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A47643 A practical commentary upon the first epistle general of St. Peter. Vol. II containing the third, fourth and fifth chapters / by the most Reverend Robert Leighton ... ; published after his death at the request of his friends. Leighton, Robert, 1611-1684.; Fall, James, 1646 or 7-1711. 1694 (1694) Wing L1029; ESTC R36245 321,962 503

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main subject and scope in the foregoing Discourse that death was before called a suffering in the flesh which is in effect the same and therefore though the words may be drawn another way yet its strange that Interpreters have been so far wide of this their genuine and agreeable sense and almost all of them taken in some other intendment To be judged in the flesh In the present sense is to die to sin or that sin die in us and it s thus exprest 1. Suitably tably to the nature of it it is to the flesh a violent death and it is according to a Sentence judicially put against it that guilty and miserable life of sin is in the Gospel adjudged to death there that arrest and sentence is clear and full Rom. 6. 6 c. 8. 13. That sin must die that the Soul may live it must be crucified in us and we to it that we may partake of the Life of Christ and Happiness in him And this is called to be judged in the flesh to have this sentence executed 2. The thing is the rather spoke here under the term of being judged in counter-ballance of that Judgment mentioned immediately before v. 5. The last Judgment of quick and dead wherein they that would not be thus judged but mockt and despised those that were shall fall under a far more terrible Judgment and the sentence of a heavy death indeed everlasting death though they think they shall escape and enjoy liberty in living in sin And that to be judged according to men is I conceive added to signifie the connaturalness of the life of sin to man 's now corrupt nature That men do judge it a death indeed to be severed and pulled from their sins and that a cruel death and the Sentence of it in the Gospel a heavy Sentence a hard Saying to a carnal Heart that he must give up with all his sinful delights must die indeed in self-denial must be separated from himself which is to die if he will be joyned with Christ and live in him Thus men judge that they are judged to a painful death by the Sentence of the Gospel although it is that they may truely and happily live yet they understand it not so They see the death the parting with sin and all its pleasures but the life they see not nor can any know it till partaking of it it is known to him in whom it is it is hid with Christ in God And therefore the opposition here is very fi●ly thus represented that the death is according to men in the flesh but the life is according to God in the Spirit As the Christian is adjudged to this death in the flesh by the Gospel so he is lookt on and accounted by carnal men as dead for that he enjoyes not with them what they esteem their life and think they could not live without it one that cannot carrouse and swear with prophane Men is a silly dead Creature good for nothing and he that can bear wrongs and love him that injured him is a poor spiritless fool hath no mettal nor life in him in the World's account thus is he judged according to men in the flesh he is as a dead man but lives according to God in the Spirit dead to men and alive to God as ver 2. Now if this life be in thee it will act all life is in motion and is called an act but most of all active is this most excellent and as I may call it most lively life it will be moving towards God often seeking to him making still towards him as its principle and fountain holy and affectionate thoughts of him sometimes on one of his sweet attributes sometimes on another as the Bee amongst the Flowers And as it will thus act within so outwardly laying hold on all occasions yea seeking out ways and opportunities to be serviceable to thy Lord employing all for him commending and extolling his goodness doing and suffering chearfully for him laying out the strength of desires and parts and means in thy station to gain him Glory If thou be alone then not alone but with him seeking to know more of him and be made more like him if in company then casting about how to bring his name in esteem and to draw others to a love of Religion and Holiness by Speeches as it may be ●it and most by the true behaviour of thy carriage Tender over the Souls of others to do them good to thy utmost thinking each day an hour lost when thou art not busie for the honour and advantage of him to whom thou now livest thinking in the Morning now what may I do this day for my God How may I most please and glorifie him and use my strength and wit and my whole self as not mine but his and then in the evening reflecting O Lord have I seconded these thoughts in reality what glory hath he had by me this day whither went my thoughts and endeavours what busied them most have I been much with God have I adorned the Gospel in my converse with others And if finding any thing done this way to bless and acknowledge him the spring and worker of it If any step aside were it but to an appearance of evil or if any fit season of good hath escapt thee unprofitably to check thy self and to be grieved for thy sloth and coldness and see if more love would not beget more diligence Try it by sympathy and antipathy which follows the nature of things as we see in some Plants and Creatures that cannot grow cannot agree together and others that do favour and benefit mutually If thy Soul hath an aversion and reluctancy against holiness this is an evidence of this new Nature and Life Thy heart rises against wicked ways and speeches oaths and cursings and rotten communication yea thou canst not endure unworthy discourses wherein most spend their time findest no relish in the unsavory societies of such as know not God canst not sit with vain persons but findest a delight in those that have the image of God upon them such as partake of that Divine Life and carry the evidences of it in their carriage David did not disdain the fellowship of the Saints and that was no disparagement to him he implies in the name he gives them Psal. 16. The excellent ones the Magnifick or Noble and that word is taken from one that signifies a robe or noble Garment so he thought them Nobles and Kings as well as he and had robes royal and therefore Companions of Kings A spiritual eye looks on spiritual dignity and esteems and loves them that are born of God how low soever be their natural birth and breeding The Sons of God have of his Spirit in them and are born to the same inheritance where all shall have enough and they are tending homewards by the conduct of the same Spirit that is in them so that there must be amongst them a
