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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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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
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
whoever shall take him shall take us too We will not part no not in death we will live and die and sleep and rise again together He that will have him shall have us whether he will or no He is in our arms there we will keep him Yet in lieu of parting with him we will part with our selves and offer our selves for him if that will do it yes and that will do it Duo minuta habeo Domine corpus animam says the devout Father I have two mites O Lord I have two mites to offer to give thee for thy Son to offer thee for him my soul and my body Them thou shalt have willingly I am content to part with them so I may keep him and they will content him Offer them up then a living reasonable sacrifice for it will be an acceptable service too an acceptable blessing of him Yet as we offer up our selves we must now lastly offer up Christ too He gave him to us to be an offering for us to sanctifie all our offerings for a blessing to us to bless all our blessings And for the imperfection of all our righteousness offerings and sacrifices prayers and praises and blessings to make them accepted which in themselves and their weak performances no way deserve he was given us to offer His perfection will make amends for our imperfections his purity for our impurities his strength for our weakness and for them when we have done all we can to be accepted we must offer him or have all rejected We must when we begin to bless turn our selves with old Iacob to this Caput lectuli this beds-head whereon only the soul can rest or leaning upon the top of this Staff as the Apostle renders it the only staff wherein old Israel trusts the only staff whereon we rely for mercy and acceptance This is the name of the Angel in whom only we are to bless in whom only we are blest in whom either God blesses us or we him This is the sum he the chief of all our oblations all our blessings by oblation and the blessing both of our resolutions and endeavours all without whom we can do neither the one nor other neither resolve good nor practice it He therefore is to be offered with all thankfulness to God by us his merits only to be pleaded by us and the form of all our blessing thus to run Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy holy Son the Child Iesus give the praise It was not our own arm that helped us to him 't is not our own arms that can hold him 't is not our own strength that can keep him 't is not our own hands that can present any offering worthy of the least acceptance To God only therefore be the praise to Chrìst only the merit of all our blessings Thus are we lastly to pray too that God would accept us and our blessing Bless him with our petitions 1. That he would please to pardon all our sins or pass by all our weaknesses in this days in every days performance our neglects our coldnesses our drinesses our wearinesses and all the issues of our infirmities any ways That 2. he would accept our offerings and be pleased with us in his Son accept us in his beloved That 3. he would grant us the benefit of that holy Sacrament which we have this day received all the benefits of his Death and Passion the full remission of all our sins and the fulness of all his graces signified and conveyed by those dreadful mysteries That 4. he would particularly arm us every one of us against their particular corruptions with strength and grace proportionable to every one and effectual to us all For proper and particular petitions rising from the sense of our several necessities are this day proper to be askt and as easie to be obtained whilst it is his own day in which he invited us to him and will deny us nothing that we shall earnestly faithfully and devoutly ask him For this also to pray to petition is benedicere and it is a way of blessing God to offer up our prayers thereby acknowledging and confessing his power and goodness which is no less in other words than to praise and bless him He that offers praise honours him and he that presents prayers professes and proclaims him Almighty Father gracious and good and glorious God at the very first dash God blessed for evermore Light up now your Candles at this evening Service for the glory of your morning Sacrifice 't is Candlemas Become we all burning and shining lights to do honour to this day and the blessed armful of it Let your souls shine bright with grace your hands with good works Let God see it and let man see it so bless we God Walk we as Children of the light as so many walking lights and offer we our selves up like so many holy Candles to the Father of light But be sure we light all our lights at this babes eyes that lies so enfolded in our arms and neither use nor acknowledge any other light for better than darkness that proceeds from any other but this eternal light upon whom all our best thoughts and words and works must humbly now attend like so many petty sparks or rays or glimmerings darted from and perpetually reflecting thankfully to that glorious light from this day beginning our blessing God the only lightsome kind of life till we come to the land of light there to offer up continual praises sing endless Benedicite's and Allelujahs no longer according to the Laws or Customs upon earth but after the manner of Heaven and in the Choire of Angels with holy Simeon and Anna and Mary and Ioseph all the Saints in light and glory everlasting Amen Amen He of his mercy bring us thither who is the light to conduct us thither he lead us by the hand who this day came to lie in our arms he make all our offerings accepted who was at this Feast presented for us he bless all our blessings who this day so blessed us with his presence that we might bless him again and he one day in our several due times receive our spirits into his hands our souls into his arms our bodies into his rest who this day was taken corporally into Simeons arms has this day vouchsafed to be spiritually taken into ours Iesus the holy Child the eternal Son of God the Father To whom with the holy Spirit be all honour and praise and glory and blessing from henceforth for evermore Amen A SERMON ON THE First Sunday in Lent 2 COR. vi 2. Behold now is the accepted time behold now is the day of Salvation ANd truly such a time is worth beholding For the business of it here being of no less concernment than Gods reconciling us to himself ver 18 19. of the former Chapter the committing the word and office of this reconciliation to his Ministers ver 20. of the
