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A40393 LI sermons preached by the Reverend Dr. Mark Frank ... being a course of sermons, beginning at Advent, and so continued through the festivals : to which is added a sermon preached at St. Pauls Cross, in the year forty-one, and then commanded to be printed by King Charles the First.; Sermons. Selections Frank, Mark, 1613-1664. 1672 (1672) Wing F2074A; ESTC R7076 739,197 600

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11. to the Mount of God get us often up to his holy places to expect this holy wind and spirit 2. That there we wrap our faces in our Mantles as he did his in his v. 13. cover them with all reverence and humility to receive him That 3. we go out with him too and stand in the entry of our Caves every one in his place ready to worship and adore him when he comes That 4. we there listen carfully to the sound he makes as he passes by attentively to hear his voice and know his will and do his pleasure That 5. we take the wings of the morning as holy David speaks our earliest devotions and prayers to convey us to his presence that he may blow and breath upon us and we daily find and feel him purifying quickning and refreshing us and every day more and more drawing nearer to us or us nearer to himself And then no matter whether we know whence he comes or whither he goes so he thus take us with him when he comes and carry us thither with him when he goes where he eternally with the Father and the Son resides in glory Even so O blessed and Eternal Spirit blow upon us and this day keep thy Festival among us for Iesus Christ his sake to whom with the Father and thy self be all our wonder and admiration all Worship and Adoratition all our praise and glory from this day for ever Amen THE SECOND SERMON UPON Whitsunday St. JOHN xvi 13. Howbeit when He the Spirit of Truth is come he will guide you into all truth AND of such a Spirit never had the world more need than now never more need of one to guide us into all truth then at this time wherein we are pestered and surrounded all with Error with all sorts of Error never more need that the Spirit of Truth should come to guide us than now when there are so many spirits up and abroad that men know not which to follow Come Holy Ghost-Eternal God never fitter to be sung than now For by the face of our Hemisphere we may seem either to have lost him quite or with those in St. Peter we may ask Where is the Promise of his coming When he is come indeed he will guide us into all truth yea but when is that When comes he Why this day he came this day was this Scripture fulfilled this day this Promise made good The Spirit of Truth came down from Heaven upon the Apostles this day so that from this day forward they spake all tongues and truths who before were both ignorant of the one and could not bear many of the other Well but the Apostles are dead and all the Disciples that could pretend to those gifts and prerogatives are dead and we neither speak with tongues by the spirit nor understand all truths any of us nor can yet hear of any that do Is his Promise then utterly come to an end for evermore Certainly either come he is not or lead us he does not or into Truth he does not or into but a little and that but very few of us or we at this end of the world have no part or portion in his coming something or other there is some reason or other to be given why this Wind this Spirit does not blow upon us That he is come this day of Pentecost plainly tells us that he is come not to go again Christs own promise that he should abide with us for ever St. Iohn xiv 16. does assure us that to us too it is he comes though not visibly as this day yet invisibly every day which is as much for truth though not for tongues St. Peter tells us in his Sermon this day out of the Prophet Ioel that the Spirit is to be poured upon all flesh Acts ii 17. so upon ours too and the Spirit for his part is always ready ever and anon calling us to come Rev. xxii 17. So that the fault will lie upon our selves not the Spirit that he guides us not into all truth The truth is men are not disposed as they should be He that looks into their ways and pursuits after truth may see it without Spectacles Other spirits are set up new lights advanc'd private spirits preferr'd all the people are become leaders every man thinks himself of age to answer for himself and to guide himself so that there is either no body to be guided all the Lords people being Kings and Priests and Prophets or else no body will be but according to their own fancies prejudices interests and humors This is the true posture the very face of Religion now adays and the true reason that this Spirit of Truth ceases to guide them into truth For He leads none but those that will be led and they will not He is only sent to guide not to hale them on or drive them forward To you Disciples such as are willing to be taught not to them that will be all Masters To those that could not bear all truths then not to those that would not then nor to those that will not now who make Christs promise of none effect to themselves by their own perversness Time was and this day it was when He found men better disposed for his coming found them together at their Prayers not as now together by the ears of one accord not in Sects and Factions waiting all for the Promise of his coming not preventing it as Saul did Samuels with a foolish Sacrifice only as himself confesses lest the people should forsake him 1 Sam. xiii 11. and as is usual now not to stay the coming of the Spirit of Truth but to set up one of their own no matter of what to keep the people from scattering and forsaking them any spirit so it can keep them to them They were to wait for the Promise of the Father Acts i. 4. which was the Spirit of Truth They did and had it Do we so and so we shall too Our case still is the same with theirs They could not bear all truths together no more can we They stood in need of daily teaching we do more They wanted a guide we cannot go without him Truth is still as necessary to be known as then it was To this purpose was the Holy Spirit promised to this purpose sent to this purpose serv'd and serve he does still the necessity being the same like to be the same for ever only fit we our selves to receive him when he comes and howbeit things look strangely and this promise seems almost impossible now the Spirit of Truth will come and when the Spirit of Truth is come he will guide them c. The words are Christs Promise of sending the Holy Spirit now the fifth time repeated to raise up the spirits of the drooping Disciples now ready to faint and die away upon the discourse of their Lords departure He was now shortly to bid adieu to the world and them
So that now we have gain'd the knowledge not only of his temporal but his eternal coming to his eternal Procession which though it be not the coming promised or intended here yet coming here upon the Context and Coherence relating so evidently to sending gives us but a just occasion both to remember to whom we owe this benefit the Father and the Son the greatness of it in that it is no less than infinite the Spirit of God God himself And 't is but fit here and every where to take notice of it that as the whence is above so the whither is beneath very much beneath him But we reserve that to a fitter place when we come to the persons that are guided by him 'T is best now to suspend a while the search of the nature to enquire into the time and manner of his coming But the time is next When he is come 3. Yea but when is that Sane novum supervenisse spiritum nova desideria demonstrant says St. Bernard you may know he is come by the desires he works in you when those begin to be spiritual hearty sincere and true to God then is the Spirit of truth come into you if you begin to long and breath and gasp after heaven 't is a sign some heavenly breath of the Spirit at least is slipt into you 2. When this Spirit that pants and beats after God within breaths out at the lips too ere it be long in prayers to God and praises of him in good communication all bitterness and malice and evil speaking and vanity too being laid aside as becommeth Saints This is a good sign too a true sign too if it be not meerly godly Phrases taken up to make a shew or to deceive if it proceed from the heart and inward Spirit 3. But the surest sign of it is in the hand in the works if they be such as are the genuine fruits of the Spirit Love joy peace long-suffering gentleness goodness faith meekness temperance Gal. v. 23. These are the Spirits perpetual attendants when he comes Boast men may of the Spirit but if they have no love if they be not the Sons of peace if patience and long-suffering be no vertue with them if gentleness appear not in their carriage if goodness and bounty to the poor abound not in them as well as faith if they be not meek and humble and sober and temperate temperate in diet in apparel in language in passion and affections and all things else boast they while they will of the Spirit and the Spirit of truth that they have it work and move by it are guided by it it will prove but the Spirit of error or the Spirit of giddiness or the Spirit of slumber they do but dream it or but their own Spirit at the best for such a one we read of and of Prophets that went according to it Ezek. xiii 3. foolish Prophets that follow their own spirit and have seen nothing ignorant Prophets who know nothing yet pretend they know more than all the Learned all the Fathers that are gone crafty Foxes only they are says the Prophet ver 4. cunning to spoil and ravine that seduce the people saying peace when there is no peace ver 8. they build and dawb with untempered morter ver 10. build up Babel the house of confusion and plaister up all the Scriptures Texts that are against them with incoherent Comments wild distinctions and interpretations that stick together like untempered mortar they make the righteous sad and strengthen the hands of the wicked that he should not return from his wicked way by promising him life ver 22. and yet they there pretended the Spirit that he was come to them and God had sent them when indeed it was no other Spirit from the Lord than such a one as came from him upon Saul when the good Spirit was departed from him The Spirit of truth wants no such covering no such morter makes not the righteous sad makes no body sad by any oppression joy is the fruit of it strengthens not the wicked in his wickedness it is all for justice and righteous dealing And where it comes upon any it as Samuel foretold it 1 Sam. x. 6. and Saul found it 1 Sam. x. 9. gives him another heart turns him into another man The new man St. Paul calls it created in righteousness and true holiness Eph. iv 2. Indeed there was another kind of coming of his this Day He came to day not only into the hearts but upon the heads of the Apostles sate there and thence disperst his heavenly light into rays and flames came down in wind and fire and tongues in wind to shew that it was the Holy Spirit the very breath of heaven that came in fire to signifie the light of truth it brought and in tongues to express it to the world But it was his Inauguration day the first solemnity of his appearance that so both the Disciples and the World might know that come he was whom Christ had promised and be convinced by a visible apparition who else would not have been convicted by any inward evidence which had been without it But thus he appeared but only once In the effect of Tongues indeed but not in the appearance of them he twice afterwards fell upon some Disciples upon the Centurion and his Company the first fruits of the Gentiles Acts x. 46. and upon those Disciples at Ephesus who knew nothing but Iohn's Baptism that so they might sensibly find the difference of Iohn's Baptism and Christs Acts xix 6. They both assoon as they were baptized spake with tongues says the Text the one so honour'd to teach this truth that in all Nations whoever doth righteousness shall be accepted the Gentiles now in Christ as well accepted as the Iews the other so highly favoured that imperfect Christians might be encouraged to go on and not be dismaied to see so many glorious Professors so exceedingly transcend them These comings were miraculous only to found Christianity and settle an Article of Faith the Article of the Holy Ghost never distinctly known to the world till Christianity arose Christ himself was fain to confirm his Divinity by signs and miracles and the God-head of the Holy Ghost can be perswaded by no less But this once done he was to lead us by an ordinary tract no longer now by sight but faith that salvation might be through faith 1 Pet. i. 5. and the blessing upon them who have not seen and yet have believed St. Iohn xx 29. This I must needs say seems the prime and proxime meaning of the words but not the full When he is come points chiefly and nearest at this his first and nearest coming but not only at it Else are we in an ill case now if no spirit to come to us no guide to lead us no truth to settle us It must extend beyond that his visible coming to the ways of his coming unto us