or Sign hanging out that tells a vain Mind lodges within 2. Of excessive costliness which both argues and ●●eds the Pride of the Heart and defrauds if not others of their dues yet the poor of thy charity which in God's sight is a due debt too and far more comfort shall thou have on thy death Bed to remember such a time in stead of Lace on my own Cloaths I helped a naked back to cloathing I abated somewhat of my former superfluities to supply the Poors necessities sweeter this than to remember that I could needlesly cast out many pounds to serve my Pride rather than give a penny to relieve the Poor As conscientious Christians will not exceed in the thing it self so in as far as they use lawful Ornament and Comeliness they will do it without bestowing much either diligence or delight on the business To have the mind taken and pleas'd with such things is so foolish and childish a thing that if most might not find it in themselves they would wonder at many others of years and common wit And yet truely 't is a Disease that few escape 't is strange upon how poor things Men and Women will be vain and think themselves some body not only upon some comeliness in their face or feature which though poor yet is a part of themselves but of things meerly without them that they are well lodged or well mounted or well apparell'd either richly or well in fashion light empty minds as bladders blown up with any thing and they that perceive not this in themselves are most drown'd but such as have found it out and abhor their own follies are still hunting and following themselves in these to beat them out of their hearts and to shame them from such fopperies The Soul fallen from God hath lost its true worth and beauty and therefore it basely descends to these mean things to serve and dress the body and take share with it of its unworthy borrow'd Ornaments hath lost and forgotten God and seeks not after him knows not that he is the alone Beauty and Ornament of the Soul Ier. 2. 32. his Spirit and the Graces of it its rich attire as here particularly specified in one excellent Grace and holds true in the rest The Apostle doth indeed expresly on purpose check and forbid vanity and excess in apparel and excessive delight in lawful decorum but his prime end is to recommend this other Ornament of the Soul The hidden man of the heart 'T is the thing the best Philosophy aim'd at as some of their choice men do express it to reduce men as much as may be from their Body to their Soul but this is the thing that true Religion alone doth effectually and throughly from the pampering and feeding of a Morsel for the Worms to the nourishing of that immortal being infus'd into 't and directs it to the proper nourishment of Souls the Bread that came down from Heaven Io. 6. 27. So here the Apostle pulls off from Christian Women their vain outside Ornaments but is not this a wrong to spoil all their dressing and fineness No he doth but this to send them to a better Wardrobe there 's much profit in the change All the Gold and other riches of the Temple figuring the Excellent Graces of Christians of Christ indeed first as having all fullness in himself and furnishing them but secondarily of Christians as the living Temples of God so the Church all glorious but within and the embroidery the variety of Graces the lively colours of other Graces shining best on the dark ground of Humility Christ delights to give much Ornament to his Church commends what she hath and adds more Cant. 1. 10. 11. The particular Grace he recommends is particularly suitable to his subject in hand the conjugal duty of Wives nothing so decoring their whole carriage as this meekness and quietness of Spirit but it is withal the comeliness of every Christian in every estate 't is not a Womans Garment or Ornament improper for Men there is somewhat as I may say of a particular cut or fashion of it for Wives towards their Husbands and in their domestick Affairs but Men all Men ought to wear of the same stuff yea so to speak of the same piece for it is in all one and the same Spirit fits the stoutest and greatest Commanders Moses a great General and yet no less great in this Virtue the meekest Man on Earth Nothing more uncomely in a Wife than an uncomposed turbulent Spirit that is put out of frame with every trifle and inventive of false causes of disquietness and fretting to it self And so of a Husband and of all an unquiet passionate Mind lays it self naked and discovers its own deformity to all The greatest part of things that vex us are not from their Nature or weight but the unsettledness of our Minds How comely is it to see a composed firm Mind and Carriage that is not lightly moved I urge not a Stoical stupidness but that in things that deserve sharp reproof the Mind keep in its own Station and Seat still not shaken out of it self as the most are that the Tongue utter not unseemly rash words nor the Hand act any thing that discovers the mind hath lost its command for the time but truly the most know so ill how to use just anger upon just cause that it is easier and the safer extream not to be angry but still calm and serene as the upper Region not the place of continual tempest and storms as the most are let it pass for a kind of sheepishness to be meek 't is a likeness to him that was a Sheep before the shearers not opening his Mouth 't is a Portion of his Spirit The Apostle commends his exchange of Ornaments from two things 1. Incorruptible and therefore fits an incorruptible Soul Your varieties of Jewels and Rich Apparel are perishing things you shall one day see an heap made of all and that all on a slame and in reference to you they perish sooner when death strips you of your nearest Garment your flesh all the other that were but loose upper Garments above it must off too it gets indeed a covering to the Grave but the Soul is left stark naked if no other Cloathing be provided for it for the Body was but borrowed then it is denuded of all But spiritual Ornaments and this here amongst them remain and are incorruptible they neither wear out nor out of fashion but are still the better for the wearing and shall last Eternity and shine there in full lustre And 2dly because the opinion of others is much regarded in matter of Apparel and 't is most for that we use Ornament in it he tells us of the account of this Men think it poor and mean nothing more expos'd to contempt than the Spirit of Meekness mere folly with Men that 's no matter this overweighs all their disesteem 't is
Ierusalems Wall● than for the binding up and healing of it self and in that Psal. that seem's to be the expression of his joy being exalted to the Throne and sitting peaceably on it yet he still thus prays for the peace of Ierusalem And the Penman of that 137. Psalm makes it an execrable oversight to forget Ierusalem ver 5. or to remember it coldly or secundarily no less will serve him than to prefer it to his chief joy Whatsoever else is top or head of his joy as the word is Ierusalems wellfare shall be its Crown shall be set above it And the Prophet whoever it was that wrote that poured out that Prayer from an afflicted Soul comforts himself in this that Zion shall be favoured my bones are consum'd c. But it matters not what becomes of me let me languish and wither away provided Sion flourish tho' I feel nothing but pains and troubles yet thou wilt arise and shew mercy to Sion I am content that satisfies me But where is now this Spirit of high sympathy with the Church sure if there were of it in us 't is now a fit time to act it If we be not altogether dead sure we will be stirr'd with the voice of those late stroaks of Gods hand and be driven to more humble and earnest prayer by it Men will change their poor base grumblings about their privacy Oh! what shall I do c. into strong cries for the Church of God and the publick deliverance of all these Kingdomes from the raging Sword but vile selfishness undoes us the most looking no further if themselves and theirs might be secur'd would regard little what became of the rest as one said when I am dead let the World be fir'd but the Christian mind is of a larger Sphere looks not only upon more than it self in present but even to after Times and Ages and can rejoyce in the good to come when it self shall not be here to partake of it is more dilated and liker unto God and to our head Iesus Christ. The Lord says the Prophet Esay in all his peoples affliction was afflicted himself and Jesus Christ accounts the sufferings of his Body the Church his own Saul Saul why persecutest thou me the heel was trod upon on earth and the head cryeth from Heaven as sensible of it and this in all our evils especially our spiritual Griefs is a high point of comfort to us that our Lord Jesus is not insensible of them This emboldens us to complain our selves and to put in our petitions for help to the Throne of Grace through his hand knowing that when he presents he will speak his own sense of our condition and move for us as it were for himself as we have it sweetly express'd Heb. 4. 