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A30672 Not fear, but love a sermon preached before the governors of the Charity for Relief of Poor Widows and Orphans of Clergy-men, at St. Mary le Bow, on the 7th day of Decemb., 1682 / by Ar. Bury ... Bury, Arthur, 1624-1713. 1683 (1683) Wing B6203; ESTC R37172 30,572 54

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of those unhappy widows and orphans who have nothing left them by their deceased husbands and fathers but their merits to administer But oh the disappointment Our Apost'l after his so great boast of the Galatians love quickly complains Where is the blessedness you spoak of And well may we demand Where is this great beauty that so descends to the very feet Hath age withered it to a deformity equal to its youthful loveliness Our very eyes are as loathsom as the primitive Preachers very feet were beatiful and the deformity descends to our posterity as their only sure inheritance yea som are so impios as to make God a party with themselvs in the entayl pretending that Clergy-mens children are equally hated of God and Man seldom or never attaining either worth in themselvs or prosperity in the world God be blessed we are henceforth secured from that malicios slander This conspicuos and perhaps matchless assembly having for ever rooted that fals toung out of its dwelling Yet thogh the Toung be rooted out the Heart is still the same so void of Love so full of ' spite against this once so honored caling that we must think it a great bargain if we can compound for ordinary charity and depose my Text to this poor plea The Preachers of the Gospel bring no evil tidings therefor they deserv not to be hated And since it is better to Cure an evil than to Complain of it I conceve I cannot do better service to my Text the Gospel and its Preachers than by removing the cause of the hatred we sink under which indeed is no other than that Epidemical mistake the root of all misery the taking things by wrong handl The Gospel hath two handls Threats and Promises its threats are Few and its promises Many its Threats shew us our danger only that we may rejoyce in our escape its Promises immediately raise our joys Threats therefor both in quantity and design sit upon the face of the Gospel as beauty-spots do upon that of a fair Lady here one and there another to this only end that by their vanquished blackness they may set off the lustre of the beauty which is to adorn the very feet but by the unhappy officiosness of melancholy messengers those spots have been enlarged to a visor which so cover the face of Religion that we cannot see its Joys for its Fears and the very grace of God which bringeth salvation appeareth like the inhumane Nero saying Let them Hate me so they Fear me This ugly visor shall I endeavor to pull off as my Text directs me by two Propositions 1. The Gospel doth not design to bring us to God by Fear but by Love For it is a Gospel of Peace glad tidings of good things 2. The mistake of this is the cause that the Gospel and its Preachers are so hated by the world For if Glad tidings make the messenger beautiful Evil tidings must make him loathsom I. THE Gospel doth not draw men to God by Fear but by Love This as it is clearly exprest in my Text so is it almost in every page of the New Testament I shall instance but in one or two places more which expresly offer one handle and reject the other In this same Epistle ch 8 v. 15. our Apost'l declareth as clearly as possib'l You have not receved the spirit of bondage again fear but the spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father And no less clearly 2 Tim. 1.7 God hath not given us the spirit of Fear but of Power of Love and of a Sound mind In the former place he opposeth the spirit of the Gospel to That of the Law and in the later he vieth with the Philosophers who pretend to exalt the mind to the highest freedom and perfection If this can be yet more clear St John hath made it so for with pomp unmatched by any other pen he ushereth his first Epistl with This proclamation These things we write unto you that your joy may be full and throghout the whole body of the following Epistl exalteth Love as the only way to this fulness of Joy ch 4. v. 18. There is no fear in Love but Love when it is perfected casteth out fear bicaus Fear hath Torment It is impossib'l to find Plainer and therefor needless to seek for More declarations of this truth Nothing can remain but that we reconcile them with such other words of Scripture as seem to contradict them Two such especially there are One spoken by our Lord and another by our same Apostl to which may be reduced all others of the same air These two therefore if we can reconcile we shall both State and Clear the truth 1. Our Apostl himself seemeth to contradict this Phil. 2 12. Work out your salvation with fear and trembling Doth not this offer salvation by that handl which but now he rejected That we may now or at any other time reconcile appearances of contradiction we must carefully consider which of the two Propositions may best be broght to compliance It is plain that what we have heard declared a-against Fear cannot be bent to any other sence we must therefor try whether the fear and trembling which he recommendeth to the Philippians may agree both with his declaration in two other Epistl's that we have not receved the spirit of fear or with his exhortation in the same Epistl ch v. Rejoyce in the Lord evermore and