cannot but afflict us at his coming so it is we must see him See we must though but to see the justice of our own damnation Nothing can be more certain then this sight sight it is the surest sense and to see him at his coming is to be certain of it at the least but to see the Son of man at his coming is certainly with evidence and to be bound to see it to have such a tie upon us such a condition on us that we shall see it whether we will or no is a certainty with a necessity upon it That so no man may doubt of a final retribution whilst he is certain he shall one day see him who will reward every man according to his work Let not then the unjustly oppressed innocent let not the less prosperous godly spirit droop or the glorious and yet triumphing sinner the prosperous Rebel or thriving Atheist pride himself in the success of his Sins for he is coming that shall come and make the just mans eyes run over with joy and happiness for his fore-passed tears and fill the others eyes with shame and confusion for all their glory It may be long before he comes but come he will at last and his reward is with him 5. But who is this that comes so the Prophet once so we now or in what shape will he appear God is the Judge of all the earth and who is it that can see God Or if he has committed all judgment to the Son as it is S. Iohn iii. Yet who can see him either being of one substance with the Father the same individual and invisible Essence That therefore he may be seen he comes in the form of the Son of man This was that which Daniel foresaw in his night visions Dan. vii 13. one like the Son of man coming with the Clouds of Heaven that which S. Peter told Cornelius that he it was who was ordain'd to be the judge of quick and dead Acts x. 42. Not as he was Lord of Heaven and Earth or as he was the eternal off-spring of the Deity for so he could not be ordain'd he himself being from all eternity but as the Son of man for he hath given him authority to execute judgment also because he is the Son of man St. John v. 27. That was it by which he obtain'd the Throne of Judgment having in that form both done and suffered all things for our salvation God thinking but just that he should be our Judge who came to save us from judgment that he should judge us who had been partaker of our infirmities and knew our weaknesses and would by the compassion of nature easier acquit us or with more evidence of justice condemn us himself having once been subject to the like humane though not sinful passions This is the form in which all eyes may see him all Nations behold him nor shall the scars of his wounds be covered but that even by them we may acknowledge our crucified Saviour is become our Judge Who whilst he judges us in the form of man will condemn us for nothing above the power of man And yet even by his actions as he was man will he condemn ours His Humility our Pride his Abstinence our Gluttony and excess his Patience our Impatience his Chastity our Lusts his paying Caesar beyond his due our undutiful with-drawings from him in a word his Goodness Piety and Devotion our ungodliness impieties and prophaneness And as it is a mercy thus to be judg'd by one who is sensible of our frail condition so is it a glory besides that our nature is so high exalted as to be the Judge of the world not of men only but Angels too What favour may we not expect when he is our Judge who is our Saviour who will not lay aside our nature in his Glory that he may retain that sympathy and compassion to us which was taken with it when he took it from us 6. I shall not here need to spend much time to tell you 6. what he comes for who have told you so often of a day of Judgment and the Son of man to sit on the tribunal His coming is to Judgment for he comes with power and that power of a Judge Only I must tell you 2. that his motion is no faster then an easie coming So loth is he to come to Judgment so unwilling to enter into dispute with Flesh and Blood that he delays the hasty prayers of the afflicted Saints under the Altars of Heaven seems a little to with-hold the full beams of mercy which he has laid up for the Saints rather then to post to the destruction of the wicked Yet for the elects sake to hasten he does a little and therefore he makes a Cloud the Chariot of his Power that when he once begins to come he may come quickly And not so only but come in Glory which is the last observable in his coming in a Cloud with Power and great Glory In a Cloud he ascended Acts 1. and the Angel told the Disciples there that he should so come as they saw him go In the Clouds say the other Evangelists they speak of more then one His cloud is not a single cloud there are attendant clouds upon it Angels surround his Throne S. Mat. xxv 31. the Trumpet of the Archangel sounds before him 2 Thess. i. 7. his Throne is a throne of Glory S. Mat. xix 28. and his Apostles Thrones are round about him and all things are in subjection under his feet 1 Cor. xv 27. Thus is he rewarded with Majesty and Glory for his meekness and humility that we seeing the recompence of those despised vertues may learn to embrace them by so strong incentives and allurements What will ye one day say O ye obstinate Iews when you shall see his Glory whose poverty you so despised What will ye do at his Throne of Judgment who would not receive him in his Cradle of Mercy How will his enemies bemoan themselves with them Wisd. v. We fools thought his life madness and his end without honour How is he now numbred among the children of God the first born amongst many brethren Fools indeed to count him what we did for he shall come again with Majesty and Glory Glory is a word by which Christ seems as it were ever and anon to refresh the fainting spirits of his Disciples which are ready to betray their Masters to despair upon the apprehension of the fears and terror which their Lord had told them should precede and accompany the latter day This word recalls their spirits that they begin to look up again and lift up their heads For having thus as it were amaz'd their thoughts and unhing'd their patience he setles them again with some special comfort that when these things begin to come to pass they should look up and lift up their heads for however it fall out to others their Redemption draweth nigh Never
fill'd that we should have an absolute or perfect plenitude a plenitude without a diminishing preposition before it Plenitudinem properly speaking it will not be de plenitudine that 's the proper speech somewhat taken from fulness a kind of ablative secondary proportional one We are not capable of other somewhat taken off the height somewhat bated of the perfection of it With this fulness it was that the blessed Virgin the Protomartyr St. Stephen St. Peter St. Paul St. Barnabas and other Saints are said in holy Scripture to be full or fill'd full of Grace or full of Faith or full of the Holy Ghost full as the Bucket not as the Spring full as the Streams not as the Ocean full as the measure not as the immeasurable full with a fulness of abundance not of redundance of sufficiency not of efficiency full enough for our selves but not for others Alas poor narrow shallow things that we are we cannot hold enough for our selves and others too Take from the Bucket or the Stream and the Bucket will not be full and the Stream will want of what it had Lest there be not enough for us and you was more then a just fear of the wise Virgins there is not will not cannot be enough No man is sanctified by anothers Grace no man justified by anothers Faith the Fathers goodness will not satisfie for the Sons ungraciousness nor the Mothers Piety for the Daughters Vanity their Righteousness be it as full as it can will but suffice only for themselves 't is only Christs Fulness his Grace his Righteousness that can communicate it self that we can take any thing from to fill up our own Sufficient I think this to read us a second lesson of humility not to think too much of our own Righteousness nor to pride our selves in our receipts for of another they are but from them no other they are received of his but none receive of ours Sufficient 2. this too to teach us not to trust to the Piety of our Forefathers as if their fulness of good works should excuse our emptiness They had but their share what would serve their turns we must afresh to the Spring-head to have enough to serve ours And the comfort is in the next point that it will cost us nothing we have it gratis for gratia it is of free grace and favour that we receive it 3. That we may not doubt it 't is doubled in the Text redoubled grace all meerly grace nothing but grace from it and for it and by it Nothing from desert nothing from works for if of works not of grace says St. Paul Rom. 11. 6. that's plain for if of desert not of grace but duty not bought or purchased neither freely without mony says the Prophet Isa. 55. 1. Come drink and eat and fill your selves The Ocean runs not freer than his grace Who hath first given unto him says the Apostle Rom. 11. 35. Who first why no body sure for before there was any body before the foundation of the world Ephes. 1. 