15. 16. Now as it is our comfort so it is our pattern Love as Brethren Hence springs this feeling we speak o● Love is the cause of union and union the cause of sympathy and of that unanimity before they that have the same spirit uniting and animating them cannot but have the same Mind and the same feelings And this Spirit is derived from that head Christ in whom Christians live and move and have their being their new and excellent being and so in living in him they love him and are one in him they are Brethren as here the word is their fraternity holds in him he is head of it the first born among many Brethren Men are Brethren in two natural respects their Bodies of the same earth and their Souls breathed from the same God but this third fraternity that is founded in Christ is far more excellent and more firm than the other two for being one in him they have there taken in the other two for that in him is our whole Nature he is the Man Christ Iesus but to the advantage and 't is an infinite one being one in him we are united by the Divine Nature in him who is God blessed for ever and this is the highest certainly and the strongest union that can be imagin'd Now this is a great Mystery indeed as the Apostle says speaking of this same point the union of Christ and his Church whence their union and Communion one with another that make up that Body the Church is deriv'd In Christ every believer is born of God is his Son and so they are not only Brethren one with another that are so born but Christ himself own 's them as his Brethren both he which sanctifies and they who are sanctifi●d are all of one for which cause he is not asham'd to call them Brethren Sin broke all to pieces Man from God and one from another Christ's work in the World was Vnion to make up these breaches he came down and begun the union which was his work in the wonderful union made in his Person that was to work it made God and Man one and as the Nature of Man was reconciled so by what he performed the Persons of Men are united to God Faith makes them one with him and he makes them one with the Father and from these results this oneness amongst themselves concentring and meeting in Jesus Christ and in the Father through him they are made one together And that this was his great work we may read in his Prayer where it is the burden and main strain the great request he so iterates that they may be one as we are one ver 11. a high comparison such as Man durst not name but after him that so warrants us and again ver 21. that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us and so on So that certainly where this is it is the ground work of another kind of Friendship and love than the World is acquainted with or is able to judge of and hath more worth in one drachme of it than all the quintessence of civil or natural assection can amount to The friendship of the World the best of them are but tyed with chains of glass but this fraternal love of Christians is a Golden chain both more precious and more strong and lasting the other are worthless and brittle The Christian ows and pays a General Charity and good will to all but peculiar and intimate friendship he cannot have but with such as come within the compass of this fraternal love Which after a special manner flows from God and returns to him and abides in him and shall remain unto eternity Where this love is and abounds it will banish far away all those dissentions and bitternesses and those ●rivolous mistakings that are so frequent amongst the most it will teach wisely and gently to admonish one another where it is needful but further than that it will pass by many offences and failings and cover a multitude of sins and will very much sweeten Society and make it truly profitable therefore the Psalmist calls it both
mention'd and carries along with it this inward and real not acted courteousness Not to insist on it now it gains at all hands with God and with Men receives much Grace from God and kills envy and commands respect and good will from Men. Those showers of grace that slide off from the lofty Mountains rest on the Valleys and make them fruitful He giveth grace loves to bestow it wherethere is most room to receive it and most return of ingenuous and entire praises upon the receipt and such is the humble Heart and truly as much humility gains much grace so it grows by it 1. 'T is one of the Worlds reproaches against those that go beyond their size in Religion that they are proud and self conceited Christians beware there be nothing in you justifying this sure they that have most true grace are least guilty of it common knowledge and gifts may puff up but grace does not He whom the Lord loads most with his richest gifts stoops lowest as pressed down with the weight of them the Free Love of God humbles the Heart most to which it is most manifested And towards Men it graces all Grace and all gifts and glorifies God and teaches others so to do It is the preserver of Graces sometimes seems to wrong them by hiding them but indeed it is their safety Hezekiah by a vain shewing of his jewels and treasures forfeited them all Verse 9. 9 Not rendring evil for evil or railing ofr railing but contrary wise blessing knowing that ye are thereunto called that ye should inherit a blessing OPposition helps Grace both to more strength and more lustre when Christian Charity is not encounter'd with the Worlds malignance it hath an easier task but assaulted and overcoming it shines the brighter and rises higher and thus it is when it renders not evil for evil To repay good with evil is amongst Men the top of iniquity yet this is our universal guiltiness towards God he multiplying mercies and we vying with multiply'd sins as the Lord complains of Israel as they were increased so they sinned The lowest step of good mutual amongst Men is not to be bent to provoke others with injuries and being unoffended to offend none but this not to repay offences nor render evil for evil is a Christians rule and yet further to return good for evil and blessing for cursing is not only counsell'd as some vainly distinguish but commanded It is true the most have no ambition for this degree of goodness aspire no further but to do or say no evil unprovoked and think themselves sufficiently just and equitable if they