against the corruptions of an untoward generation Under this we may speak of Parental Instruction and Watchfulness 1. Instruction which is a timely instilling of conscientious principles and seeds of Religon into Children taking them a part and engaging them to receive the most necessary points as it vvere drop by drop here a little and there a little (n) Isa 28.10 according to their narrow capacities in a free and familiar Conference by putting Questions to them and teaching them how to give Answers and by putting them upon asking Questions and returning short and clear Answers thereunto not only concerning the Word but Works of God whose Spirit alone makes all efficacious The Lord hath most strictly enjoyned this by Moses (o) Deut. 4.9 charging Parents to keep their souls diligently and not to let the things God hath done to slip out of their hearts all their days but teach their Sons and their Sons who in after time did thankfully acknowledg the benefit of this instruction (p) Psal 44.1 2. We have heard with our ears O God our Fathers have told us the works that thou didst in their days in the times of old And for the Words and Ordinances of God they are commanded not only to have them in their own hearts (q) Deut. 6.6 7. 11.19 but to teach them diligently unto their children as one who whets and sharpens a thing that is blunt (r) Eccles 10 10. by talking of them when they sit down in their house when they walk by the way when they lye down and when they rise up and elsewhere (s) Psal 78.5 6 7. Prov. 22.6 20 21. nor only so but by Rites (t) Exod. 12.26 13.14 and setting up visible and extraordinary
of perturbation but like himself gentle and dove-like solicitings Gal 5 22. warm and holy impulses and when cherished leave the soul in a more humble heavenly pure and believing temper than they found it 'T is a high aggravation of sin to resist the Holy Ghost Acts 7.51 Yet we may quench his motions by neglect as well as by opposition and by that means lose both the profit and pleasure which would have attended the entertainment Salvation came both to Zacheus his house and heart upon embracing the first motion our Saviour was pleased to make him Had he sleighted that 't is uncertain whether another should have been bestowed upon him The more such sprouts are planted and nourished in us the less room will stinking weeds have to root themselves and disperse their influence And for thy own good thoughts feed them and keep them alive that they may not be like a blaze of straw which takes birth and expires the same minute Brood upon them and kill them not as some birds do their young ones Psal 139.23 Try me and know my thoughts by too often flying from their nests David kept up a staple of sound and good thoughts he would scarce else have desired God to try and know them had they been only some few weak flashes at uncertain times 2. Improve them for those ends to which they naturally tend 'T is not enough to give them a bare reception and forbear the smothering of them but we must consider what affections are proper to be rais'd by them either in the search of some truth or performance of some duty Those gleams which shoot into us on the sudden have some lesson seal'd up in them to be opened and learned by us When Peter upon the crowing of the cock call'd to mind his Master's admonition he thought thereon and wept † Mark 14 72. he did not only receive the spark but kindled a suitable affection A choice graff though kept very carefully by us yet if not presently set will wither and disappoint our expectation of the desired fruit No man is without some secret whispers to disswade him from some alluring and busie sin † Job 33.14 17. God speaks once yea twice that he may withdraw man from his purpose as Cain had by an audible voice Gen. 4.7 which had he observed to the damping the revengeful motion against his brother he had prevented his brother's death his own despair and eternal ruin Have you any motion to seek God's face as David had Let your hearts reply Thy face Lord will I seek * Psal 27.8 The address will be most acceptable at such a time when your heart is tuned by One that searcheth the deep things of God † 1 Cor. 2.10 and knows his mind and what ayres are most delightful to Him Let our motion be quick in any duty which the Spirit doth suggest and while he heaves our hearts and oyls our wheels we shall do more in any religious service and that more pleasantly and successfully than at another time with all our own art and industry for his injections are like water poured into a pump to raise up more and as Satan's motions are not without a main body to second them so neither do the Spirit 's go unattended without a sufficient strength to assist the entertainers of them Well then lye not at anchor when a fresh gale would fill thy sails but lay hold of the present opportunity These seasons are often like those influences from certain conjunctions of the Planets which if not according to the Astrologer's opinion presently applied pass away and return not again in many ages So the Spirit 's breathings are often determined that if they be not entertained with suitable affections the time will be unregainable and the same gracious opportunities of a sweet entercourse may be for ever losts for God will not have his holy Spirit dishonoured in always striving with wilful man Gen. 6.3 When Judas neglected our Saviour's advertisement John 13.21 the Devil quickly enters and hurries him to the execution of his traiterous project v. 27. and he never meets with any motion afterwards but from his new Master and that eternally fatal both to his body and soul 3. Refer them if possible to assist your Morning meditation that like little brooks arising from several springs they may meet in one channel and compose a more useful stream What stragling good thoughts arise though they may owe their birth to several occasions and tend divers ways yet list them in the service of that truth to which you have committed the government of your mind that day As Constables in a time of necessary business for the King take up men that are going about their honest and lawful occasions and force them to joyn in one employ for the publick service Many accidental glances as was observed before will serve both to fix and illustrate your Morning proposition But if it be an extraordinary injection and cannot be referred to your standing Thesis follow it and let your thoughts run whither it will lead you a Theme of the Spirit 's setting is better than one of our own choosing 4. Record the choicer of them We may have occasion to look back upon them another time either as grounds of comfort in some hour of temptation or directions in some sudden emergency but constantly as perswasive engagements to our necessary duty Thus they may lye by us for further use as money in our purse Since Mary kept and ponder'd the short sayings of our Saviour in her heart † Luke 2.17 51. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hesych committing and fitting them as it were in her common-place book why should not we also preserve the whispers of that Spirit who receives from the same mouth and hand what he both speaks and shews to us It is pity the dust and filings of choicer metals which may one time be melted down into a mass should be lost in a heap of drossy thoughts If we do not remember them but like children are taken with their novelty more than their substance and like John Baptist's hearers rejoyce in their light only for a season † Joh. 5.35 it will discourage the Spirit from sending any more and then our hearts will be empty and we know who stands ready to clap in his hellish swarms and legions But howsoever we do God will record our good thoughts as our excusers if we improve them as our accusers if we reject them and as He took notice how often He had appear'd to Solomon † 1 Kings 11.9 so He will take notice how often His Spirit hath appeared to us and write down every motion whereby we have been solicited that they may be witnesses of his endeavours for our good and our own wilfulness 5. Back them with ejaculations Let our hearts be ready to attend every injection from heaven with a motion to it since 't is