4. he begun with us even then gratificavit nos he accepted us all grace from the beginning Hence too is a lesson of humility the Text and day is full of it from one end of the Text to the other one end of the day to the other grace grace to put down all opinion of merit or desert as if it meant to teach us to be fill'd with humility from the fulness of it this day shewed by Christ and to be read from all the Texts that concern it as if grace it self had this day appeared to teach it 4. So much perhaps to be prest the rather from the fulness of the grace that now follows to be considered in the next particular lest by the abundance of it we should be exalted above measure as St. Paul by the abundance of his Revelations 2 Cor. xii 7. For men may be proud of graces and here are store received in the Text. 1. Gratiam pro gratiâ the grace of the Gospel for the grace of the Law that 's the more abundant says St. Paul Rom. v. 17 20. though this was a grace too a favour when time was and that such he shewed no such grace to any people as to the Iew. To them the Adoption the Glory the Covenants the giving of the Law the Service of God the Promises the Fathers the coming of Christ also according to the flesh all these graces appertained Rom. ix 4 5. these all were great ones but the Law brought nothing to perfection Heb. vii 19. The very end of it was Christ Rom. x. 4. The Law as great a favour as it was was but the Law still full of shadows and imperfections full of rigours without ability to perform them That came by Christ the very grace and beauty and glory of the Law was Christ the grace of the Gospel that was it which was the perfection of the Law the fulness of the Adoption the performance of the Covenants the finishing bringing in a better service the fulfilling of the promises the expectation of the Fathers the fulness of Christ not according to the weakness of the flesh but according to the power of the Spirit and of an endless grace This is de plenitudine right over and above all graces and favours that were shewed before all that ever any received before us So much above them as spiritual and eternal blessings are above the temporal as the reward of glory is above all other rewards for grace for grace 2. is grace for glory grace given us by Christ to the end we may obtain eternal glory by it all the graces If I may so call the good works of the Law tended only to temporal promises read the whole Law over and shew me any other if you can the grace of the Gospel of Christ it is that first revealed the hopes of glory thence the Kingdom of Heaven is heard of first there first of grace for glory grace was single grace till Christ took a second nature to double it to grace all to us And 3. here 's glory again for grace according to other Interpreters the reward as sure as the work is Grace is not only given us to purchase Glory but Glory as surely given us for that Grace The glory of the Law or the works of the Law had no grace at all was but a kind of dark dusky thing The glory of the Gospel and the glory after it and from it is that only that exceeds in glory Thus Grace is doubled upon Grace we have Grace for Glory Grace to come to Glory and Glory again to reward our Grace two great ingredients of the fulness we receive gratiam pro gratiâ even each of these for the other Yet to make the Glory yet more glorious the Grace more gracious here is 4. Grace for Grace yet in another sense one Grace for another one to advance another Grace upon Grace that we may
their unrighteousness and their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more ver 10. 12. a Covenant of pardon and remission such as the Sacrifices of the Law could not give were not able And new Books we have it written in as authentick as those old ones in the Iewish Canon where we may find all seal'd by the testimony of the Spirit Heb. vi the Author of the new Testament as well as of the old 6. The new Church has its new Sacraments Ite Baptizata for Ite Circumcidite Baptism for Circumcision and the Lords Supper for the Passeover in both which of ours there is more than was in theirs in those legal Ceremonies not only outward signs as they but inward graces 7. New Sacrifices the calves of our lips instead of Calves and Goats the sacrifices of Praises and Thanksgivings nay the sacrifice of a contrite heart and humble spirit the sacrificing of our lusts and the offering up of our souls and bodies a living holy acceptable Sacrifice Rom. xii 1. 8. A new Priesthood to offer them an unchangeable Priesthood now Heb. vii 24. Christ our High-Priest and the Ministers of the New Testament 2 Cor. iii. 6. as so many under-Priests to offer them up to God Christ offer'd himself a Sacrifice offers up also our Prayers and Praises to his Father has left his Ministers in his Name and Merits to do it too and this a lasting Priesthood to last for ever 9. We have a new Altar too so St. Paul Heb. xiii 10. an Altar that they which serv'd the Tabernacle have no power to eat of Take it for the Cross on which Christ offered up himself or take it for the holy Table where that great Sacrifice of his is daily commemorated in Christian Churches Habem says the Apostle such an one we have and I am sure 't is new 10. Temples we have many new the Temples of our bodies 1 Cor. vi 19. those both to offer in and offer up and 2. Churches many for that one Temple so long since buried in dust and rubbish 11. There is above these a new Spirit Ezek. xxxvi 26. not the spirit of bondage again to fear but the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father Rom. viii 15. the spirit of love and not of fear the spirit of Sons and not of Servants a spirit that will cause us to walk in Gods Statutes keep his Commandments and do them Ezek. xxxvi 27. a new thing indeed that can make the Beasts of the Field to honour him as the Prophet speaks of it Isa. xliii 19. the Dragons and the Owls to do so the most sensual fierce cruel and dullest natures bow unto him that gives waters in the Wilderness and Rivers in the Desart Isa. xliii 19. 20. that blows but with his wind and these waters flow Psal. cxlvii 18. this is a new spirit that is so powerful And from this spirit it is that we 12. receive new life and vigour that we walk not under the Gospel so dully and coldly as they under the Law where the outward work to the letter serv'd the turn but according to the spirit in the inward purity of the heart as well as in the outward purity of the body To which lastly there is a new inheritance annexed a new Heaven and a new Earth which we may look for according to his promise 2 St. Pet. iii. 13. And are not these new things all good news worth our rejoycings Can we be ever old that enjoy such mercies are they not enough to revive the dying spirit nay to raise the dead one to set forth his praises who thus renews us as the Eagle renews his mercies to us every morning makes us Kings and Priests gives us easie Laws and pleasing Covenants effectual Sacrifices and saving Sacraments turns our bodies into his Temples and our hearts into Altars makes us a glorious Church and builds us Churches inspires us with a new Spirit and gives us a second life gives us a Kingdom gives us Heaven and all This is the new state under Christ since his coming ended and renewed our years unto us And therefore says our Apostle just before the Text If any man be in Christ he is a new creature all this new work is done upon him that 's the second way we are now to consider the words That in the Christian truly such all old things are past away and all things become new He is dead to sin Rom. vi 2. and he is dead to the Law Rom. vii 4. or if you will sin and the Law are both dead to him they can hold him no longer he is alive unto God Rom. vi 11. new created in righteousness and true holiness Will you have it more particular Why first then the Heathen ignorance and error that is past with them they are enlightned Heb. vi they know God and are known of him they are light in the Lord the very children of it The Heathen sins they are past with them in them they walkt once Ephes. ii 2. such they were some of them 1 Cor. vi 11. but now they are washt but now they are sanctified but now they are justified Nor are they now 2. under so slender a providence as the poor Heathen were God visits them often now and not only now and then and suffers them not to go on or fall back again into the old ways of infidelity But they are not only out of the Heathen condition but out of the Iewish too no more in bondage to the Law The sacrificing of Rams and Goats of all sensual affections is done already the unreasonable part is mortified in them they have been washt and need be wash'd no more they are oblig'd to no differences of meats no Iewish Sabbatizing no Circumcision no one particular place of Worship no legal Rites or Ceremonies Christ having abolished in his flesh the Law of Commandments says S. Paul contained in ordinances Ephes. ii 15. We are now at liberty he has made us free And we are now 3. under a new course of providence God leads us now by spiritual and eternal promises he threatens spiritual and everlasting punishments guides us by a clearer light than Prophesie the evidence of the Word and Spirit ties us not up to the Covenant of Works nor empty Ceremonies these things are past Makes us not rich that he may accept us but accepts us as we are He reckons not of us by our wealth or honour or learning or our parts we know no man so now ver 16. not Christ so now according to the flesh we value not any man now for any thing but holiness and righteousness for so much as he is in Christ. Nor does the Christian value himself now for any thing but for that of Christ which is in him riches he contemns honour he despises learning he submits all outward and externall priviledges and commendations he lays at the foot of Christ devotes them to his commands
these are all old worn tatter'd things not worth the taking up nothing now worth any thing but Christ nothing but Christ and those new things those graces are in him Thus old things are past with the true Christian but 2. all things also are become new in him He has a new heart and a new spirit he has no more a heart of stone but a heart of flesh a soft tender pliable heart a meek and well disposed spirit a loving spirit he is no more what he was the old ego he has a new understanding things look not to him as they did of old he vilifies the world and worldly things His affections new he affects not what he did before he contemns all things below He is a King and rules over his passions he is a Priest and sanctifies them with his Prayers he lives under a new Law the Law of the Spirit and not the Flesh he makes every day new Covenants with God A Member of the Church he is and the Kingdom of God is now within him He is a great adorer of the Sacraments of the Church and daily offers up himself a Sacrifice to God his Soul and Body and all he has and pours out his praises His Body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost and the Altar of his Heart burns with the continual fires of Devotion and Charity He now lives no more but Christ lives in him that 's the new life he leads and it leads him into glory A new thing of which he has a glimpse and a kind of antipast here that makes him relish nothing else but cast all behind his back as old rags and dirt to press forward to the mark for the price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus Phil. iii. 14. This is the new Creature the new man in whom old things are past away and all things become new And shall all things become new and not we shall all old things pass away and we remain in our old sins still every thing be cloth'd with a new lustre we only appear in our old rags still Certainly we cannot judge it reasonable Better use I hope we will make of this days Text of this New-years lesson Put off says the Apostle concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts and be renewed in the spirit of our minds and put on that new man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness Eph. iv 22 23 24. 