keep in that but this is lame is but half the rule Thou thinkest injury obliges thee or if not so yet excuses thee to revenge or at least disobliges thee unties thy engagement of wishing and doing good but these are all gross practical errours For 1st The second injury done by way of revenge differs from the first that provoked it little or nothing but only in point of time and certainly no one Man's sin can procure priviledge to another to sin in that or the like kind If another hath broken the bonds of his allegiance and Obedience to God and of charity to thee yet thou art not the less ty'd by the same Bonds still 2dly By revenge of injuries thou usurpest upon God's prerogative who is the Avenger as the Apostle teaches Rom. 12. this doth not forbid either the Magistrats Sword for just punishment of Offenders or the Souldiers Sword in a just War but such revenges as without authority or a lawfull call the pride and perversness of Men do multiply one against another In which is involv'd a presumptuous contempt of God and his supreme authority or at least the unbelief and neglect of it 3dly It cannot be genuine upright goodness that hath its dependance upon the goodness of others that are about us that as they say of the vain glorious Man his vertue lyeth in the beholders eye if thy Meekness and Charity be such as lyeth in the good and mild carriage of others towards thee in their Hand and Tongues thou art not owner of it intrinsecally such quiet and calm if none provoke thee is but an accidental uncertain cessation of thy turbulent Spirit unstirr'd but move it and it acts it self according to it self sends up that Mind that lay at the bottom but true Grace doth then most manifest what it is when those things that are most contrary surround and assault it it cannot correspond and hold game with injuries and raylings hath no faculty for that for answering evil with evil a Tongue enur'd to graciousness and mild Speeches and Blessings and a heart stor'd so within can vent no other try it and stir it as you will A Christian acts and speaks not according to what others are towards him but according to what he is through the grace and Spirit of God in him as they say quicquid recipitur recipitur ad modum recipientis the same things are differently received and work differently as the Nature and way is of that which receives them A sparkle blows up one of a sulphureous temper and many Coals greater injuries and reproaches are quench'd and loose their force being thrown at another of a Cool Spirit Prov. 17. 27. They that have malice and bitterness and cursings within though these sleep it may be yet awake them with the like and the Provision comes forth out of the abundance of the heart give them an ill word and they have another or two for one in readiness for you where the Soul is furnished with spiritual blessings there blessings come forth even in answer to reproaches and indignities the mouth of the Wise is a Tree of Life says Solomon can bear no other fruit but according to its kind and the Nature of the root an honest spiritual heart pluck at it who will they can pull no other fruit but such fruit Love and Meekness lodge there and therefore whosoever knocks these make the answer Let the World account it a despicable simplicity seek you still more of that Dove-like Spirit the Spirit of meekness and blessing a poor glory to vie railings and contest in that faculty or any kind of vindictive returns of evil the most abject creatures have of that great Spirit as follish poor Spirited persons account it but it is the glory of Man to pass by a transgression the noblest victory and as we mention'd the highest example God is our Pattern in Love and Compassions we are well warranted to do 't in this Men esteem much more of some other vertues that make more shew and trample upon these Love and Compassion and Meekness but though these violet● grow low and are of a dark colour yet they are of a very sweet and diffusive smell odoriferous Graces and the Lord propounds himself our example in them Matth. 5. 't is to be truly the Children of your Father your
may hold firm You may be free chose it rather not to stand to the courtesie of any thing about you nor of any Man whether enemy or friend for the tenure of your happiness lay it higher and surer and if you be wise provide such a peace as will remain untouch'd in the hottest flame such a light as will shine in the deepest dungeon and such a life as is safe even in death it self that life that is hid with Christ in God But if in other sufferings even the worst and saddest the Believer is still a happy Man then more especially in those that are the best kind suffering for righteousness not only do they not detract from his happiness but 2dly They concur and give accession to it he is happy even by so suffering As will appear from the following considerations 1. 'T is the happiness of a Christian until he attain perfection to be advancing towards it to be daily resining from sin and growing richer and stronger in the graces that make up a Christian a new creature to attain a higher degree of patience and meekness and humility to have the heart more weaned from the Earth and fixed on Heaven now as other afflictions of the Saints do help them in those their sufferings for righteousness the unrighteous and injurious dealing of the World with them have a particular fitness for this purpose those trials that come immediately from God's own hand seem to bind to a patient and humble compliance with more authority and I may say necessity There is no plea no place for so much as a word unless it be directly and expresly against the Lord's own dealing but unjust suffering at the hands of Men requires that respect unto God without whose hand they cannot move that for his sake and for reverence and love to him a Christian can go through those with that mild evenness of Spirit that overcomes even in suffering And there is nothing outward more fit to perswade a Man to give up with the World and its Friendship than to feel much of its enmity and malice and that directly acting it self against Religion making that the very quarrel which is of all things dearest to a Christian and in highest esteem with him If the World should caress them and smile on them they might be ready to forget their home or at least to abate in the frequent thoughts and fervent desires of it and turn into some familiarity with the World and favourable thoughts of it and thus let out somwhat of their hearts after it and thus grace would grow faint by the diversion and calling forth of the Spirits as in Summer in the hottest and fairest weather 't is with the body 'T is a confirm'd observation by the experience of all Ages that when the Church flourish'd most in outward peace and wealth it abated most of its spiritual lustre which is its genuine and true beauty and when it seem'd most miserable by persecutions and sufferings 't was most happy in sincerity and zeal and vigour of grace when the Moon shines brightest towards the Earth 't is dark Heavenwards and on the contrary when it appears not is nearest the Sun and clear towards Heaven 2dly Happy in acting and evidencing by those sufferings for God their love to him Love delights in difficulties and grows in them the more a Christian suffers for Christ the more he loves Christ accounts him the dearer and the more he loves him still the more