you to be Christians nor better than Infidels and Heathens Look not that men should think you better than your fruits do manifest you to be nor that they take you to be good for saying that you are good nor judge you to excel others any further than your works are better than others And marvel not if the World ask What do you more than others when Christ himself doth ask the same Matth. 5.47 If ye salute your Brethren and those of your own Opinion and way and if ye love them that love you and say as ye say do not even Publicans and Infidels do the same Matth. 5.46 Marvel not if men judge you according to your works when God himself will do so who knoweth the heart He that is all for himself may love himself and think well of himself but must not expect much love from others Selfishness is the Boil or Imposthume of Societies where the Blood and Spirits have an inordinate Afflux till their corruption torment or gangrene the part While men are all for themselves and would draw all to themselves instead of loving their Neighbour as themselves and the Publick Good above themselves they do but hurt and destroy themselves for they forfeit their communion with the body and deserve that none should care for them who care for none but themselves To a Genuine Christian another's good rejoyceth him as if it were his own and how much then hath such a one continually to feed his joy and he is careful to supply another's wants as if they were his own But the scandalous selfish hypocrite doth live quietly and sleep easily if he be but well himself and it go well with his Party however it go with all his Neighbours or with the Church or with the World To himself he is fallen to himself he liveth himself he loveth himself he seeketh and himself that is his temporal prosperity he will advance and save if he can whatever his Religion be and yet himself he destroyeth and will lose It is not well considered in the World how much of sin consisteth in the narrow Contraction of mens love and regard unto their natural selves and how much of goodness consisteth in a Community of love and what a glory it is to the Government and Laws of God that he maketh it so noble and necessary a part of every man's duty to love all men and to do good to all as he is able though with a difference God could do us all good enough by Himself alone without one another But what a mercy is it to the World that as many Persons as there are so many there are obliged by God to love their Neighbours as themselves and to do good to all about them And what a mercy is it to the Actor that God will thus make him the Instrument and Messenger of his Beneficence Ministers and Christians all Would you be thought better than others Are you angry with men that think otherwise of you What good do you more than others in your places What good do you that other men 〈◊〉 see and feel and taste and judge of Every man loveth himself and can feel what doth him good in natural things And God that by giving you food and other mercies to your bodies would have you therein taste his love to your Souls would use you just so for your Brethrens good Do you give them good words and counsel It is well But that is not it that they can yet taste and value You must do that sort of good for them which they can know and relish not that this will save them or is any great matter of it self no more than God's common bodily mercies to you but this is the best way to get down better And he that seeth his Brother have need and shutteth up the bowels of his compassion from him how dwelleth the love of God in him 1 Joh. 3.17 Give to him that asketh and from him that would borrow of thee turn not thou away Matth. 5.42 That is let not want of Charity hinder thee at any time from giving though want of ability may hinder thee and prudence may restrain thee and must guide thee If you say Alas we have it not to give I answer 1. Do what you can 2. Shew by your compassion that you would if you could Take care of your poor Brethren 3. Beg of others for them and put on those that can to do it Say not These carnal people value nothing but carnal things and cannot perceive a man's love by spiritual benefits For it is not Grace but the means and out-side of things spiritual that you can give them and for ought I see the most of us all do very hardly believe God's own love to us if he deny us bodily mercies If you languish in poverty crosses and painful sickness any thing long your murmuring sheweth that you do not sufficiently taste God's goodness without the help of bodily sense And can you expect that natural men believe you to be good for your bare words when you so hardly think well of God himself though he promise you Life Eternal unless he also give you bodily supplies VIII He that will glorifie his Religion and God before men must be strictly just in all his dealings just in governing just in trading and bargaining just to Superiours and to Inferiours to Friends and to Enemies just in performing all his promises and in giving every man his Right He that in love must part with his own Right for his Neighbour's greater good must not deprive another of his Right for Charity includeth Justice as a lower Vertue is included in a higher and more perfect He must not be unjust for himself for riches or any worldly ends he must not be unjust for Friends or Kindred he must not be drawn to it by fear or flattery no price must hire him to do an unrighteous deed But above all he must never be unjust as for Religion as if God either needed or countenanced a lye or any iniquity No men are more scandalous dishonourers of Religion and of God than they that think it lawful to deceive or lye or be perjured or break Covenants or be rebellious or use any sinful means to secure or promote Religion as if God were not able to accomplish his Ends by righteous means This cometh from Atheism and Unbeli●f when men think that God will lose his Cause unless our wits and sinful shifts preserve it as if we and not He were the Rulers of the world The unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God 1 Cor. 6.9 and seldom scape the hatred or contempt of men IX He that will glorifie God must know and observe the Order of Commands and Duties and that God will have Mercy and not Sacrifice and must prefer the End before the Means as such He must not pretend a lesser Duty against a greater nor take the lesser at that time for a Duty