fortunate in our new Nativities or second Births or give us audience with the Almighty Alas these are but as the Star of Remphan and Moloch which only carry us into Babylon confound all the projects we build upon them The Star we are to look to is the Star of Iacob our Sol the Sun of Righteousness our Venus the Holy Spirit of love our Iupiter God the Father the great Iuvans Pater of the World These are the only Planets the Christian guides his motions by that make our business go well our time accepted our days lucky And That such a time there is in the great Affairs of souls a time of a readier acceptance with God and what it is that makes it so is now worth the considering That so it is the Scripture tells us plain The Prophet from whom our Apostle takes the words immediately before the Text and which he ushers in his own times and ours says as much Isa. xlix 8. calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tempus voluntatis a time not only when he will but when he is willing to hear us Tempus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we may render it the time of his good pleasure the Vulgar gives us it by tempore placito a time when he is pleased well pleased to hear us and be pleasant with us The same Prophet tells us too of a time not only when he may be found but when he is near ready and at hand to hear us Isa. lv 6. The Prophet David expresly Psal. lxix 13. speaks of an acceptable time to make our prayers in And To day if you will hear his voice in the Psalmist paraphrased by the Apostle to day while it is called to day shews there is a set day or days of audience with God wherein he sets himself as it were with all readiness to hear and help us an accepted time And will ye next know what it is that makes it so There are but two things that do Either Gods being in a good or pleasing disposition towards us or our being in a good and pleasing disposition towards him Come we but to him in either of these and we have nickt the time we are sure to be accepted 1. When he is looking upon him in whom he is always well pleased his beloved Son when he is propounding him to us in his Word or Sacraments scattering there as it were his gifts unto men then in those Solemnities is one sort of his accepted times wherein he is ready to do what we will desire him 2. But 2. when we our selves are in a good temper and disposition that 's another In tempore quo vos facitis voluntatem meam so the Chaldee paraphrases the Hebrew the tempus voluntatis or tempus placitum Isa. xlix 8. That time when you do what I would have you says God that 's the accepted time when I will hear you when our souls are in that order and obedience to our God that he would have them then will he be in that readiness to succour us that we would have him The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 goes for season And of seasons there are some you know more acceptable than others Two very acceptable and pleasant in the year the Spring and Summer There are the same in the souls of men A Spring when our graces and vertues begin to sprout and blossom bespread and cloth this earth we carry when the Sun of righteousness begins to smile and warm us when the air grows temperate our passions and affections moderate within us and all our powers breath nothing but Violets and Roses this as the Prophet stiles it the very time of love a disposition and time we cannot but be accepted in wherein God begins to be in love with us There is a Summer too when the hills the highest pitch and spirit of our souls stand thick with Corn and the valleys our lowest powers our inferiour passions laugh and sing when the bright raies of heaven shine hot upon us when we are hung full with all heavenly fruits when our hearts do even burn within us and the whole desires even of our flesh this dust that covers us are on fire for heaven when our hearts pant after the living brooks and our souls are a thirst for God to come unto him to appear before him This indeed is not only the time but the fulness of it when coming so replenisht with grace and righteousness we shall be fully accepted and be sure not to be sent empty away Indeed 't is sometimes an Autumn and a winter season with us A time when our leaves fall off our graces and vertues decay and wither when the fair beauty of a Summer-goodness either spent and dried away with too long a Sun-shine of prosperity or blasted by the first approach of some cold wind some touch of Winter some affliction now at hand makes the day look sad about us and melancholy too no way pleasing A time too there is when 't is high Winter with us our faith and charity grown cold and dead when the streams of our wonted Piety lie as it were chain'd up in icy fetters and the Sun of righteousness scarce appears above the Horizon to us These are times not to expect to be accepted in And such I told you were intimated here too Now is the accepted seems to say plain enough there is a time coming that will not be so that 's the third branch of our first Particular The one and twentieth year after the hundred and twentieth that God gave the Old World to repent in Gen. vi 3. was a year too late The next day after Ninivies forty given her would not have done her work Hierusalem our Saviour tells us had past her day Nunc autem abscondita the things of peace then hidden from her eyes were too sad a proof her day was set St. Luke xix 42. Nunc autem is full opposite to Nunc dies To day if you will hear his voice Heb. iii. shews if you will not you must not look for another They in the First of the Proverbs found no less they had passed their time refused Gods when he called upon them ver 24. They shall therefore call and he will not answer they shall seek him and that early too but he will not be found ver 28. he will but laugh at them for their pains ver 26. A shrewd Lesson to us not to neglect our day Indeed it is not in the power of Astrology to calculate this time nor of any humane judgment to define or point out the day when God has done accepting us but sure such a one there is or it were vain to fright us with a nunc autem with a But when there is no such matter if day after day would come and go and yet never bring on a night wherein no man could work Nay 't is requisite there should be so for were there no such time his very mercy would