can he suffer for him 3dly Happy as in testifying love to him and glorifying him so in conformity with him which is loves ambition affects likeness and harmony at any rate a Believer would readily take it as an affront that the World should be kind to him that was so harsh and cruel to his beloved Lord and Master Canst thou expect or wouldst thou wish smooth language from that World that revil'd thy Jesus that called him Beelzebub couldst thou own and accept friendship at its hands that buffetted him and shed his blood or art thou rather most willing to share with him and of S. Paul's mind God forbid that I should glory in any thing save in the Cross of Christ whereby the World is crucified to me and I unto the World 4. The rich supplies of spiritual comfort and joy that in those times of suffering are usual that as sufferings for Christ do abound consolations in him abound much more as the Apostle testifies God speaking most peace to the Soul when the World speaks most War and enmity against it and this compenses abundantly when the Christian lays the greatest sufferings Men can inflict in the one ballance and the least glances of God's countenance in the other it says 't is worth all the enduring of these to enjoy this says with David let them curse but bless thou let them frown but smile thou And thus he usually doth refreshes such as are prisoners for him with visits that they would buy again with the hardest restraint and debaring of nearest friends The World cannot but misjudge the state of suffering Christians it sees their Crosses but not their anointings Was not St. Stephen think you in a happy posture even in his enemies hands was he afraid of the Showre of Stones coming about his ears that saw the Heavens opened and Jesus standing on the Father's right hand so little troubled with the stoning him that as the Text hath it in the midst of them he fell a sleep 5. If those sufferings be so small weigh'd down even with present comforts and so the Christian happy in them in that regard how much more doth the weight of Glory surpass that follows these sufferings they are not worthy to come in comparison they are as nothing to that glory that shall be revealed in the Apostle's Arithmetick 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when I have cast up the sum of the sufferings of this present time this instant this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they amount to just nothing in respect of that glory Now these sufferings happy because the way to this happiness and pledges of it and if any thing do they raise the very degree of it however 't is an exceeding excellent weight of glory the Hebrew word that signifies glory signifies weight yet the glories that are here are all too light except in weight of cares and sorrows that attend them but that hath the weight of compleat blessedness speak not of all the sufferings nor of all the prosperities of this poor life nor of any thing in it as worthy of a thought when that glory is named yea let not this life be called life when we mention that other life that our Lord by his death hath purchas'd for us Be not afraid of their terrour No time nor place in the World so favourable to Religion that it is not still needful to arm a Christian mind against the outward oppositions and discouragements he shall meet with all
of a ready memory nor rich invention acting it self in the performance these may draw a neat picture of it but still the life is wanting The motion of the Heart Godwards holy and divine affection makes prayer real and lively and acceptable to the Living God to whom it is presented the pouring out of thy heart to him that made it and therefore hears it and understands what it speaks and how it s moved and affected in calling on him It is not the guilded Paper and good writing of a Petition that prevailes with a Man but the moving Sense of it and to the King that discerns the heart heart sense is the sense of all and that which he alone regards listens what that speaks and takes all as nothing where that is silent all other excellence i● prayer is but the outside and fashion of it that is the life of it Though Prayer precisely taken is only petition yet in its ●uller and usual sense it comprises the vent of our humble sense of vileness and sin in the sincere confession and the extolling withal and praising the holy name of our God his excellency and goodness and thankful acknowledgment of received mercies Of these sweet ingredient perfumes is the incense of prayer composed and by the divine fire of love ascends unto God the Heart and all with it and when the Hearts of the Saints unite in joynt prayer the Pillar of sweet smoke goes up the greater and fuller Thus says that Song of the Spouse going up from the Wilderness as Pillars of smoak perfumed with Myrrh and Frankincense and all the Powders of the Merchant and as the word there signifies streight Pillars like the tallest streightest kind of trees Indeed the sincerity and unfeignedness of prayer makes it go up as a streight Pillar no crookedness in it tending streight towards Heaven and bowing to no side by the way Oh! the single and fixed viewing of God as in other ways it is the thing makes all holy and sweet so particularly in this Divine Work of Prayer It is true we have to deal with a God who of himself needs not this our pains either to inform or excite him he fully knows our thoughts before we express them and our wants before we feel them or think of them Nor doth his affection and gracious bent to do his Children good wax remiss or admit the least abate and forgetfulness of them But instead of necessity on God's part which cannot be imagined we shall find that Equity and that singular Dignity and Utility of it on our part which cannot be denied 1. Equity that thus the Creaturesignifie his homage to and dependance on his Creator for his being and well-being takes all the good he enjoys or expects from that Sovereign Good declaring himself unworthy waiting for all upon the terms of free goodness and acknowledging all from that Spring 2. Dignity Man was made for communion with God his Maker 't is the Excellency of his Nature to be capable of this end the happiness of it to be raised to enjoy it Now in nothing more in this Life is this communion actually and highly enjoyed than in the exercise of prayer that he may freely impart his affairs and estate and wants to God as the faithfullest and powerfullest Friend the richest and lovingest Father may use the liberty of a Child telling his Father what he stands in need of and desires and communing with him with humble confidence admitted to so frequent presence with so great a King 3. The Vtility of it 1. Easing the Soul in times of strait when it is prest with griefs and fears giving the vent and that in so advantageous a way emptying them into the bosom of God The very vent were it but into the Air gives ease or speak it to a Statue rather than smother it much more ease poured forth into the lap of a Confident and sympathising Friend though unable to help yet much more of one that can and of all Friends our God the surest and most affectionate and most powerful so Isa. 63. 