Christian who is saved when he dies may live comfortably while he lives then the resolution of the case is this that that Faith which is saving in the end is also sanctifying in the way and would be comfortable also if the Christian did not Ponere obicem hinder it himself and therefore that he may live joyfully he must remove these hindrances and use the means proper to the end of which anon at present he must do as these believers in the Text did and he shall find comfort as they did in these four particulars 1. They did persist in the simplicity of the Gospel as it is in Christ 2 Cor. 11.2 false Apostles deceitful workers transforming themselves into the Ministers of Christ began then v. 13. Paul was jealous of the Church of Corinth lest that chast Virgin should be corrupted v. 2. as the Churches in Galatia were bewitched with these juglers Gal. 3.1 the great design of the old serpent from that day to this hath been to adulterate the Doctrine of faith in a crucified Redeemer knowing full well that this is the most effectual course to ruine all true holiness and solid comfort But these believers received the grace of God in truth as it was fully and plainly proposed to them they did not spin out the high and vital truths into needless disputes nor darken them with nice distinctions and subdistinctions this serves for little else but to distract the mind and disturb the quiet of mens souls 2. They did taste that the Lord viz. Christ is gracious to whom coming as the living stone they as lively stones were built upon him a spiritual house for God 1 Pet. 2.4 5. they did not content themselves with orthodoxy to rest satisfied in this that they were not Simonians or Ebionites or Menandrians or the sectators of them that did destroy Christ's righteousness by dividing it let us not only profess Christ but feel him 't is one thing to preach Christ and another thing to feel him were the last words of Mr. Ash 3. They minded the mystery of the Gospel the eternal Deity grace and righteousness of our Lord Jesus as Peter prayed for them 2 Pet. 1.3 and exhorts them to grow in this 2 Pet. 3. last as for Church modes and membership and priviledges they did enjoy them without censuring and animosity but knowledge of and communion with Jesus Christ accompanied with love and obedience and peace of conscience was the main business of their life this is the way to comfort let us do so Assure your selves there is little joy in a ceremony to a dying man modes and membership are but sorry comforters Lastly As they had Faith and Love so they did exercise them they did believe and they did go on to believe and so to be acquainted with the righteousness of God from Faith to Faith you may observe how the Apostle remembers the works of Faith Love and Patience in Christ of the Thessal 1. cap. 1.3 and in the 2. Epistle cap. 1. verse 3. He thanks God their Faith did grow exceedingly there was but a little time between the writing of these two Epistles this latter being written shortly after the first to rectifie their mistake about the day of Christ The primitive Christians did not content themselves with habits and let them be as fire under the ashes or as seed under the clods but did stir them up that they might warm and they did water them that they might spring and blossom like a rose If a man that hath the power of seeing should walk up and down the streets from morning to night with his eyes shut without any actual seeing would you not suspect him to be distempered what comfort can this man take in the light of the Sun much like this is a believer that hath Faith habitual he riseth in the morning and lyes down at night and hath not an act of Faith upon nor a privy thought of blessing Jesus all the day how can any comfort be expected in such a strangeness as this is So then the sum is this these believers received the Gospel of Salvation by Christ pure as it was proposed to them they gave the Apostle this honour that they had wisdom enough to express themselves plainly fully significantly and honesty enough that they would not deal fallaciously or ambiguously they valued not the tradition of their fathers nor the fancies of Philosophers they had no vain janglings amongst themselves but coveted the sincere unmixed milk of the word that they might grow thereby 1 Pet. 2.1 2. The Gospel came to them not in word only but in power and in the Holy Ghost and in much assurance Assurance of understanding assurance of Faith their communion was with the Father and fellowship with Jesus Christ that made their joy to be rich and plentiful their priviledges and ordinances were their delight but not their confidence they came to God by them and waited upon God in them in dangerous times for the enlarging and confirming of their knowledge Faith and comfort let us be exhorted to do as they did and doubtless we shall speed as they sped My business now is to speak something to the Text and then more to the practical case in hand only first I would crave leave to speak a few words to the context for this reason because as my Text is the true pourtraiture of practical godliness so the context gives us a system of godliness doctrinal The Epistle is written to the strangers v. 2. Jews and Gentiles say some but especially Jews scattered in four now Roman provinces not long before distinct and considerable Kingdoms together with Asia sc the proconsular or less Asia yet including also those parts in and about Chaldea Peter was at this time in or about Babylon in which parts were many myriads of the Jews of whom he was the Apostle with James and John Gal. 2.9 1 Pet. 5.13 That Babylon in the Text should mystically be Rome is a mere conceit and a groundless fancy this Epistle was written thirty years at least before John had received the revelation Grotius and others are quite beside the truth 't is forty to one odds that Peter was never there well these Jews were effectually called according to Gods election the terminus or the thing to which not for which or upon which but to which they were chosen and called is said to be this sc to obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus the great efficient of this in them is the blessed Spirit through the sanctification of the Spirit the same verse being thus sanctified they had hope where observe the property of this hope it was a lively hope 2. The term or object an inheritance 3. The way whereby they obtained this hope they were begotten of God as a father to it 4. The cause moving God to this his abundant mercy 5. The ground of this hope it was the resurrection of Christ from the dead then
special comforting Faith then keep a good conscience in evil times chuse suffering before secular safety remember who did shrink from the truth and lost this Faith and comfort even to the gates almost of despair and self violence for twelve months together and never did recover till some hints of mercy to him he began to revive and have some quiet Spira said with tears running down his face that time was when he could have called God Father but now he could not 13. Direct You may and ought to get this special rejoycing Faith out of sanctified afflictions thus whom God doth correct and teach him he loves he is blessed Psal 94.12 Heb. 12. but God doth so to me ergo here are bills and prayers for mercies but who looks after the issue The teaching the holy use sanctified affections are very good evidences and so very comfortable There are that would not have lost their bussetings temptations various temptations afflictions for any good the blessed spirit hath taught th●m that way many a divine truth by heart out of the word they are sensible of it and from it conclude the love of God in Christ to them and thence they have joy and comfort that joy that Angels cannot give and Devils cannot take sanctified troubles are tokens of special love 14. Give diligent attendance upon the ordinances set thy self in the sight of God to hear what God will speak as Cornelius did Act. 10.33 and rejoyce to do it such shall walk in the ight of God's countenance Psal 89.15 Take heed of the