'T is his counsel must be our practise The time past of our life may suffice us says S. Peter 1 Pet. iv 3. to have wrought the will of the Gentiles It is sufficient it is sufficient 'T is time now we unlearn our old lesson unravel our old work leave off our old course of life and begin a new to live henceford to righteousness and not to sin to God and not to men The new entred year calls for it the Text calls for it the Blood of Christ spent at his Circumcision lately past which yet this day and some days still to come commemorate cries for it that we would no longer count the blood of the new Covenant an unholy thing but betake us to it and live by it after a new fashion in newness of life I call you not to legal washings but the washings of Baptism and Repentance not to Iewish Feasts but Christian Festivals not to sacrifice Lambs and Sheep but your Souls and Bodies not to old Ceremonies but the new substance the Righteousness of Jesus Christ. Let him now begin his new reign in you let his new Commandment of Love be obeyed by you his Church purchased so dearly not be cowardly deserted by you keep his Covenant frequent his Temples adorn his Altars reverence his Priests follow the guidance of his Holy Spirit when he inspires good motions into your hearts amend your lives and become all new men in Jesus Christ. And when all these old things shall pass away and the new Heaven and Earth appear when he that sits upon the Throne Rev. xxi 5. shall make all things new then shall we be all made new again even these old decayed ruines of our bodies too and both souls and bodies clothed with the new Robes of Glory that shall never pass away but be ever new ever glorious for evermore THE SECOND SERMON ON THE Circumcision St. LUKE ii 21. His Name was called Iesus ANd to Day it was that He was called so when eight days were accomplished for his circumcising And they did well to call him so for it was the Name the Angel named him before he was conceived in the womb And he could be called by no better For Nomen super omne nomen says St. Paul of it Phil. ii 9. A name it is above every name for above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but also in that which is to come Eph. i. 21. A Name that has all things in it that brings all good things with it that speaks more in five letters than we can do in five thousand words speaks more in it than we can speak to day and yet we intend to day to speak of nothing else nothing but Iesus nothing but Iesus The sooner then we begin the better And to begin the sooner we shall set upon it without either the Circumstances before or after in the verse or the Ceremonies either of Preamble or of Division of the words Only for Method sake and memory I shall shew you the fulness and greatness of this Name in these seven Particulars 'T is a Name of Truth and Fidelity 'T is a Name of Might and Power 'T is a Name of Majesty and Glory 'T is a Name of Grace and Mercy 'T is a Name of Sweetness and Comfort 'T is a Name of Wonder and Admiration 'T is a Name of Blessing and Adoration A faithful mighty glorious gracious comfortable admirable blessed Name it is given Him to Day to be called by but to be called by and to be called upon by us for ever that we also may be filled with the truth and power and glory and grace and sweetness and wonder and all the blessings of it This is the sum of what we have to say of this Great Name and now we go on with the Particulars A Name it is first of veracity and fidelity of faithfulness and truth This Iesus is but the old Ieshua 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so much mentioned so often fortold so long expected all the Scripture thorow The Greek termination of● only added that we might so understand that all those Types Prophesies and Promises were now terminated and at an end in this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in this Iesus the Greeks and Gentiles taken in too to fulfill all that had been before named or spoken any way concerning him The testimony of Iesus is the very spirit of Prophesie Rev. xix
consider the practise of those first Christian Saints and Martyrs those daily pains and cares their days and nights were spent in we would think our Race to heaven another-gates business Christianity another manner of thing than we make it now a days or are willing to conceive it Were there no other word than this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Text this run to express it we might understand it to be a work of labour and if we take it with that reference it has to the Olympick Races there are many things in the performance that will sufficiently shew it What a deal of pains and care did they take first to fit and prepare themselves And then with what might and main did they pursue their course How often have such Racers been taken up at the Goal so tired and spent that they have had much ado to recover their life or spirits Ah! did we but half so much for heaven there were no doubt of it Running take we it how we will is a violent exercise that for the time imploys all the parts and powers 'T is that the Apostle would have here that all the faculties and powers of our souls and bodies should be taken up in the business of heaven Our heads study it our hearts bend wholly to it our affections strive violently after it our hands labour for it our feet run the ways of Gods Commandments to come to it our eyes run down with water for it and our bodies with sweat about it 'T will cost somewhat more to come to heaven than a few good words at the last than a Lord forgive me and have mercy upon me when we are going out of the World or than a hot fit or two of Piety when we are in it or a cold and careless walking and stragling up and down in it throughout even all our lives Nay more 't is not running over whole Breviaries of Prayers 'T is not running over good Books only neither reading and studying of good things but running as we read that all that run may read in our running the Characters of heaven Would men but lay this to heart that it is no such easie or perfunctory business to get thither their courses would be better their lives holier themselves heavenlier than they are nor would so many put off the work to the last cast make a meer death-bed business of it as if they then were fit enough to run Gods ways when they cannot stir a hand or foot whereby 't is more then to be fear'd they deceive themselves and being then in no possibility to run they go they know not whither II. And yet for all the pains and running we talk of if now secondly it have not an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to rule and steer it if it be not a so running such a one as is right set to obtain we had as good sit still This so to run is 1. To run lawfully 2. To run carefully 3. To run speedily 4. To run willingly 5. To run stoutly 6. To run patiently 7. To run constantly and to the end To run 1. lawfully according to the Laws and Rules prescribed to obtain it 2. Carefully the way to obtain it 3. Speedily with the speed requisite to obtain it 4. Willingly with spirit to obtain it 5. Stoutly to endure any thing to obtain it 6. Patiently to expect to obtain it 7. Constantly not giving out till we obtain it 1. Lawfully according to the Laws and Rules of the Race we are to run we are not crowned else says our Apostle 2 Tim. ii 5. Now the Laws of the Christian Race are Gods Commandments according to which we are diligently to direct our steps Yet three Laws there are more particular and proper to it the Law of Faith the Law of Hope and the Law of Charity These the three more peculiar Rules of it We must run in a full belief of Gods Promises in Christ that in him they are yea and in him Amen that God will not let one tittle of them fall to the ground Looking unto Iesus the Author and finisher of our faith Heb. xii 2. of our course too We must secondly run in hope that through his grace we also even we though the most unworthy shall obtain laying hold upon the hope so set before us Heb. vi 18. And thirdly in Charity must be our course though we strive for the mastery it must not be in strife or envy but in love and charity in unity and peace in love unfeigned our selves 2 Cor. vi 6. and provoking one another to it Heb. x. 24. no other strifes or provocation but who shall go before one another in love so keeping the bond of peace which once broken our clothes and garments which were tied up to us with it as with a girdle fall all down about us and hinder us both in our Race and of our Crown Those who have broke this bond and rent the Churches Robes and their own souls by their unhappy separations will after all their labour with those in the Psalm sleep their sleep and find nothing nothing but that they have hindered both others and themselves of the Crown of glory Run we lawfully and orderly then that first And 2. run we carefully too neither to the right hand nor to the left neither looking after sensual pleasures or worldly profits or sinful lusts not turning aside after those golden balls which the Devil the Flesh and world are always casting in the way to hinder us but straight on our course carefully shunning all temptations stumbling-blocks and stones of offence which are likely to trip up our heels and throw us in our race what carefulness says St. Paul 2 Cor. vii 11. has your godly sorrow wrought will earnest desire of a heavenly Crown say I work in you if you would think upon it It would make you 3. gather up all your strength set to all your force put to all your speed you would think you could not come soon enough to so glorious a Goal Let us go speedily and pray before the Lord say they in Zachary viii 21. Make haste and come down says our Saviour to Zacheus St. Luke xix 6. as if he that meant to see Christ here at his own house or hereafter in his must make what haste he can Running is our speediest motion and the more haste to Heaven the better speed though to earthly things the proverb says it is not and the reason may be indeed because our swiftest motion is to be towards Heaven to be reserv'd for that Yet willingly 4. must it be we must do it without Whip or Spur they are for unreasonable Beasts and not for men in running We are not to look that God should force and drive us to his work he loves no such workmen A ready mind is Gods Sacrifice he accepts no other If I do it willingly says our Apostle ver 17. I have a reward no reward else to
nor stir nor raise up our selves or our heads Who shall ascend Whatever question it is it is most certainly an assertion of difficulty Who shall ascend no man can read it but he will read hardness in the ascending And yet it would be harder but for the last consideration of the words that 't is a kind of admiration of the Prophets at the foresight of Christs Ascension He in his spirit foresaw his Saviour climb this Hill and wonder'd ●t it From his ascending some of the difficulty is abated He has led one way ●●ac'd a path open'd a door into Heaven unto all Believers so we us'd to sing in the Te Deum I need not tell you he has ascended in all the senses of the words no height of holiness but he has none frequenter in the Temple than he was none in Heaven till he came thither He the first that made our dull earth ascend so high He rose and ascended up on high without the least help of metaphor or figure rose from the Grave ascended into the Hill a●cended thence into the Hill of the Lord stands there at his right hand St. Stephen saw him so Acts ●ii 53. Never said Prophet any thing that more punctually fell out than this he may well admire it and so may we Yea and praise him too To him we owe all our Ascensions all the height and ascensions of our spirits in grace and goodness all our priviledges to worship him in holy places all our assurances and hopes of Heaven and the possession of it His rising raises us his ascending makes us ascend He the only prime singular one we only as parts and members of him What is then left us to do What for all this priviledge Why if Christs grace and Gods Worship and Heaven it self be such priviledges I hope we will not be so silly to forgo them or betray them Seeing they be so high ones we cannot be so unworthy now to do any thing beneath them any base or unworthy thing Being holy ones too we will not be so profane to pollute our selves or them with lusts and sacriledges Being so admirable priviledges all we cannot certainly but adore Gods mercy in them Being glorious ones too we must glorifie him for them count all things dross and dung in comparison of them Being yet hard to come by the more need we have to labour for them set all our powers make it all our work to get them to get grace and worship and glory to ascend the hill and holy place with all holiness as the way to glory In a word seeing all this priviledge comes by Christ 't is him we are to thank and serve and worship upon his own hill and in his own holy place till the time come till we ascend in glory And yet there is something more behind the way to this hill the conditions required to obtain this priviledge what we are to perform that we may attain it To have clean hands and pure hearts minds not lift up to vanity and mouths that will not swear to deceive our neighbour For he only shall ascend into the hill of the Lord he only shall rise up in his holy place he only is a true Believer he only truly worships God when he comes to Church to worship