9. both compassion and effectual salvation exprest In all their affliction he was afflicted and the Angel of his presence saved them in his love and in his pity he redeemed them and he bare them and carried them all the days of old And so resting on his Love Power and gracious Promises quiets it self in God upon this assurance that it s not vain to seek him and that he despiseth not the sighing of the poor 2. The Soul is more spiritually affected with its own condition by opening it up before the Lord more deeply sensible of sin and ashamed in his sight in confessing it before him more dilated and enlarged to receive the mercies suited for as the opening wide of the mouth of the soul that it may be filled more disposed to observe the Lord in answering and to bless him and trust on him upon the renewed experiences of his regard to their distresses and desires 3. All the Graces of the Spirit in Prayer are stirr'd and acted and by acting strengthned and increased Faith in applying the Divine Promises which are the very Ground that the Soul goes upon to God and Hope looking out to their performance and Love particularly expressing it self in that sweet converse and delighting in it as love doth in the company of the Person loved thinks all hours too short in speaking with him Oh how the Soul is refresht with freedom of Speech with its beloved Lord and as it delights in that so it is continually advanced and grows by each meeting and conference beholding the excellency of God and relishing the pure and sublime pleasures that is in near communion with him looking upon the Father in the face of Christ and using him as a mediator in prayer as still it must is drawn to further admiration of that bottomless love that found that way of agreement that new and living way of our access when all was shut up and we to have been shut out for ever And then the affectionate expressions of that reflex love to find that vent in prayer do kindle higher as it were ●ann'd and blown up rise to a greater and higher and purer flame and so tend upwards the more strongly David as he doth profess his love to God in Prayer in his Psalms so no doubt it grew in the expressing I will love thee O Lord my strength Psal 18. and Psal. 116. doth raise an incentive of love out of this very consideration of the correspondence of prayers I love the Lord because he hath heard and resolves thereafter upon persistence in that course therefore will I call upon him as long as I live And as the Graces of the Spirit are advanced in prayer by their actings so for this reason further because prayer sets the soul particularly near unto God in Jesus Christ 't is then in his presence and being much with God in this way it is
cannot consist with the love of God as St. Iohn tells us drunk with the inordinate unlawful love even of their lawful calling and the lawful gain they pursue by it their hearts going after it and so reeling to and fro never fixed on God and heavenly Things but either hurried up and down with uncessant business or if sometimes at ease it is as the ease of a drunken man not compos'd to better and wiser thoughts but falling into a dead sleep contrary to the watching here joyned with sobriety Watch. There is a Christian Rule to be observed in the very moderating of bodily sleep and that particularly for the interest of Prayer but Watching as Sobriety here is chiefly the spiritual circumspectness and vigilancy of the mind in a wary walking posture that it be not surprized by the assaults or slights of Satan by the World nor its nearest and most deceiving enemy the corruption that dwells within that being so near doth most readily watch unperceived advantages and easily circumvents us Heb. 12. 1. The Soul of a Christian being surrounded with enemies of so great both power and wrath and so watch●ul to undoe it should it not be watchful for its own safety and live in a military vigilancy continually keeping constant watch and sentinel and suffering nothing to pass that may carry the least suspicion of danger to be distrustful and jealous of all the motions of his own Heart and the smilings of the World and in relation to these it will be a wise course to take that word as a good caveat be watchful and remember to mistrust Under the Garment of some harmless pleasure or some lawful liberties may be conveyed into thy Soul some thief or traytor that will either betray thee to the enemy or at least pilser and steal of the preciousest things thou hast Do we not by experience find how easily our foolish hearts are seduc'd and deceived and so apt to deceive themselves and by things that seem to have no evil in them yet are drawn from the height of affection to our highest good and from our Communion with God and study to please him which should not be intermitted for then it will abate but ought still be growing 2. Now the Relation of these is clear they are inseparably link't together each of them assistant and helpful to the other in their nature as they are here in the words Sobriety the friend of watchfulness and prayer of both Intemperance doth of necessity draw on sleep excessive eating or drinking sending up too many and so gross vapours surcharge the brain and when the body is thus deaded how unfit is it for any active imployment Thus the mind by a surcharge of delights or desires or cares of earth is made so heavy and dull that it cannot awake hath not spiritual activeness and clearness that spiritual exercises particularly Prayer do require Yea as bodily insobriety full feeding and drinking not only for the time indisposes to action but by custome of it brings the body to so gross and heavy a temper that the very natural spirits cannot stir to and fro in it with freedom but are clog'd and stick as the Wheels of a Coach in a deep miry way Thus is it with the Soul glutted with earthly things the affections bemir'd with them make it resist and unactive in spiritual things and the motions of the spirit heavy and obscured in it grows carnally secure and sleepy prayer comes heavily off But when the affections are soberly acted and even in lawful things that they have not liberty with the reins laid on their Necks to follow the World and carnal projects and delight when the unavoidable affairs of this life are done with a spiritual mind a heart kept free and disingaged Then is the Soul more nimble for spiritual things for Divine Meditation and Prayer it can watch and continue in these things and spend it self in that excellent way with more alacrity Again as the Sobriety and the watchful temper attending it enables for Prayer so Prayer preserves these it winds up the Soul from the Earth raises it above these things that intemperance feeds on acquaints it with the transcending sweetness of Divine Comforts the love and the loveliness of Jesus Christ and these most powerfully wean the Soul from these low creeping pleasures that the World gapes after and swallows with such greediness He that is admitted to nearest intimacy with the King and is called daily to his presence not only in the view and company of others but likewse in secret will he be so mad as to sit down and drink with the kitchin boys or the common guards so far below what he may enjoy surely no. Prayer being our near Communion with the great God certainly it sublimates the Soul and makes it look down upon the base ways of the World with disdain and despise the truly besotting pleasures of it Yea the Lord doth sometime fill these Souls that converse much with him with such beautiful delights such inebriating sweetness as I may call it that 't is in a happy manner drunk with