common humor we begin to be very sqeamish and carnal one is of Paul another of Apollo we attend more the man and his artifice than God and his word Mr. Bolton in his florid but profane wit thought Perkins was a sneaking fellow But when God changed his heart he was of another mind Lastly Be more intent upon your duty then upon your comfort and comfort will follow Order your steps in the paths of Divine precepts walk in all relations according to the rule and be not so earnest after comfort so sollicitous in that behalf Walk uprightly and the face of God will behold the upright You pray for assurance be sure your ends be right let it be more for holiness that the name of Jesus Christ may be glorified by you than for comfort I think some good people are too carnal in their prayers for assurance they desire it not so much for holiness as for safety I have known such take heed look well to your aims I will conclude with Paul's prayer 2 Thess 2.16 17. Now our Lord Jesus and God our Father who hath given us everlasting consolation and good hope through grace comfort your hearts and stablish you in every good word and work How Christians may learn in every State to be content Serm. XXVI Phil. 4.11 For I have learned in whatsoever state I am therewith to be content OUR Apostle makes this profession of his high attainments in the grace of Contentation upon a very weighty Reason The Occasion of the words or Motive viz. that he might obviate all misconstructions and bad interpretations which possibly some might put upon what he had said in the foregoing verse and should further say in the 14 15 and 16. Verses In every of which we have him expressing his great and affectionate resentment of the Philippians bounty and liberality to him I rejoyced in the Lord greatly that now at the last your care of me hath flourished again ye have well done that you did communicate with my afflictions c. No Church communicated with me as concerning giving and receiving but ye only For even in Thessalonica ye sent once and again unto my necessity Now he foresaw that this his just acknowledgment might have some base and ugly censures put upon it which therefore he makes it his business to prevent And he enters a double Caveat about them Not because I desire a gift v. 17. q. d. O Philippians I have received your Gifts and I am very thankful to you for them but do not think I do this out of any * Gratam sibi esse testatur eorum beneficentiam c. li à tamen orationem temperans ut ab omni sordium suspicione se purum esse testetur Beza base spirit as if I desired thereby to be enriched or advanced in worldly possessions No saith he it is not so with me all that my eye is upon in your kindness to me is this I desire fruit that may abound to your account Again Not that I speak in respect of want as if I were so exceeding low in the world that I could not live without your supply or as if I were a person so tender and delicate that I could not bear a little want or hardship No it is not so with me neither for let my outward condition be what it will never so low as to outward things yet I have one Reserve alwaies by me a contented Mind I cannot have so little but that little shall suffice So † Non quòd penuriam passus sim id dico didici enim ut Sufficiat mihi id quod habeo V. Syr. the text comes in Not that I speak in respect of want for I have learned c. In the words wherein I am concerned we have The Text divided 1. A Lesson to be learnt to be content A rare and excellent Lesson than which there is scarce any one higher and harder in the whole compass of Christianity 2. Paul's great proficiency in this lesson I have learned in whatsoever state I am or as 't is in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In quibus sum i. e. qualiscunque sit meâ conditio c. Calvin 'T is more than if he had sa●d In iis quae habeo Vide Muscul in loc Greek In whatsoever things I am therewith to be content He had in the course of his life passed through various states and some of them were bad enough according to the account which he himself gives of them 2 Cor. 4.8 9 10. 2 Cor. 6.4 5. 2 Cor. 11.23 But no condition came amiss to him his spirit was alwayes composed and calm he lived in the constant practice of divine Conrentment I have learnt saith he and we may believe him in whatsoever state I am therewith to be content What an apt Schollar what an admirable proficient was this blessed man in this high and difficult piece of practical knowledg Surely he that can master such a lesson as this may well be placed in the highest form of Christ's school Of the supernaturalness and Mysteriousness of contentment When he saith he had learned to be content two things are implied in that expression the Supernaturalness the mysteriousness of Contentment The Supernaturalness of it I have learnt it q. d. 't was not a thing known by me from the first I brought not this frame with me into the world 't was
either in obtaining good or preventing evils Job 22.21 Now it will appear how pernicious those extremes are by considering 1. The contempt of chastenings deprives us of all those benefits which were intended by them God's end in them is to imbitter sin to our tast and make us disrellish that deadly poyson for as according to the rules of physick contraries are cured by contraries so sin that prevails by pleasure by something delightful to the carnal part is mortified by what is afflictive to sense Repentance is a duty that best complies with affliction for when the spirit is roade sad and brought to the sobriety of consideration it will more readily reflect upon the true causes of troubles when the springs overflow 't is but directing the stream into a right channel the changing the object of our grief viz. mourning for sin instead of sorrowing for outward trouble and we are in the way to happiness Sensible sorrow leads to Godly sorrow The natural is first then the spiritual Now the despisers of God's hand that are unaffected with judgments are incapable of this benefit For if they do not feel the blow how shall they take notice of the hand that strikes if they are not softened with sorrows how shall they receive the divine impression if they have no sense of his displeasure how shall they fear to offend him for the future if the medicine doth not work how can it expel noxious humors 2. The neglect of chastenings doth not only render them unprofitable but exposes to greater evils 1. It provokes God to withdraw his judgments for a time This the sinner desired and thinks himself happy that he is at ease miserable delusion 1. This respite is the presage of his final ruine 'T was the desperate state of Judah Isa 1.5 as God expresses it Why should ye be striken any more ye will revolt more and more The words of an anxious Father that has tryed all methods counsel kindness corrections to reclaim a rebellious obstinate son and finding no answerable effect gives him over to follow the pernicious swing of his corrupt desires No severity is like the suffering him in his licentious courses Thus when God hath used many gracious wayes to reduce the sinner by his Word Spirit and judgments but he is inflexible to the calls of the Word impenetrable to the motions of the Spirit and insensible of afflicting providences when after a combat with the rod sin comes off unwounded and the rod retires this calm is more dreadful than the fiercest storm Nothing can be more fatal to the sinner for by this divine desertion he is given over to a reprobate mind and vile affections he goes on undisturbed in his sins and every day increaseth