again I say rejoice To find out this it is necessary we look about us and see how he useth the same phrase upon other occasions possibly it may be an Idiom Twice more we find him at the same phrase and in both places his meaning will very well comply with Love and Joy Eph 6.5 Servants obey your Masters with Fear and Trembling What doth not a Servant please both God and his Master better if he Obey him with Love and Chearfulness And what shall we say to the 9 th verse And you Masters do the same things to Them Must Masters also treat their Servants with Fear and Trembling Yes but such as may circulate between the best Masters and the best Servants even such as himself explaineth by good will v. 7. This possibly will be plainer by 2 Cor. 7.15 His inward affection is more abundant towards you while he remembreth the obedience of you all how with Fear and Trembling you receved him Titus came in kindness to visit them and they welcomed him with such endearing caresses as made his already great inward affection more abundant than before Here certainly the Fear and Trembling which so welcomed and heightned Love must be so far from excluding it and Joy that they import an extraordinary mesure of them Yea we need look no farther for a good light whereby to see the meaning of this phrase in That his exhortation to the Philippians than the encoragement wherewith he quickneth them in the words immediately following For it is God which worketh in you
that is the Greatest part of mankind And at That time the world was not capabl to have it Cured but only Fomented And that upon That very account the Law imposed such exercises as the Gospel forbids we have a clear discours of St Paul in the beginning of the fourth chapter to the Galatians Now I say that the heir as long as he is a child differeth nothing from a servant thogh he be Lord of all but is under tutors and governors until the time appointed of the father even so we when we were children were in bondage under the Elements 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the a b c of the world But when the fulness of time was com God sent forth his Son made of a woman made under the law to redeem them that were under the law that we might receiv the adoption of sons And bicause ye are sons God hath sent forth the spirit of his son into your hearts crying Abba father Wherefor thou art no more a servant but a son and if a son then an heir of God throgh Christ In this discours you have a full discovery of Superstition its Nature its Operations and its Abolition 1. It s Nature childishness requiring the discipline of Fear to govern it 2. Its Exercises childish weak and beggarly Elements the first letters that children learn 3. It s Cure the spirit of Adoption sent forth into the hearts of Gods children now grown up to manhood Vpon this discours how justly doth he ground his expostulation ver 9. Now after that ye have known God or rather are known of God how turn ye again to the weak and beggarly elements wherein you desire again to be in bondage When I was a child I spake as a child I understood as a child I thoght as a child but when I became a man I put away childish things When mankind was unripe in Age it was so in Vnderstanding and no wonder its Exercises should be suitabl It was governed by the rod and busied about ceremonies but now it is com to manhood you are called to have fellowship with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ 1 Jo. 1.3 to be partakers of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 and consequently of his Wisdom and Holines his Loves and his Hates and therefore to approve things that are excellent Phil. 1.10 How is it then that you still spend your time your strength and your labour in whipping of topps bandying of balls and playing with nuts no less childish in your imaginations than the law of Moses could either Find or Make you Thus did the Apostl rebuke the Galatians and what would he have said to this and som preceding generations which have outgo'n both Jews and Gentiles in this childishness and that especially in two great respects 1. We find not that either Jews or Gentiles disquieted themselvs about maters of mere Belief thogh they did about maters of Action 2. Nor that they disturbed the peace of their Nations thogh they did that of their own Minds 1. They disquieted not themselvs with maters of mere belief conceiving that the true worship of God consisted not in Disputing but Imitating his Perfections But we in mere honor to the glorious promises which are made to Believing have multiplied Articls of Faith and Questions upon every Articl and Doubts upon every Question and every one of these we call maters of Faith and mater of Faith we take to be mater of Salvation and if we mistake in the One we believ we shall miss of the Other Hence is it that Catholik and Heretik among the Romanists Orthodox and Heterodox among the Beformed sound so terribly as to fray many a good man if not quite out of his Wits yet which is almost as bad out of his Corage to use them Reason we are told must not presume to medl in maters of Faith but we must deny our selvs no less in our Rational faculties than in our Sensual appetites for it is no less impious to Disbeliev God's word than to Disobey his command And in This they speak not only Truth but Reason which therefor they justify by exercising But as it is in Moral vertues so is it in Faith it lieth between two extremes Defect on One hand and Excess