those and the more of this the more is the Soul above base intemper●nce in the delights of the World as common drunkenness makes a Man less than a Man this makes him more that throws him below himself makes him a beast this raises him above makes him an Angel Would you as sure you ought have much faculty for Prayer and be frequent in 〈◊〉 and find much the pure sweetness of it then 〈…〉 selves more the muddy pleasures and sweetness of the World if you would pray much and with much advantage then be sober and watch unto prayer 〈…〉 your hearts to long so after ease and wealth 〈◊〉 esteem in the World these will make your hearts if they mix with them become like them and take 〈◊〉 quality will make them gross and earthly and unable to mount up will clog the wings of pray●r and you shall find the loss when your Soul is heavy and drowsie and falls off from delighting in God and your Communion with him Will such things as those you follow be able to countervail your damage can they speak you peace and uphold you in a day of darkness and distress or may it not be such now as will make them all a burden and vexation to you But on the otherside the more you abate and let go of these and come empty and hungry to God in prayer the more room shall you have for his consolations and therefore the more plentifully will he pour in of them and enrich your Soul with them the more the less you take in of the other 2. Would you have your selves raised to and continued and advanced in a spiritual heavenly temper free from the surfeits of earth and awake and active for heaven be uncessant in prayer But thou wilt say I find nothing but heavy indisposedness in it nothing but roving and vanity of
is hid with Christ in God The World sees here nothing of his Glory and beauty and his own not much have but a little glimmering of him and their own happiness in him know little of their own high condition and what they are born to But in that bright day he shall shine forth in his royal dignity and all eyes shall see him and be overcome with his splendour terrible shall it be to those that formerly despised him and his Saints but to them the gladest day that ever arose upon them and that shall never set or be benighted The day they so much longed and lookt out for the full accomplishment of all their hopes and desires Oh! how dark were all our days without the hope of this day The● says the Apostle ye shall rejoyce with exceeding joy and to the end you may not fall short of that Joy in the participance of Glory fall not back from a cheerful progress in the Communion of these sufferings that are so close linked with it and will so sure lead unto it and end it For in this the Apostles expression this Glory and Joy is set before them as the great matter of their desires and hopes and the certain end of their present sufferings Now upon these grounds the motion will appear reasonable and not too great a demand to rejoyce even in the sufferings It is true that passage in the Epistle to the Heb. opposes present Affliction to Joy But 1. If you mark it is but in the appearance or outward visage it seemeth not to be matter of joy but of grief To look to it it hath not a smiling countenance yet joy may be under it 2. And though to the flesh it is what it seems grief and not joy yet there may be under it spiritual joy yea the affliction it self may help and advance that joy 3. Through the natural sense of it there will be some allay or mixture of grief so that the joy cannot be pure and compleat but yet there may be joy even in it Thus the Apostle here clearly gives rejoyce now in suffering that you may rejoyce exceedingly after it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 leaping for joy doubtles this joy at present is but a little parcel a drop of that Sea of joy Now 't is joy but more reserved then they shall leap Yet In present rejoyce even in trial yea in fiery trial This may be the Children of God are not called to so sad a life as the World imagines besides what is laid up they have even here their rejoycings and Songs in their distresses as those Prisoners had their Psalms even at midnight after their stripes in their chains before they knew of a sudden deliverance true there may be a darkness within clouding all the matter of their joy but even that darkness is the feed time of after joy and light is sown in that darkness and shall spring up and not only shall they have a rich crop at full harvest but even some first fruits of it here in pledge of the harvest And this they ought to expect and seek after with humble submissive minds for the measure and time of it that they may be partakers of spiritual joy and may by it be enabled to go patiently yea cheerfully through the tribulations and tentations that be in their way homeward and for this endeavour after a more clear discerning of their interest in Christ that they may know they partake of him and so in suffering are partakers of his sufferings and shall be partakers of his Glory Many afflictions will not cloud and obstruct this so much as one sin therefore if ye would walk cheerfully be most careful to walk holily All the winds about make not an earthquake but that within Now this joy is grounded on this Communion 1. Sufferings then 2. In Glory 1. In suffering even in themselves it is a sweet joyful thing to be a sharer with Christ in any thing all enjoyments wherein he is not are bitter to a Soul that loves him and all sufferings with him sweet The worst things of Christ more ●●uly delightful than the best things of the World his afflictions sweeter than their pleasures his reproaches more glorious than their honours and more rich than their treasures as Moses accompted them Heb. 11. Love delights in likeness and Communion not only in things otherwise pleasant but in the hardest and harshest things that have not any thing in them desireable but only that likeness so that this is very sweet to a heart possest with this love what does the World in hatreds and persecutions and revilings for Christ but make me more like him give me a greater share with him in that which he did so willingly undergo for me When he was sought to be a King he escaped but when he was sought to the Cross he freely yielded himself And shall I shrink and creep back from what he calls me to for his sake yea even all my other troubles and sufferings I will desire to have stampt thus with this conformity to the sufferings of Christ in the humble obedient cheerful endurance of them and giving up my will to my fathers The following of Christ makes any way pleasant his faithful followers refuse no march after him be it through deserts and Mountains and Storms and hazards that will affright self-pleasing easie Spirits hearts kindled and acted with the Spirit of Christ will follow him wheresoever he goeth As he speaks it for warnings if they persecuted me they will persecute you so he speaks it for comforting them and it is sufficiently so if they hate you they hated me before you 2. Then add the other see whether it tends he shall be revealed in his Glory and ye shall be filled even over with joy in the part●king of that Glory Therefore rejoyce now in the midst of all your sufferings stand upon the advanced ground of the promises and covenant of grace and by faith overlook this moment and all that is in it to that day wherein everlasting joy shall be upon your heads a Crown of it and sorrow and mourning shall flie away believe this day and the victory is won Oh! that blessed hope well fixed and acted would give other manner of Spirits what zeal for God what invincible courage against all encounters How soon will this pageant of the World vanish that Men are gazing on these pictures and fancies of false stiled pleasures and honours and give place to the real glory of the Sons of God this blessed Son that is God appearing in full Majesty and all his Brethren in glory with him all cloathed in their robes And if you ask who are they why these are they that came out of great tribulation and washed their robes in the blood of the Lamb. Verses 14 15 16. 14. If ye be reproached for the name of Christ happy are ye for the Spirit of Glory and of God resteth upon you on