he only shall go to Heaven that hath clean hands c. THE FIRST SERMON UPON Whitsunday St. JOHN iii. 8. The wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof but canst not tell whence it cometh nor whither it goeth So is every one that is born of the Spirit THe wind bloweth And this day it blew to purpose A mighty rushing wind there was that this day fill'd the House where the Disciples were assembled Acts ii 2. And it blew truly where it listed when it blew only in that Chamber where they were And the sound of it was heard sufficiently when Parthians and Medes and Elamites the dwellers in Mesopotamia and in Iudea in Cappadocia Pontus and Asia Phrygia and Pamphilia in Aegypt and in the parts of Lybia about Cyrene and strangers of Rome Iews and Proselites Cretes and Arabians all of them this day heard it fram'd into articulate voices into Tongues as many and divers as the Countries they came from Yet could not any of them tell whence this wind blew whence these sounds came for they were all amazed and in doubt saying one to another What meaneth this ver 12. Nor could the Disciples themselves but in general that from heaven it came nor whither it went when it retired from them This Day then was this Text fulfilled in your ears O happy Disciples Nicodemus might to day by experiment understand what in this Chapter he could not apprehend the Wind and Spirit both together and feel the workings of them both there both in one descent together though here he did not when they were put in one word together where whether Spiritus Ventus or Spiritus Spiritus both 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were understood Expositors have disputed and it stands yet upon the question The Ancients restrained the words to the holy Spirit and translate it Spiritus The Modern Expositors to the Wind and translate it Ventus To do both right we shall joyn both senses understand the words as a similitude made by our blessed Saviour to instruct both Nicodemus and us in the ways of the Spirit and in the knowledge of the spiritual Regeneration by the likeness of the Wind. So two Simile's there will be in the Text. Sicut Ventus sic Spiritus and Sicut spiritus sic spiritualis The First Similitude is between the Wind and the Spirit The Second between the Spirit and the spiritual man or him that is born of the Spirit In the similitude betwixt the Wind and the Spirit we shall observe I. The Nature of them both in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 breath or Wind or Spirit it signifies them all II. The Power and Operation both of the one and of the other they blow both of them where they list III. The Plainness of their sounds Thou hearest the sound thereof both of them easie enough to be heard IV. The Obscurity yet of both their Motions ye know of neither of them whence they come or whither they go According to these four points will the second similitude be extended too He that is born of the Spirit will be like the Spirit in all four In his Nature in his Operations in his Plainness in some particulars and his Obscurity in others So is every one that is born of the Spirit But to tell you fully the true Condition of him that is born of the Spirit I must tell you first the Nature the Operations and the Properties of the Spirit And to tell you the Nature the Operations and the Properties of the Spirit I must shew you also those of the Wind that so by the more perfect discovery of them we may the more perfectly admire them and
dead Earth into Herbs and Flowers Such a wind is this Spirit that gives life to every one that comes into the world for he is the Spirit of Life Rom. viii 2. But that which adds somewhat still to the fuller glory of these effects and must not be pass'd without a note is that 't is Spirit still this wind blows still For however the winds are not always in a noise and bustle yet some spirit of air there is that moves in the deepest stillness Spiritus there is always though not ventus some tender breeze though no gale of wind there is always stirring And if there were not continually some such sweet breathings of the Holy Spirit upon us when those strong and louder blasts seem to be lull'd asleep we were but dead men and might sleep for ever but such there are and we live by them I might but I will not add any more to the Effects either of the Wind or of the Spirit I pass on to their Course and Compass to shew you how far their effects and powers reach The Wind bloweth where it listeth and the Spirit where he willeth And here I must tell you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vbi vult is a large circuit Vbi is where and Vbi is when and Vult is what you will especially when 't is his who worketh all things according to the counsel of his will Ephes. i. 11. So that 't will be no stretching to say either of the Wind or of the Spirit that it bloweth 1. Where it lists and 2. How it lists and 3. As much as it lists and 4. On whom it lists and 5. When it lists 1. The Wind blows where it lists on this side or on that side or on any side any where and every where The Spirit does so too only with more propriety to Vbi vult doing out of the liberty of its own will what the wind only does out of the subtilty of its nature No place lies exempted from the power of his will It finds St. Paul and Silas in the prison and blows up the organs of their voices into Songs and Hymns It finds Manasses in the dungeon blows there with his wind and the waters flow out of his eyes It finds St. Matthew at the receipt of Custom and blows him out of a Publican into an Apostle It blows St. Peter and St. Andrew out of their Boat to the stern of the Church of Christ. He blows upon some in their journey as upon St. Paul upon others at home as upon Cornelius upon one in the bed upon another at the Mill upon Ionas in the Whales belly No place beyond his compass not the Isles of the Gentiles not the land of Vz not the Deserts of Arabia Here and there even amongst them he blows some into his Kingdom In a word no chamber so secret but it can get into no place so remote but it can reach none so private but it can find none so strong but it can break through none so deep but it can fathom none so high but it can scale no place at all but it can come into and none so bad but some way or other it will vouchsafe to visit It makes Holy David cry out as in an extasie Psal. cxxxix 6. Whither shall I go then from thy Spirit or Whether shall I go then from thy Presence If I climb up into Heaven thou art there if I go down to Hell thou art there also If I take the wings of the morning and remain in the uttermost parts of the earth even there also shall thy hand lead me and thy right hand shall hold me No place it seems in Heaven or Earth or Sea or Hell it self can hold him out Nor can any hold him to this or that way of working neither for He bloweth 2. How he lists sometimes louder sometimes softer sometimes after this manner sometimes after that He raises new inclinations or he cherishes the old He changes the tempers of men or disposes them He removes opportunities of doing ill or he propounds opportunities of doing good he scares us with threats or allures us with promises he drives us with judgments or he draws us with mercies he inflames us within or he moves us from without which way soever it pleases him No wind so various in its blowing Different ways he has to deal with divers men and diversities of gifts he has for them too differences of Administrations diversities of Operations 1 Cor. xii 5. To one he gives the word of wisdom to another the word of knowledge to another faith to another the gift of healing to another the working of miracles to another prophesie to another discerning of spirits to another divers kinds of tongues to another the interpretation of tongues all from the Spirit says the Apostle in the forecited Chapter Nor was this only for those times He still breaths diversities of gifts and graces as he pleases On some sanctifying graces on others edifying On others both To some he gives a cheerful to others a sad spirit to some a kind of holy lightness to others a religious gravity to one a power wholly to quit the World to another power to stand holy in it to one an ability to rule to another a readiness to obey to one courage to another patience to a third temperance and so to others other graces as he thinks fittest 3. Yet of these gifts to some more to some less not to all alike nay not to the same person always alike neither but 3. as much only as this Spirit will All have not faith alike nor hope alike nor charity alike nor courage alike nor patience alike neither all vertues nor any vertues all alike Upon some the abundance of the Spirit dwells upon others he breaths only some have had exstasies others but only moderate breathings Eliah had abundance of the Spirit yet Elisha has it doubled 2 Kings ii 9. And yet this very same Elisha that presently upon it divides Iordan with the wind of a Mantle and restores waters to their sweetness and earth to its fruitfulness by a cruse of Salt 2 Kings ii 21. in but the very next Chapter cannot so much as prophesie without a Minstrel ver 15. is not so much as in a disposition to receive this divine Spirit without the help of an Instrument of Musick to rally his spirits into harmony and order St. Paul who was but even now caught up into the third Heavens 2 Cor. xii 1. feels by and by such a thorn in the flesh ver 7. that of all that great extraordinary proportion he has no more left him than a poor pittance a mere sufficiency ver 9. 4. And the Person is as much in his own power as the measure is He blows not only what but upon whom he will He is no mans debtor Rom. xi 35. He will have mercy upon whom he will have mercy Rom. ix 18. What
yet so much he lov'd them that he would not leave them comfortless though himself who was their only joy and comfort was to go away yet he would not leave them without another Comforter Though he that was the way must ascend yet a guide should presently descend to guide them after him though he who was the Truth must back to Heaven yet the Spirit of Truth should forthwith come down to guide them into all truth to bring them thither So that here even without a guide you may easily find two Considerables 1. The Advent or coming of the Holy Spirit when He the Spirit of Truth is come 2. The Intent or purpose of it the end and benefit of his Advent or coming He will guide you into all Truth that 's the business In the First we shall consider 1. His title He The Spirit of Truth 2. His motion Is Come 3. His time When indefinite it is here but a due time it has and we will strive to learn when it is 4. His manner of coming 1. Invisibly as a Spirit 2. Effectually as a Spirit of Truth 3. Gently and 4. Softly both implied in the word or term of Coming 5. Suddenly too sometimes when he is come as if so suddenly that we should not feel or know it till he is In the Second the Intent or Benefit of his coming we shall observe 1. The benefit What it is To lead 2. Whether into truth Into Truth 3. How far Into all Truth Yea but 4. to Whom all these to you even to lead you You and you and you all of us in our way in our order one after another Yea but lastly lead us and into truth and into all truth but How 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 says the Text shew and make and draw us out a way and conduct and move and actuate us in it When have thus considered them single and apart we will joyn them again together and so leave them Tell you how the leading is always proportionate to his coming as he comes so he leads If he comes miraculously and extraordinarily so he leads if invisibly and ordinarily so he leads as much as he comes into us so much he leads us as is his coming so is his leading and no other the one answerable to the other And lastly all this we shall make good from Christs promise here 1 That his Promise we have for it who will not cannot fail us 2. Promise upon promise 3. a promise with a non obstante with a Howbeit that howbeit all else should fail this should not howbeit to the world this Spirit may prove something else then a Guide a Reprover or a Judge yet to us he shall be a guide into the way of truth This will be the sum these the heads of my Discourse which that I may happily pursue Come thou O Spirit of Truth and guide my thoughts and words this day that I may teach thy ways unto the people and declare thy Truth We are to begin with the Spirits Advent or his Coming for come to us he must before he guide us and that his entertainment may be according enquire we first Who it is His Titles here will best inform you He the Spirit of c. 1. He What 's He He is a relative relates to an Antecedent refers to some person mentioned before Who 's that 1. the Comforter ver 7. Who 's He the Comforter 2. which is the Holy Ghost Chap. xiv 26. 