on the Other It is no less frequent in maters of Faith than in Manners to teach for Doctrines of God the Commandments of Men in the One tormenting the Mind with needless Mysteries as in the Other the Body with needless Penances But to Faith what could have be'n more incongruos Repentance indeed in its very name carrieth a sower countenance importing a mortification of our Natural appetites and consequently a pain to our hearts But Faith who 's proper object is Glad-tidings might justly claim not only freedom from Pain but such fulness of joy as should cast out the grief even of Repentance whereas now it is made the harder taskmaster of the two For however painful it be it is not impossibl to cut off hands or feet or pull out eys but our Reason is not only the Ey but the Heart of our Soul not to be cutt or pluckt off Tormented indeed it may be and most in those who have most improved it as the clearest ey is always tenderest and stupified it may be yet not to such a privation but that it will ever and anon feel anxios fits of melancholy doubting of the truth of som things which are received as matters of Faith and consequently of our title to Salvation for want of Faith Few can at all times bost with the Physician there are not impossibilities enogh in Religion and fewer with the Father credo quia impossibile est It is hard to apprehend how any thing can be at once True and Impossib'l but to make the very Impossibility a reason why I should believ it let St. Paul judg whether this be not cum ratione insanire For when he would perswade a belief of the Resurrection he did not urge the impossibility but the contrary Why should it be thoght a thing incredib'l that God should raise the dead and when hereupon Festus charged him with madness he replied I am not mad but speak the words of truth and soberness What Soberness can there be in a quite contrary argument yea what plainer madness than to talk such extravagant inconsistences as infer credibility from impossibility What other spirit but that of Fear could thus confound mens understandings Fear of all passions the most infatuating Fear which most frequently blindeth the most piercing judgments Fear which maketh every shadow a man and every bush a thief and every thief a murtherer Fear and only fear can so disorder our minds that we think it equally necessary to salvation to believ the niceties of Schoolmen and the Doctrines of the Gospel and distrust our interest in Christ if we can neither satisfie nor destroy our reason when it cannot comply with contradictions which he never enjoyned us to believ 2. Much less did they embroil the publik peace with controversies in Religion Whereas among Christians there is not any question so nice in point of Belief or so slight in point of Worship but hath be'n able to engage whole Families in the fiercest contentions and whole Nations in most bloody wars yea for two or three ages there hath hardly b'en a rebellion whereof Religion hath not be'n either the Real or Pretended cause And This as it is more notoriosly scandalous than the now mentioned disquiets of private persons so is it if possibl more directly opposit to the most earnest endeavours of the Gospel which doth indeed very frequently exhort us to joy and comfort in our own spirits but much more earnestly and solenly provoke us to love and peace toward others Yea Love maketh so great a figure in almost every page of the New Testament that it seemeth not only the Supreme but almost the Only grace It looks like unlawful to fight upon Any occasion whatsoever but to fight for Religion seemeth no less contradictious than to fight for Love And that the Only Religion which commandeth to beat swords into plow-shares should be the only religion that forgeth plow-shares to swords is a fanaticism so irrational as nothing but Fear could have produced The summ therefor is This The light of Nature agreeth with that of the Gospel to declare that we are not to serv God for Fear but Love What our Apost'l opposeth to a Sound mind that our Philosopher caleth a mad error but the madness is incomparably greater in a Christian than ever it was or indeed could possibly be in a Heathen For as it is the utmost extravagance of frensy to beat our selvs or our friends so in this we exceed the Heathen that many among Vs but none among Them disturb their own souls with anxios doubts concerning Faith or imbroil their Nation with bloody wars upon difference of opinions in Doctrine or Worship so is it more monstrosly mad in a Christian by how much more clearly and solenly the Gospel hath labored to prevent the one and the other by declaring that we have not receved the slavish and mad spirit of Fear but of Power and Love and of a sound mind And again that The Kingdom of God is not meat and drink but righteosness and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost for he that in these things serveth Christ is accepted of God and approved of men This upright and erect walking this frank and chearful this manly yea divine freedom of spirit as it maketh men more Like God so doth it make them more Acceptabl to him it will not only vindicate religion from the obloquies of its enemies who either despise or fear it as a curb to generosity and freedom but recommend it to them as most noble and pleasant nor will it only silence our quarrels but endear us in mutual affection FINIS * See Annot. 1. a Annot. 2. b Annot. 3. c See Annot. 4. d See Annoi ult a Plutarch in Dione