life of a Christian to be daily outstripping himself to be spiritually wiser holier more heavenly minded to day than yesterday and to morrow if it be added to his life than to day every day loving the World less and Christ more than the former and gaining every day some further victory over his secret corruptions his passions more subdued and mortified his desires in all temporal things more cool and indifferent and in Spiritual things more ardent that miserable lightness of Spirit cured and his heart more solided and fixed upon God aspiring to more near Communion with him particular graces made more lively and strong by often acting and stiring them up faith more confirmed and stayed love more enflamed composed meekness making more deep humility Oh! this were a worthy ambition indeed you would have your Estates growing and your credit growing how much rather should you seek to have your graces growing and not be content with any thing you have attained to 2. Obs. But all our endeavours and diligence in this will be vain unless we look for our perfecting and establishing from the right hand without which we do nothing thither the Apostle moves his desires for his Brethren and so teaches them the same addr●ss for themselves the God of all Grace c. This prayer is grounded as all prayer of faith must be on the promise and covenant of God He is our Rock and his work is perfect he doth not begin a building and then leave it off none of his designs break in the middle or fall short of their end he will perfect that good work which he hath begun to the day of Iesus Christ Phil. 1. And how often is he called the strength of those that trust on him Psal. 18. 30. Their Buckler and his way perfect Hence is the stability of grace and perseverance of the Saints 't is founded upon his unchangeableness not that they are so though truly sanctified if they and their graces were left to their own manage No 't is he that not only gives that rich portion to those he adopts to be his Children but keeps it for them and them in the possession of it he maintains the lot of our Inheritance And to build that perswasion of perseverance upon his truth and power engag'd in it is no presumption yea 't is high dishonour to him to question But when Nature is set to Judge of Grace it must speak according to it self and therefore very unsuitably to that which it speaks of Natural wits apprehend not the spiritual tenour of the Covenant of Grace but model it to their own principles and quite disguise it and they think of nothing but their resolves and moral purposes or if they take a Notion of Grace confused they imagine it put into their own hands to keep or lose it and will not stoop to a continual dependance on the strength of another rather chuse that game of hazard and it is certain loss and undoing to do for themselves But the humble Believer is otherwise school●d he hath not so learned Christ he sees himself 〈◊〉 with enemies without and buckled to a treacherous heart within that will betray him to them and he dare no more trust himself to himself than to his most p●o●essed enemies Thus it ought to be and the more the heart is brought to this humble suiting of that ability and strengthning and per●ecting from God the more shall it find both stability and peace from the assurance of that stability Inf. Certainly the more the Christian is acquainted with himself the more will he go out of himself for his perfecting and establishing finds that when he thinks to go forward he is driven backward and 〈◊〉 gets hold of him oftentimes when he thought to have smitten it and finds that miserable inconstancy of his heart in spiritual things the vanishing of his purposes and breaking off of his thoughts that they usuall● die ●re they be brought forth that when he hath thought I will pray more reverently and set my self to behold God when I speak to him and watch more over my heart that it fly not out and leave me possibly the first time he sets to it thinking to be 〈◊〉 of his intention he finds himself more scatter●d and disorder'd and dead than at any time before when he hath conceived thoughts of humility and self abusement and thinks now I am down and laid low within my self to rise and look big no more yet some vain fancy creeps in anon and encourages him and raises him up to his old estate so that in this plight had he not higher strength to look at he would sit down and give over all as a thing wholly hopeless ever to attain his jo●rneys end But when he considers whose work that is within him even these small beginings of desires he is encouraged by the greatness of the Work not to despise and despair of the small appearance of the work in its beginning the day of small things and knows that it is not by any power nor might but by his Spirit that it shall be accomplisht lavs hold on that word though thy beginning be small yet thy latter end shall greatly increase Looks to Jesus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 12. 2. looks oft from all oppositions and difficulties looks above them to Jesus the Author and Finisher of our Faith Author and therefore Finisher this that royal dignity interested in the maintenance and compleating of what he hath wrought notwithstanding of all thy imperfections and the strength of sin he can and will subdue it notwithstanding thy loose light condition that wer't easily blown away with the least wind of tentation yet he shall hold thee in his right hand and there thou shall be firm as the Earth that is so settled by his hand that though it hangs on nothing yet nothing can remove it though thou art weak he is strong and he that strengthens thee and renews thy strength when it seems to be gone and out spent he makes it fresh and greater than ever before The word Isa 40. renew change they shall have for their own his strength a weak Believer and his strong Saviour too hard for all that can rise against them Hominem cum ●asi metiri is here fit no taking right measure of a Christian but that way And though thou art indeed expos'd to great Storms and Tempests yet he builds thee on himself makes thee by believing to found on him and so though the winds blow and the rain fall yet thou standest being built on him thy rock And this indeed is our safety the more we cleave to our rock and fasten on him this is the only thing establishes us and perfects and strengthens us therefore well is that word added 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 found you or settle you on your foundation This is the firmness of the Church against the Gates of Hell he is a strong foundation for establishment and