his enmity against God and provokes God's enmity against him 'T is not conceivable that one who is not made pliable to the grace of God by afflictions should submit when he is in pleasant circumstances and dispos'd to enjoy sensual satisfactions If the whip and spur cannot break and tame the unruly beast certainly the rich pasture will never make him manageable So that God's ceasing to punish the sinner at present is so far from being a favour that 't is the effect of his deepest displeasure for it contributes to his hardning 'T was the case of Pharaoh when any of the plagues were removed indulgence occasioned his induration As water taken from the fire freezes sooner and harder because the thinner parts are evaporated by the former heat so when men are taken off from the fire of affliction they are more confirmed in their vicious courses ●han if they had never been afflicted 3. The slighting of lighter strokes provokes God sometimes to bring more dreadful judgments in this life upon sinners No man can endure that his love or anger should be despised Nebuchadnezzar commanded the furnace to be heated seven times hotter for those who contemned his threatnings Lev. 26.23 24 God tells the Israelites If ye will not be reformed by me by these things but will walk contrary unto me then will I also walk contrary unto you and will punish you yet seven times more for your sins He will change the rods into scorpions and scourge them for their continued rebellions Amos 3.5 'T is the intent of that expostulation Shall one take up a snare from the earth and have taken nothing at all Shall God remove his judgments while sinners are careless and unreformed as if they might be final conquerers over them no he will multiply and greaten them It may be at first God blasts part of the estate and the sinner is not apprehensive of his hand then he comes nearer and snatches away a dear relation if still the sinner is unaffected he strikes his body with a lingring or acute disease if still he be not concern'd for God's displeasure he wounds his spirit makes him sick in sense and conscience at the same time fills him with terror by the reflection upon his wicked wayes and the foresight of that dreadful Tribunal before which he must appear So that although he cannot live he dare not die though his earthly tabernacle be ready to fall upon him he is afraid to go out and meet the supreme Judge And if this doth not work a sincere thorow change God casts him into hell to the company of the Giants Prov. 21.16 Vid. Mr. Mede in loc those bold rebels that fought against God Briefly as under the law an incorrigible son that neglected his father's reproofs was to die without mercy so an unreformed sinner who kicks against the pricks and refuses to submit to God's corrections shall be cut off in his obstinacy Justice will proceed to excision and acts of vengeance against him 2. Fainting under chastenings is pernicious to sufferers for it renders them utterly indisposed for the performance of duty and uncapable of receiving the comforts proper for an afflicted state 1. It renders them utterly indisposed for the performance of duty Hope draws forth all the active powers of the soul 't is the great motive to diligence and instrument of duty Despair like extremity of cold that checks the spring and binds up the earth that its fruits cannot appear hinders the free exercise of reason and grace and cuts the sinews of obedience He that is hopeless of a good issue out of troubles will neither repent nor pray nor reform but indulges barren tears instead of real duties Besides it often falls out that the same affliction is sent from God's displeasure upon his people for their sins and is the effect of the rage of men against them upon the account of their professing his Name Such is the Wisdom and Goodness of God that by the same fiery tryal he may refine his servants from their dross and impurities and render the Glory of the Gospel more Conspicuous The hatred of Religion and a blind fury may transport men to acts of Cruelty against the
sufficient for the Salvation of them in their circumstances yet there is a vast difference between the abilities of several persons and therefore men are not to take their measures for their enquiries after Spiritual things merely by the necessariness of the things themselves but likewise by the abilities God hath given them So that upon the whole the better means and advantages in any kind men have for the gaining of knowledge so much the more knowledge is required to be in them Rule 4. By how much the more use men have for their knowledge and by how much the more good they may do with it so much the more knowledge will be expected of them That knowledge which might do well in a private Christian yet is not ordinarily sufficient for a Minister That which would be much in the one might be but little in the other And that which might do well in a Child would not be sufficient in a Parent or Master of a Family They that are to instruct others in the knowledge of God ought themselves to be more abounding in it Prop. 2. Men should in their seeking knowledge first study those truths which are most confessedly necessary to Salvation and before those which are apparently less necessary and so Principles before Controversies things essential before such as are only Circumstantial And indeed by how much the nearer any truth is to the foundation so much the more they should labour after the knowledge of it as for instance men should acquaint themselves 1. With the Being and Attributes of God as the foundation of all service yeilded to him and expectations of rewards from him Psal 14.4 Heb. 11.6 He that knows not God to be holy how can he know that God requires holiness and then how can he himself be holy how can a man trust God if he know him not to be wise powerful faithful or love him if he know him not to be good or fear him if he know him not to be just and it will easily follow that he who knows not God as he can never worship him while he lives so he can never expect that he should save him when he dies 2. With the Doctrine of the Trinity three Persons in the Godhead the Father Son and Spirit John 1.5 7. John 14.16 John 15.26 each Person having his proper part in the Salvation of sinners The Father as the Original and Fountain of it the Son as the Manager and the Holy Ghost as the Applier 3. With their own natural state and condition their being by nature in a state of sin and misery as having sin'd against this Holy Righteous Eph. 2.1 2 3. John 16.8 Powerful God and thereby exposed themselves to his wrath and curse They that would be delivered from the curse must know themselves to be obnoxious to it They that would not perish must know themselves to be in danger of it Men are not like to enjoy God's favour unless they know that they have lost it 4. With the Doctrine of a Redeemer and that both 1. As to the Person Who he is That the Lord Jesus Christ the Eternal Son of God the Second Person of the Trinity is the Redeemer of sinners Math. 20.28 and the only one Act. 4.12 That God hath not left all mankind to perish in their sin and misery but hath out of his abundant Mercy and free Grace found out a ransom for them a Saviour to deliver them and that the Lord Jesus Christ is he and none besides him so that it is in vain to seek for Salvation in any else seeing he alone hath the words of Eternal life John 6.6.8 He that knows nothing of a Saviour knows nothing savingly nor can any man partake of Redemption without some knowledge of the Redeemer They can never come