3. One that the world cannot receive ver 17. of the same Chapter so great that the world as wide as it is cannot contain him so good that the world which as St. Iohn speaks lies in wickedness cannot receive him 4. a Comforter that shall abide for ever ver 16. an eternal Comforter 5. whom I will send unto you from my Father Chap. xv 26. a heavenly Comforter which proceedeth from the Father the same verse a Comforter who is the very Spirit of God or God the Spirit proceeding This is He we speak of this is He that is said here to come that is said still to come 2. Well may the Evangelist stand and stop at his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here stand and take breath here at this He as if he knew not how to go further how to call him how to express him He the Comforter he that abides for ever he whom the world cannot receive he the Holy Ghost he that proceeds from the Father and the Son all this he had said already and more he thought he could not say and therefore now here makes a halt as I may say He and no more to give us time to consider of the greatness of the person that is to come and to prepare for his coming Yet to confirm all that before he has said of him as he began the promise of him Chap. xiv ver 16 17. under the name of the Spirit of Truth so he concludes it with the same Title that we might know all that he has said is truth all that Christ has promised of him is no more than truth for he is the Spirit of Truth The Spirit of Truth 1. To make good and true all that Christ had promised the very seal and signature of our Redemption Ephes. iv 30. to seal the conveyance of our Inheritance to us Ephes. i. 14. to make that good to bear witness with our spirit that we are the Children of God Rom. viii 16. to make all good to us both in Heaven and in Earth 2. He is the Spirit of Truth because the Spirit of God and Christ. God is Truth and Christ is the Truth St. Iohn xiv 16. and the Spirit of God he is 1 Cor. ii 11. and the Spirit of Christ he is Phil. i. 19. so to be sure the Spirit of Truth if of God and Christ. 3. The Spirit of Truth is the Spirit of Prophesie Rev. xix 10. those holy men spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. i. 21. who spake by the Prophets says the Nicene Creed and Prophets they are not but lyars who speak not the truth nor is it Prophesie if it be not truth 4. The Spirit of Truth for that as he inspires grace so he doth truth too all supernatural truths to be sure For truths there are many and spirits there are many but no truth but from him nor no Spirit of Truth but he himself He is the Fountain of Truth as in him and from him it is we live and breath He breaths into us this breath of life the spirit of life from this Spirit so from this Spirit of Truth all the truth that at any time breaths from us even natural truths and the truths of reason but that 's not it Inspired truths spiritual truths they are the proper effects of this Spirit Other truths may be from him nay are originally all from him as all good from God that eternal source of goodness but they may sometimes arise and breath from
it and finds fault with it for infidelity and unbelief sets up Christs righteousness and blames the world for neglecting it and following its own vanity interests and humours professes the Prince of the world cast out by Christ the devil overcome and brought to to judgment by him our sins forgiven we acquitted and the World condemned this cannot be from the Spirit of the World nor from the Spirit of the Flesh nor from the Spirit of darkness and error for this were to bear witness against themselves but from the Spirit of light and truth Read the Text now over again When he c. he shall guide you into all truth If it be the Spirit of truth that informs you it will 8. dispose you equally to all truth not to this only or to that which most agrees with your education humour temper or disposition condition custom interest or estate but universally to all to any though never so hard or opposite to them so they be truths He that is thus affected towards truth is not only probable to be directed into truth in all his Doctrines and Assertions but may most properly be said to have the Spirit of truth already come speaking and residing in him Yet go a little further to the next words He shall not speak of himself but whatsoever he shall hear that Spirit 9. that does not seek it self that opinion which renounces the glory of a Leader the ambition of a Faction the affectation of Singularity the honour of himself that speaks not of its own head but what he has heard with his ears and his Fathers have declared as done in the time of old that makes not new opinions but takes up the old such as Christ delivered to the Apostles they also to the Fathers they downward to their successors this is most probably if not most certainly the Spirit of truth The Spirit sure of humility it is that trusts not relies not on its self or its own judgment and the Spirit of humility is the Spirit of truth for them that be meek and humble them shall he guide in judgment and such as be gentle them does he learn his way Psal. xxv 8. Yet on a little And he will shew you things to come Those Doctrines 10. that refer all to the world to come which mind nothing seriously but things above and things to come which ever and only teach us to fix there they are surely from the Spirit of truth because no truth like that which is to fulfil all promises and that to be sure is yet to come One more glance and I have done with this and 't is but a glance to the very next words He shall glorifie me Those Doctrines which give God all the glory which return the glory of all to Christ which so exalt man only as the better thereby to glorifie God so set up Christ as that they make him both the healer of our nature and the preserver of it the remitter of our sins and the conferrer of Grace the first mover of us to good the assister of us in it the sanctifier of us with it the justifier of us thorow it the rewarder of us for it and yet all this while the accepter of us when we have done the best which accuses not Christ of false judgment in justifying the sinner whilst he is no better and pronouncing him just when he is no other than wicked and unjust nor denies the efficacy of his grace to make us clean to have a true cleansing purifying sanctifying power as well as that which they call the justifying these Doctrines which take not this glory away from Christ but give the power as well of making as pronouncing righteous to his grace that thus magnifie and glorifie his Justification and Redemption they certainly glorifie Christ are the only Doctrines that glorifie Christ truly and according to the Spirit of truth So now let 's sum up the matter Those Doctrines which are contrary to worldly carnal sensual respects not conceivable by the natural or carnal man That 2. stick by us when worldly comforts leave us That 3. are according to Christs Word and his Example accompanied with Meekness and Obedience Which 4. teach us charity and love to one another Which 5. inform us rightly in the prime Articles of the Faith Which 6. witness nothing more than Christ an universal Saviour as Adam the universal sinner Which 7. reprove the sins and infidelities of the World and show us the way to be acquitted from them Which 8. have a kind of conduct and sincere affection with them to all truths whatsoever under whatever term or name though never so odious so contrary to interest or honour Which 9. seek not their own name to get a name or set up a Faction but are consonant to the ancient Fathers and Primitive Antiquity with humble submission to it Which 10. lift up all our thoughts to heaven and 11. by all means possible can give God and Christ and the holy Spirit the glory deny nothing to them that is theirs under a foolish pretence only to abate and vilifie man beyond the truth these Doctrines are truth so much of them at least as agree with these Rules are from the Spirit of truth and are manifestations that the Spirit of truth is come to that soul that embraces them If all these together then the Spirit altogether if but some of these but some so much of that neither All Doctrines and Opinions 1. that savour of worldly or carnal interests that 2. change and wheel about according to the times and will not hold out to the last which 3. are not regulated by the Word of God or are any way contrary to Christs Example of Patience and Obedience Which 4. are not for peace and charity Which 5. deny any Article of the three Creeds we acknowledge Which 6. confine the mercies of our Saviour and bear false witness of him Which 7. advance any sin or suffer men to live in it Which 8. love not truth because it is truth but for other ends Which 9. seek any other title to be distinguished by than that of Christian or glories in it which disagree from the stream and current of Antiquity Which 10. fixes our thoughts too much below Or 11. rob God or Christ or the holy Spirit of the glory of any good or the perfection of their work be they cried up never so high for truth and Spirit the new discovery of Christ and new light of truth and the very dictate of the Spirit they are not so it is not when nor then that the Spirit of truth is come there is not that in them by which Christ has described the Spirit of truth One thing there is behind when all these requisites before are found in any Doctrine or Opinion this Doctrine indeed may be such as comes from the Spirit of truth yet accepted and entertained it may be through some other Spirit upon some