to God that know not by whom to come 2. And as to the way of his working that Redemption 1. That he did in order to the Salvation of sinners John 1.14 and 3.13 take the nature of man upon him was both God and Man in one person and still continues so to be He had those natures united in himself which he was to reconcile to each other 2. That not only he was able as being God fit as being man Rom. 3.24 25 26. Rom. 5.10 1 Tim. 2.6 to satisfie Divine justice for the injury sin had done it but that by his obedience and death he did it to the full He that knows God to be infinitely just and himself to be a sinner had need know something of a Sacrifice for sin or he can never have any well-grounded hopes of escaping the hands of such a God 3. That Christ being raised from the dead and ascended into Heaven sits at the Father's right hand Rom. 8.34 Mark 16.19 and by his intercession there is now making application of the redemption he wrought on Earth He ever lives to make intercession Heb. 7.25 Men would be in an ill condition if redemption were wrought and there were none to apply it if Christ had died for them and left them to intercede for themselves 5. Men should acquaint themselves with the Doctrine of Justification by Christ that sinners must be justified by the Righteousness of the Lord Jesus imputed to them if ever they be justified at all He is the Lord their Righteousness Jer. 23.6 They are accepted in the beloved Eph. 1.6 Found in Christ not having their own Righteousness c. but that which is through the faith of Christ the Righteousness which is of God by faith Phil. 3.9 All their own Righteousness inherent in them and wrought by them even after regeneration and by the help of the Spirit of grace being finite imperfect short of the Law and due to it 6. With the way of their being made partakers of this Righteousness that it should be received by Faith alone as the means God hath appointed for their being interested in it God hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation through faith in his blood Rom. 3.25 and therefore they that are justified must be justified by Faith Rom. 5.1 All the holiness any Saint could ever arrive unto in this life would never entitle him to Christ's Righteousness if faith were wanting 7. With the nature properties and fruit of that faith that it must be an effectual lively Faith not only an assent of their minds to the truth of the Scripture Jam. 2.17 John 1.12 but the consent of their hearts to the terms of the Covenant a receiving whole Christ with an eye to all rhe good things he offers there and for all those holy ends and purposes for which he is propounded to them In a word they are to look upon Faith as the Principle of their Obedience and walking with God according to that rule of Righteousness God hath given them 8. With the Doctrine of sanctification that God is wont to fit and frame mens hearts at first to the duties of
Obedience he requires of them by the work of the Spirit upon their hearts changing them regenerating them and causing old things to pass away and all things in them to become new 2 Cor. 5.17 and further to increase that fitness for and readiness to Spiritual things by his guiding assisting and quickning them in those holy wayes into which he hath brought them and by those ordinary means the Word and Ordinances which he hath appointed for the working and improving of their Graces 9. With the reward God promiseth to their Faith and Obedience in the blessedness of their Souls at the end of this life and of their whole man after the Resurrection in their being for ever with the Lord 1 Thes 4.17 when the unbelief and disobedience of others will be punished with everlasting torments inflicted by him In a word whoever comes to God Heb. 11.6 must believe not only that he is but that he is the rewarder of those that diligently seek him Men ought in the beginning of Religion to look to the end of it have some sight of the goal when they enter upon their race know their wages when they set about their work The Doctrine of rewards furnisheth men with the greatest incentives to holiness ignorance or unbelief of future recompence must needs make men negligent of present service take away the knowledge of Heaven and Hell and ye take away all ●are and thoughts of Religion These things I lay not down as an enumeration o● Fundamentals or compleat scheme of Religion it is sufficient for 〈…〉 that they are some of the most necessary and substantial truths wherein the generality of Christians are concerned which they are therefore especially and in the first place to acquaint themselves with and before those things which are less necessary to Salvation as being further from the Foundation And indeed this is the very method of Nature Men usually seek those things first which are most necessary and other things afterward they first lay their Foundation and then set up their Superstructures Principles must be known before Conclusions can be drawn from them Those Doctrines of Religion must be first known from whence others are to be deduced and without the knowledge of which others can be but confusedly and darkly known This seems to have been the Apostle's Method Heb. 6.1 where he speaks of some Truths which they are in paticular I stand not to dispute which were Principles and first learned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost others as conducing to the perfection of the Saints unto the knowledge of which he would therefore have them go on He that knows not those things which must be known knows nothing yet to any purpose Prop. 3. Men should Labour after such a knowledge of the Truth as that they may be able to give a Reason of the hope that is in them 1 Pet. 3.15 To shew on what Ground they stand what is the Foundation of their Faith and Hope that the Religion they profess is indeed the true Religion and that the Doctrines they own are really Founded upon the Scripture of Truth Dan. 16.2 and in a word they should be able to give a Reason why they believe rather thus than otherwise and hold such Doctrines rather than the contrary They should Labour after such a Grounded knowledge of the Truths of the Gospel as that they may be able to say of them as well as of the Duties of it that they are fully perswaded in their own Minds and do not take up things upon trust Rom. 14.15 or believe the Truth upon the Credit of others It is a shame for Professors to be merely Believers upon Tradition to see with other Mens Eyes or be like the Heathen Idols that have Eyes and see not They are Men and have reasonable Powers and ought to make use of them even in the things of God so far as they are Revealed and Subjected to their Judgment The Spiritual Man Judgeth all things even the deep things of God 1 Cor. 2.10.15 Though they are to submit their understandings to God yet they are not to resign them to Men. They that will judge for themselves in the things of this life should no less do in the things of the other That Man that will not trust another with his Estate or Purse should much less do it with his Conscience and Salvation Prop. 4. Men should especially give themselves to the study and labour after the knowledge of the present truths 2 Pet. 1.12 I mean those truths which are the special truths of the Times and Ages and Places in which Men live We shall find if we observe it that God who delivers hls Mind and Will to Men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by several parts and degrees doth in some Ages make more clear discoveries of some truths in others of other truths and though the whole will of God and all those truths which we are any way concerned to know in order to our Salvation be sufficiently laid down in the Scripture yet there is sometimes more knowledge of one truth stirring in the World sometimes of some other Sometimes God calls his Servants more especially to Preach up and bear Witness to such or such a particular Truth which either was less known and understood before or is more opposed at present Immediately after Christ's resurrection the great truth of that time the then present truth was that Jesus was the Christ that very Messiah whom God had promised to the Fathers and the Jews themselves did expect This the Apostles did first of all Preach confirming it especially by his Resurrection from the dead Thus Act. 2.36 God hath made the same Jesus both Lord and Christ Act. 5.31 Him hath God exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour So Philip to the Eunuch Act. 8.35 And Paul so soon as he was converted and sent to Preach presently declares that Jesus was the Christ Acts 9.22 And Peter to Cornelius Acts 10.42.43 And Apollos in Achaia ch 18.28 And afterwards we find that the Jews and Judaizing Christians pertinaciously adhering to the Law of Moses gave occasion to the more full Preaching of the Doctrine of free Grace and Justification by Christ alone and the abolishing of the legal Ceremonies as we may see in the Epistle to the Romans Galatians Colossians and Hebrews And after towards the end of the Apostles times the Heresie of Cerinthus gave occasion to the more full vindicating the Doctrines of Christ's Godhead Hieronym in Catal. Script Ecclesiast as we see in the Gospel of John And some hundreds of years after that the Pelagian Heresie gave occasion for the renewed publication of the Doctrine of free Grace by Austin Prosper and others And in the beginning of the reformation of Religion in the last age the first truths God called those Worthies that then lived to the Preaching of were those especially which concern the Lord Jesus Christ in his Prophetical and Priestly offices
premised my work shall be to shew what use and respect Baptism has unto this benefit of obtaining remission of Sins by Jesus Christ I shall do it in these considerations 1. First that God hath ever delighted to deal with his Creatures in the way of a Covenant that we might know what to expect from him and might look upon our selves as under the firmer Bonds of obedience to his blessed Majesty In a Covenant which is the most solemn transaction between Man and Man both parties are engaged God to us and we to God It is not meet that one party should be bound and the other free therefore both are bound to each other God to Bless and we to Obey Indeed in the first Covenant the debitum poenae is only mentioned because that only took place Gen. 2.17 In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely dye But the other part is implied and it doth in effect speak thus much Do and Live Sin and Dye 2. Secondly because the first Covenant was broken on our part God was pleased to enter into a second wherein he would manifest the glory of his Redeeming grace and pardoning Mercy to fallen Man this was brought about in Christ 2 Cor. 5.19 God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself and therefore this second Covenant is called a Covenant of Peace as being made with us after the breach and when Man was obnoxious to the wrath of God Isa 54.10 The Covenant of my Peace shall not be removed Man needeth such a Covenant and God appeased by Christ offereth it to us 3. Thirdly In this Covenant of Peace the Priviledges and Duties are suited to the State in which man was when God invited him into Covenant with himself Man was fallen from his Duty and obnoxious to the wrath and displeasure of God and therefore the new Covenant is a Doctrine of Repentance and Remission of Sins What is Preach the Gospel to every Creature Mark 16.16 is in Luk. 24.47 That Repentance and Remission of sins should be Preached in his Name among all Nations for that is the Gospel or the new Remedial Law of our Lord Jesus Repentance to heal us and set us in joint again as to our Duty Remission of Sins to recover us into God's favour both these benefits we have by the Redeemer Acts 5.31 Him hath God exalted to give Repentance and Remission of Sins to Israel he giveth the one simply and both giveth and requireth the other so that by the New Covenant Remission of Sins is conveyed to all true Penitents Fourthly More distinctly to understand the tenour of this New and second Covenant we must consider both the Duties and the Priviledges thereof for in every Covenant there is ratio dati accepti there is something promised and given and something required and usually the Promise consists of somewhat which the Party is willing of and the Duty or Condition required of that to which he is more backward and loath to submit so in the Covenant of Grace in the Promise God respects man's want in the Duty his own Honour Every man would have pardon and be saved from Hell but God will have subjection even corrupt Nature is not against desires of Happiness these God makes use of to gain us to Holiness All men readily catch at Felicity and would have Impunity Peace Comfort Glory but are unwilling to deny the Flesh to renounce the credit profit or pleasure of Sin or to grow dead to the World and worldly things Now God promiseth what we desire on condition that we will submit to those things that we are against as we sweeten bitter Pills to Children that they may swallow them the better they love the Sugar though they loath the Alloes so doth God invite us to our Duty by our Interest Therefore whosoever would enter into the Gospel-state must resolve to take the Blessings and Benefits offered for his Happiness and the Duties required for his Work Indeed accepting of the Benefits is a part of the Condition because we treat with an invisible God about a happiness that lieth in another World but 't is but part there are other terms and therefore we must draw nigh with a true heart in full assurance of Faith Heb. 10.22 With a true heart resolving upon the Duties of the Covenant in full assurance of Faith depending upon God's Word that he will give us the blessings Fifthly The Priviledges are two Pardon and Life these are the great Blessings offered in the New Covenant you have them both together Acts 26.18 To turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God that they may receive forgiveness of sins and inheritance among them that are sanctified by Faith These two Benefits are most necessary the one to allay the Fears of the guilty Creature and the other to gratifie Desires of Happiness which are natural to us the one to remedy the misery incurr'd by Sin and the Fall of Man the other to establish our true and proper Felicity in the everlasting enjoyment of God the one to ease our Consciences and support us against troubles of mind the other to comfort us against the outward troubles and afflictions which sin hath introduced into the World In short the one to free us from deserved Punishment the other to assure us of undeserved Blessedness the one importeth Deliverance from Eternal Death and the other Entrance into Eternal Life Sixthly The Duties thereof do either concern our first entrance into the Christian state or our Progress therein Our Lord representeth it under the Notions of the Gate and the Way Mat. 7.14 Strait is the Gate and narrow is the Way which leadeth into Life Other Scriptures deliver it under the notions of making Covenant and keeping Covenant with God making Covenant Psal 50.5 keeping Covenant Psal 25.10 Psal 103.18 The Covenant must not only be made but kept I. As to entring into Covenant with God there is required true Repentance and Faith Mark 1.15 Repent and believe the Gospel Repentance respects God as our end Faith respects Christ as the great means or way to the Father Acts 20.21 Repentance towards God and Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ God is our end for Christ died to bring us to God 1 Pet. 3.18 and Christ is our way John 14.6 and whole Christiany is a coming to God by Christ Heb. 7.25 Now in our first entrance Faith and Repentance are both mixt and it is hard to sever them and show what belongs to the one and what to the other at least it would perplex the Discourse Both together imply that a man be turn'd from a life of Sin to God by Faith in Christ or a renouncing the Devil the World and the Flesh and devoting and dedicating our selves to God 1. A Renouncing of the Devil the World and the Flesh for these are the three great Enemies of God and our Salvation Eph. 2.2 3. In time past ye walked according to