and rule these resolutions desires and endeavours two Lights he makes true rectified reason and supernatural grace to guide them what to do at all seasons days and years and many little Stars many glimmerings of truth begin then to discover themselves which before did not After all this 5. the sensitive faculties in their course and order bring forth their living creature according to their kind submit themselves to the command of the superiour reason And then lastly when the Spirit has thus totally renewed the face of the earth of our mind and affections is the new man created after the likeness and image of God in righteousness and true holiness This the course this the order of the Spirits coming He comes moving upon the waters of repentance and first enlightens the darkness of our souls he orders all our faculties and powers he makes us fruitful to good works he daily encreases divine light and heat within us he reforms our sense subdues our passions regulates our reason sanctifies them all comes in light comes in grace comes in truth comes in strength comes in power that we might in his strength and power come one day all in glory And now he that thus created the old World and still creates the new new create and make us new and pray we all with holy David Psal. li. 10. Create O Lord in us new hearts and renew right spirits within us Cast us not O Lord for ever though we are now full of errors from thy presence and keep not thy holy Spirit from us but let thy Spirit of truth come down and guide us out of our wandrings give us the comfort of his help again guide us again into the ways of truth and stablish us there with thy free Spirit and that for the merits and mercies of thine only Son who here promised to send him and this day accordingly sent him to guide us to himself from grace to grace from truth to truth from truth below to true happiness above Jesus Christ our Saviour To whom c. THE THIRD SERMON UPON Whitsunday St. JOHN xvi 13. Howbeit when He the Spirit of Truth is come He will guide you into all truth AND He this day began to guide has continued guiding ever since will go on guiding to the end began it with the Apostles continued it to the Church and will continue it to it to the end of the World Indeed he that looks upon the face of the Christian Churches now would be easily tempted to think that either the time was not yet come that it should be fulfilled or that it had been long ago and his promise come utterly to an end for evermore For so far are we from a guide into all truth that we have much ado to find a guide in truth false guides and false spirits are so rise so far from being guided into all truth that 't is neerer truth to say into all error as if this guide had quite forsaken us or this promise belong'd not at all to us Yet for all that to us it is For the truth is 't is not this Guides this Spirits fault but ours that this all truth is so nigh none at all He will guide still but we will not be guided And into all truth too he will but we will not we will have no more than will serve our turn stand with our own humour ease and interest that 's the reason why he guides not now as in the days of the Apostles the first times the times of old We will not let him we cannot bear it as it is in the verse before or worse we will not bear we will not endure it every one will be his own guide go his own way make what truth he pleases or rather what him pleases the only truth every one follow his own spirit that 's the reason why we have so little of the Spirit of Truth among us There are so many private spirits that there is no room for this Yet if into all or indeed any truth that 's worth the name of saving we would be guided to this One we must return to one spirit or to no truth There is but one Trurth and one Spirit all other are but fancies He that breaks the unity of the Spirit that sets up many spirits sets up many guides but never a true one chance he may perhaps into a truth but not be guided to it and as little good come of it where the analogie of Scripture and Truth must needs be broken by so many differing and divided spirits 'T is time we think of holding to one Spirit that we may all hold the same Truth and in time be led into it all The only question is Whether we will be led or no If we will not the business is at an end If we will we must submit to this Spirit and his guidance his manner and way of guiding By so doing we shall not fail in any necessary saving truth He will guide us into all truth Which that he may as I have heretofore out of the former words told you of his coming so shall I now by his assistance out of these latter tell you of his guiding for to that intent and purpose he came to day and comes every day came at first and comes still comes 1. to guide to guide 2. into truth 3. into all truth 4. even you and all into it yet 5. to guide only not to drive or force us to guide after his own way and fashion not our fancie of which lastly we need not doubt or make a question he will do it So that now the Parts of the Text will plainly rise into these Propositions 1. That though Christ be gone he has not left us without a guide but has sent Him that shall guide us still 2. That He that shall do it is He that very He that is the Spirit of Truth just before No other can 3. That guide therefore into truth he will no other will 4. That he will guide not into this truth or that truth only but into all 5. That he will guide even us too You and you and you us as well as those that were before us all 's but You. 6. That he will do it yet but after his own way and fashion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after the way he comes after as he comes so will he guide set us a way to find the truth and guide us after that way and no other 7. That for certain so it is He will Howbeit he will though yet he has not though yet we peradventure will not or cannot endure to be guided yet when we will set our selves to it He will guide us into c. it shall be no fault or failure of his for he for his part will is always willing The sum of all is this to assure us 1. that notwithstanding all the errors and false spirits now abroad there is a Spirit of Truth still
wind who daily does wondrous things in us and for us and by us through the mighty rushings of it and fills and replenishes us with all the benefits and comforts of it whilst he passes by others without so much as a breathing on them Yet the business would be how to catch this wind and serve our uses of it Why in the Word and in the Sacraments and by Prayers we may have it and be filled with it Come then and fill your souls you have heard the Word already treasure it up for there are treasures for the winds and you shall feel it blow move and stir in you The blessed Sacrament is a second way to be filled with this Spirit 't is reacht out and proffer'd to us there we may there take it into our mouths as before into our ears and it will rush down all before it that stands against it down it will into our bowels and fill us with all heavenly fulness And then draw it in and breath it out we may by devout and holy Prayers only remember always the disposition of that soul this Spirit only will abide with peace and unity Thus dispos'd you must be to receive the Spirit thus dispos'd to receive the Sacrament and then the Spirit will discend upon our Sacrifice and the wind of Gods benediction upon our offering and we shall return hence with mighty rushings in us the rushing down of sin the raising up of grace mighty mighty things will be done in us by the power of this Spirit and this Wind and as it came from Heaven so thither will it back again and carry us upon its wings to keep a perpetal Feast an Eternal Whitsunday all in the white Robes of everlasting Glory Blow O blessed Wind upon us this day blow away our chaff and dross and dust out of our performances breath into thy holy mysteries the breath of a life-giving life rush down all our sins before thee purifie and clense and refresh and revive and comfort us by thy saving breath that this wind may bring us good all the good of Heaven and Earth fill both our ears and hearts here with sounds and songs of joy and hereafter with Hallelujahs for evermore THE FIFTH SERMON UPON Whitsunday ACTS ii 1 2 3 4. And when the day of Pentecost was fully come they were all with one accord in one place And suddenly there came a sound from Heaven as of a rushing mighty wind and it filled all the house where they were sitting And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire and it sate upon each of them And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost and began to speak with other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance WHen the day of Pentecost here was fully come ver 1. they were all filled says the Text ver 4. and began to speak Now the day is fully come again we also are full of matter as Elihu told Iob Iob xxxii 18. and we must speak For 't is a day of Tongues a day to speak in and a day to speak of too to speak magnalia in it and of it of the great things of God and the great things of the day the wonderful works of God ver 11. which were this day wrought by the descent of the holy Spirit To this end the Spirit descended to this end the Tongues came to this end both appeared that we might learn to use our Tongues and Spirits to set forth his praise every one according as the Spirit gives him utterance according to the gift and place that God has given him We as the Apostles and Ministers of the Spirit you as Disciples to be taught by us you to ask with those hearers ver 37. Men and brethren what shall we do We as St. Peter ver 38. to tell you what to do We faithfully to preach the Word the remission of sins and the gifts of the holy Ghost ver 38. you gladly to receive it ver 41. We to begin the Anthem you to make the Chorus for the service of this days solemnity both of us to bear our parts to day in praises and thanksgivings for the benefits we receive from this days business We have the last year begun to speak of it out of this Text we begin again to speak of it hence this year shall do as the Spirit shall give us utterance To hold our peace to day were to sin against the Spirit who this day gave us all our tongues to speak And I hope nor we nor you will be silent of his glory no such evil shall befall us For a day of good tidings it is was so when it came first will be so now 't is come again and when ever it comes about was so to the Disciples will be so I hope to us to hear the voice of a Comforter to see his appearance or out hear of it The Text is the Story of it the Relation of the coming of the Comforter the descent of the Holy Ghost In it when time was we observed these four Particulars I. The disposition of them the Spirit comes upon II. The way and manner and order he comes after III. The Effect and Issue that comes upon it And IV. The Time when it came to pass I. The disposition of those the Spirit comes upon is such as makes men to be of one accord that brings them all to one place upon such days as Pentecost on the solemn feasts makes them then and there sit quietly and orderly expecting Christ a unanimous Church-like orderly devout and religious disposition Upon such and such only is it that the holy Spirit comes II. The way manner and order of his coming is as a mighty wind and like as fire Suddenly he came came as a sound as a sound from heaven as a sound of a rushing mighty wind and such a one too as filled all the house O●me 2. as fire as tongues of fire as cloven tongues of fire such fire yet as sace upon them and did no hurt heavenly and coelestial fire Thus he came to day III. The Effect and Issue is filling the filling of all that then were present with ghost and spirit Holy-Ghost and spirit then with words and tongues and speech even according to the measure or pleasure of the Spirit This the issue of the holy Spirits coming fulness and spirit and ability and utterance new hearts and new spirits new languages and sobriety to use them IV. The time the Time of Pentecost when it was fully come when all was ready persons and place and time fully disposed and fit then comes the holy Spirit then came all these things to pass I put this last though it stands first that I might close up all at least in good time and order There wants nothing now O blessed Spirit to go on and finish but that thou shouldst come and order all our thoughts and spirits that we may humbly receive the sound of thy holy