the Course of this World after the Prince of the power of the Air the Spirit that works now in the children of disobedience among whom also we had our conversation in the lusts of the flesh fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind There all our Enemies appear abreast the Devil as the Grand deceiver and principal of all wickedness the World with its Pleasures Honours and Profits as the Bait by which it doth deceive us and steal away our hearts from God and pervert and divert us that we should not look after the one thing necessary the Flesh is that Corrupt Inclination in us which entertains and closeth with these Temptations to the neglect of God and the wrong of our own Souls this is very importtnate to be pleased and is the proper internal cause of all our mischief for James 1.14 Every man is inticed and drawn away by his own lust These must be renounced before we can return to God for till we put away our Idols we cannot incline our hearts to the true God Josuah 24.23 And these are the great Idols by which our hearts are estranged from him When God is laid aside self interposeth as the next Heir and that which we count self is the flesh Many wrong their own Souls but never any man hated his own flesh That which feeds the flesh is the World and the Devil by proposing the Bait irritateth and stirreth up our affections Therefore we must be turned from Satan to God we must be delivered from the present evil World we must abstain from fleshly Lusts for God will have no Co-partners and Competitors in our hearts 2. A devoting and giving up our selves to God Father Son and Holy Ghost as our God 2 Cor. 8.3 and Rom. 6.13 As our owner by Creation Psal 100.3 And by Redemption 1 Cor. 6.19 20. As our Soveraign Lord Jer. 24.8 Isa 26.13 Other Lords besides thee have had dominion over us c. As the fountain of our life and blessedness Psal 31.14 I trusted in the Lord I said thou art my God Lam. 3.24 The Lord is my portion saith my Soul therefore will I hope in him Psal 119.57 I have said thou art my Potion therefore I will keep thy Precepts II. As to our Progress and Perseverance which is our walking in the narrow way and shews the sincerity and heartiness of our consent in making the Covenant And besides this is not the work of a Day but of our whole Lives we have continual need of coming to God by Christ Here three things are required 1. As to the Enemies of God and our Souls there must be a forsaking as well as a renouncing the Devil must be forsaken we must be no more of his party and confederacy we must resist stand out against all his batteries and assaults 1 Pet. 5.8 9. the World must be overcome 1 John 5.4 5. and the flesh must be subdued and mortified Gal. 5.24 that we be no more governed by the desires thereof and if we be sometimes foiled we must not go back again but renew our Resolutions and the drift of our lives must still be for God and Heaven 2. As to God to whom we have devoted our selves we must love and please and serve him all our days Luke 1.75 we must make it our work to love him and count it our happiness to be beloved by him and carefully apply our selves to seek his favour and cherish a fresh sense of it upon our hearts and continue with patience in well-doing Rom. 2.7 till we come to the complete sight and love of him in Heaven 1 John 3.2 3. You must always live in the hope of the coming of Christ and everlasting glory Tit. 2.3 looking for the blessed hope and Jude v. 21. looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus unto eternal life As we did at first thankfully accept of our recovery by Christ and at first consent to renounce the Devil the World and the Flesh and resolve to follow God's counsel and direction we must still persevere in this mind and use his appointed means in order to our final happiness The sum then of our Christianity is that we should by true Repentance and Faith forsake the World the Flesh and the Devil and give up our selves to God Father Son and Holy Ghost that he may take us for his reconciled Children and for Christ's sake forgive all our sins and by his Spirit give us grace to persevere in those Resolutions till our full and final happiness come in hand Seventhly This Covenant consisting of such Duties and Priviledges God hath confirmed by certain visible Ordinances commonly called Sacraments as Baptism and the Lord's Supper both which but in a different manner respect the whole tenour of the Covenant For as the Covenant bindeth mutually on God's part and ours so these Duties have a mutual Aspect or Respect to what God does and what we must do on God's part they are a Sign and a Seal on our part they are a Badge and a Bond. 1. On God's part they are sealing or confirming Signs as Circumcision is called a sign or seal of the righteousness which is by faith Rom. 4.11 that is of the grace offered to us in Christ so is Baptism which came in the Room of Circumcision Col. 2.11 12. In whom ye are circumcised buried with him in Baptism Surely the Gospel-Ordinances signifie as much grace as the Ordinances of the legal Covenant if Circumcision was a Sign and Seal of the Righteousness which is by Faith a or pledge of God's good will to us in Christ so is Baptism so is the Lord's Supper they are a Sign to signifie and a Seal to confirm to represent the Grace and assure the grant of Pardon and Life As for instance Baptism signifies Pardon and Life so does the Lord's Supper Matth. 26.28 29. That for our growth and nourishment this for our imitation Baptism is under our consideration at present that it hath respect to remission of Sins the Text is clear for it and so are many other Scriptures It was Ananias his Advice to Paul Acts 22.16 Arise and be Baptized and wash away thy sins and call on the Name of the Lord. So Ephes 5.26 That he might sanctifie and cleanse us by the washing of water through the Word The washing represents the washing away the guilt and filth of sin it signifies also our Resurrection to a blessed and eternal Life Baptism saveth by the Resurrection of Christ 1 Pet. 3.21 Well then it is a sealing Sign When God promised longer life to Hezekiah 2 Kings 20.8 he said What shall he the sign that the Lord will heal me So when he promiseth pardon and life to us What shall be the sign that the Lord will do this for us Baptism is this sign a witness between us and God Gen. 31.48 This heap is a witness between thee and me 2. On our part they are a Badge and a Bond to oblige us to the