Word that I thy servant may have utterance this thy people give thee audience all of us obedience and all our hearts and tongues be so thorowly heated with thy holy fire that they may be filled with thy praise and honour all the day long That we may do so here are tongues given in the Text ver 3. Cloven tongues as it were of fire there we left there we begin again at the second Way and Manner of the holy Spirits coming down to day And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire and it sate upon each of them Where 1. of the Order 2. Of the Appearance 3. Of the Manner it self And lastly of the Continuance of it For the Order 't is the second way of the Spirits coming here first in the wind then in the fire The holy fire within us is not kindled but with a mighty wind The divine spark or soul cannot be blown up into a fire till some mighty wind has shaken all our powers blown off the dust and ashes those earthly worldly affections that choak'd and cover'd it till it has rais'd a tumult in all the corners of us dispers'd the vanities and irregularities of all our motions and scatter'd every thing that hinder'd it from the obedience to the Spirit then and not till then the fire bursts forth and as the Psalmist we speak with our tongues For the Order 2. is the same between the sound and the tongues The Sound first the tongues second We are first to hear before we speak so the Spirits order tells us here Not turn Teachers at the first dash not presume to teach others before we are thorowly taught our selves that 's none of the Spirits way of teaching how spiritual soever they think themselves that do so that speak what they have neither seen nor heard their own fancies and imaginations the divisings of their own hearts such as the Christian world never heard before whereof there is not so much as the sound or any thing sounding like it in all the Writings of the Church The sound too 3. before the fire The Spirit manifests it self by degrees first more obscurely to the ear then more evidently to the eye I have heard of thee by the hearing of the ear says Iob Chap. xlii 5. that was a favour but now mine eye seeth thee that 's a greater The Spirit comes by degrees Gods favours rise upon us in order There comes first a great and strong wind that rends the mountains and breaks in pieces the rocks before him that throws down our mountainous thought and projects breaks them all in pieces crosses our designs thwarts them with some great affliction or some strange thing or other breaks our very hearts our stony hearts then follows an earthquake in all our faculties we begin to shake and tremble with the fear of the Almighty then comes the fire and burns up all the chaff scorches our very bones and warms us even at the heart whereupon presently there issues out a still small voice out of our lips the tongues follow upon the fire or are even with it This was signified to us thus by Gods appearing to Elijah 1 Kings xix 11 12. and the same order the holy Spirit of God uses here to the Apostles the same method still he keeps with us For he thrusts not in upon us unprepared he makes himself a way into us gives us not so clear an evidence as seeing him at the first not till the sound has well awaken'd us and the wind well brush'd and cleans'd our houses for him Yet then appear he does For we now presently hear of his appearance There appeared tongues The manifestation of the Spirit says St. Paul is given to every man to profit withal 1 Cor. xii 7. Not the Spirit only but the manifestation too No Spirit without some manifestation If the Spirit be an extraordinary Spirit the manifestation will be so too If it be but ordinary the manifestation will be no more 1. If God sends any with an extraordinary commission to preach or teach he enables them with an extraordinary Spirit appears with them after some extraordinary fashion tongues or miracles or some high heavenly fires come with them They but blaspheme the Spirit and usurp upon the Office who take it upon them without such a warrant they run without sending says God Ier. xxiii 21. their tongues are but their own and however those perverse fellows in the Psalm infer they are they that ought to speak who is Lord over them Psal. xii 4. they ought not to speak there is a Lord over them what ere they think that will one day call them to accompt and make them know it their fire they bring is but Nadabs and Abihu's their zeal without knowledge they have no tongue but what their mother taught them the holy Spirit has taught them none made no appearance to them either by fire or by tongues they are filled with some other Spirit the Spirit of Pride of Division or Rebellion or somewhat worse where the Spirit sends with an extraordinary commission it will appear by some gift extraordinary and miraculous somewhat will appear But 2. if our mission be but ordinary the ordinary way that the Spirit has now left in the power and authority of the Church will be sufficient yet that must appear too our authority appear thence our tongues serve to it too to the edifying of the Church 1 Cor. xiv 12. to the building of it up not to the pulling of it down Every gift of the holy Spirit is to have its manifestation tongues and interpretation and prayer and Prophesie and all the rest yet all in order Every one to employ not hide his talent he who has a ministery to waite on that he that is to exhort to attend to that he that is to teach to busie himself in that though all according to proportion Rom. xii 6 7 8. all to appear to the glory of God Yea even those saving graces of the Spirit are not always to be kept within they are to appear in tongues or fire so shine that others may glorifie so speak and act that others seeing our good conversation may be affected with it and perswaded to grace and vertue by it The Spirit is not given to be hid under a bushel the wind cannot the fire will not the tongue is not usual to be kept in so They all appear'd here after their way the wind after its way the tongues and fire after theirs in this verse to the fight the most certain of the senses that we might not be deceived by pretended Spirits might have somewhat manifest to judge by to tell us that the graces of the Spirit whether those for edification of others or sanctification of our selves are for manifestation to appear to others as well as to our selves we receive them to that purpose to profit others and to approve our selves These may serve for reasons why
the Spirit appears but why the Spirit appears now now first and not before now first visibly to the world is worth enquiry And 't is to shew the preheminence of the Gospel above the Law That stood only in meats and drinks and divers washings and carnal ordinances says the Apostle Heb. ix 10. was but the Law of a carnal Commandment Heb. vii 16. The Gospel is a Law of spirit and life the Law of Moses a dead a killing Letter but the Gospel of Christ a quickning Spirit 2 Cor. iii. 6. the Law a course of shadows the Gospel only the true light It will appear so by the next Particular we are to handle the manner of his appearing In tongues in cloven tongues in tongues as it were of fire I shall invert the order for the fire it is that gives light unto the tongues to make them for to appear of the fire then first to shew them the better For the Spirit to appear as wind or breath is nothing strange It carries them in its name Spiritus à spirando every one can tell you But that this breath should not only blow up a fire but be it self also blown into it the Spirit here appear as fire that 's somewhat hard at first perhaps to understand Yet you shall see many good reasons for it Four great ones I shall give you which comprehend more under them 1. To shew the Analogy and correspondence of Gods dealings and dispensations how they agree both with themselves and with one another 2. To insinuate to us the nature and condition of the holy Spirit 3. To signifie the several gifts and graces of it 4. To declare its operations also and effects 1. The Holy Ghost here appear'd like fire that we might see it is the same God that gave both Law and Gospel the same Spirit in both Testaments The Law was promulgated by fire Exod. xix 18. the Lord descended on Mount Sinai then in fire The Gospel also here is first divulged by tongues as it were of fire in Mount Sion The difference only is that there were here no lightnings thunders clouds or smoke as there were there nothing terrible nothing dark or gloomy here all light and peace and glory 2. Under the Old Testament the Prophets oft were Commissionated by fire to their Offices the Angel takes a live coal from off the Altar and lays it upon Isaiah's mouth Isa. vi 7. Elijah the Prophet stood up as fire Ecclus. xlviii 1. Ezekiels first Vision was of appearances of fire Ezek. i. 4 13. The Commissions therefore of the Apostles were drawn here also as it were with pens of fire that they might the more lively answer and the better express the Spirit of the Prophets 3. That the nature of the Law they were to preach might be exprest too It was the Law of love and the holy fire of Charity was it they were sent to kindle in the World 4. It was to teach them what they were to expect in the World themselves fire and faggot affliction and tribulation the lot and portion both of them and of their followers ever since 5. It was to teach them what they were to be burning and shining lights to lead others into heaven Lastly That so all righteousness Law and Prophets might be fulfilled the types of the one and the promises of the other from the first of them to the last to St. Iohn Baptists that they should be baptized with the Holy Ghost and with fire that the fire that Christ came to send into the earth and was then already kindled might now burn out into the World And all this to shew the Almighty Wisdom who thus agreeably orders all his doings from the first unto the last that we might with the greater confidence embrace the Doctrine of the Gospel which so evenly consented with the Law and was added only to bring it to perfection to raise up the fire of devotion and charity to the height 2. But not only to manifest the wisdom of the Father and perform the promise of the Son but secondly to intimate the nature of the holy Spirit Fire is the purest Element The holy Spirit is pure and incorruptible thine incorruptible Spirit says the Wise man Wisd. xii 1. No evill can dwell with it It will not mingle with humane interests By this you may know it from all other Spirits They intermix with private humours and self-respects and great ones fancies The holy Spirit is a fire and will not mix it must dwell alone has not a tongue now for this and then for that to please men and ease it self but is always pure and incorrupt Fire 2. is the subtilest Element it pierces into every part And whither can I go then from thy Spirit says holy David Psal. cxxxix 6. If I climb up into heaven thou art there If I go down to hell thou art there also If I take the wings of the morning and remain in the uttermost parts of the Sea even there also will it find me out Darkness cannot cover me thick darkness cannot hide me night it self cannot conceal me from thee O thou divine Spirit O keep me therefore that I may do nothing that may make me ashamed and hide my self seeing thy eyes will quickly pierce into me 3. Fire is an active nature always stirring always moving Nothing can be found better to express the nature of the holy Spirit It mov'd from the beginning actuated the first matter into all the shapes we see breath'd an active principle into them all renew'd again the face of the Earth when the waters had defaced it blows and the waters flow blows again and dries them up guides the Patriarchs inspires the Prophets rests upon the Governours of the People from Moses to the seventy Elders gives spirit and courage to the Martyrs Non permanebit spiritus meus in vagina says God Gen. vi My Spirit will not endure to be always as in a rusty sheath it will be lightning the understanding it will be warming the affections it will be stirring of the passions it will be working in the heart it will be acting in the hand it will be moving in the feet it will be quickning all the powers to the service of the Almighty nothing so busie as this holy fire nothing so active as this Spirit Though the nature and essence of it cannot be full exprest it is thus very powerfully resembled 3. The gifts of it more easily by this fire Seven there are numbred of them out of Isa. xi 2. The Spirit of wisdom and understanding the Spirit of counsel and ghostly strength the Spirit of knowledge and true godliness and the Spirit of holy fear all very naturally represented to us by so many properties I shall observe to you of the fire Fire it ascends it penetrates it tries it hardens it enlightens it warms it melts You have all these again in the seven gifts of the Spirit For 1. the holy Spirit