adore and magnifie him to day who this day gave us both the occasion and means to hear and understand them I begin now to compare the Nature of the Wind and Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word is and may be translated both It is so in the Text. Some are for Ventus some for Spiritus Breath they are both The one the breath of heaven the other of the air The one Gods the other the Worlds Indeed the wind is a kind of breath or spirit but a spirit in the nicest and subtilest sense it is not A body it is and not a spirit yet the nighest thing it is we have to liken the spirit to as near a simile as we can find for it but the Spirit of the Day is so a spirit as in no sort a body 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with an Article and an Emphasis a Spirit above all Spirits the prime Spirit A Spirit by Essence an essential Spirit or essentially a Spirit A Spirit by Procession the Spirit proceeding personally that Spirit which proceedeth from the Father St. Iohn xv 26. and from the Son St. Iohn xvi 7. which was this Day breath'd first of all solemnly into the World to quicken it to a heavenly life Spiritus Dei and Spiritus Deus the Spirit of God and the Spirit which is God and the only Spirit that can bring us all to God But this great Nature is too great to comprehend too infinite to pursue Nor can the Simile reach it It falls short and so must I and you when we have done our utmost 'T is an easier Project for us both to fall upon the Power and Operations of it though I foresee we shall often there be at a stand too Yet to help our selves as well as we can we will consider the Operations first by themselves then by their Effects and then thirdly by their Course and Compass By themselves first II. The wind you hear blows and so the Spirit blows Yet the Spirit is not blows not neither like every wind There are whirlwinds that make a horrid noise that whirl every way about and turn the World up topsie turvy upside down the wind that is but Spiritus a direct and orderly breathing does not so Spiritus vertiginis is but Vertigo Spiritus the spirit of giddiness that the Prophet speaks of Isa. xix 14. is but the Vertigo or turning of the brain an abuse of the name not a spirit but a meer humour that makes us giddy has made this Nation so too long 2. Blustring and stormy winds there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rather than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Graves violento flamine venti but this no such Spiritus rather than Ventus ours is here a calm and peaceable one a breath rather than a wind a Spirit proceeding from the God of peace bequeathed and sent us by the Prince of peace so still and even that it did not so much as disorder a wreath of that holy flame which this day encircled the heads of the Disciples but let that heavenly fire sit quietly upon them Acts ii 3. 3. Nor is it of this wind to which this Spirit is compared said flat here but spirat not said to blow by a word that signifies commonly only the ordinary and natural blowing All is supernatural here 'T is neither whirling we told you first nor blustring we said secondly nor puffing wind we tell you now 't is a meek an humble Spirit from the beginning it mov'd upon the waters Gen. 1. but did not swell them into waves or billows as natural winds commonly do not does it now but only guides all our waters passions and motions into their proper place with sweetness and order which is meerly a supernatural work 4. And yet as soft and smooth as it blows it is the Spirit of Power a mighty wind Acts ii 2. and rush in it does oft times at first with a little sudden and eager violence yet two syllables one single fiat and all is done strange things we know are done by a very little wind and that one word of this one Spirit made the World out of nothing and can as easily make a nothing of the World He can remove the greatest rocks and mountains not only with the breath of his displeasure but of his pleasure too his easiest breath He blew the Gods of the Heathen out of their Thrones and spake all their Oracles dumb blew all their spirits in a moment thence and yet the voice of his breathing was scarce heard He does so still throws down all the Holds and Fortresses of the devil in us sine strepitu without noise Some rushing mighty wind sometimes may go before it to rouze our dulness and awake us but the spirit is not there Some Earthquake of servile fear may shake us first and affright us from some ill action but the Spirit is not there Some fire or fiery trial may first burn or scorch us and thereby make us look about us or some kinder fire warm us into a better temper than formerly we were in but the Spirit is not there neither But when these outward dispensations have sufficiently disposed us to attention then comes the still small voice 1 Kings xix 12. and there 's the Spirit that silently glides into our souls as the small dew into a fleece of wool Such a still smooth sweet breath of wind is the true resemblance of the Spirit and when this comes it works wonders that minds me of the next Particular the Effects of both the Wind and Spirit Two especial effects the Wind has To purifie and to refresh These are the prime Effects of the Spirit too 1. When the holy Spirit enters into the heart it purifies and cleanses it from all pollution This made David pray Psal. li. 10. Create in me O Lord a clean heart Yea but how O blessed Prophet why as it follows by renewing a right spirit within me That 's the way to make him clean No way but that but that will For the Spirit is compar'd to fire Acts ii 3. and that purifies To water St. Iohn iv 10. and that cleanses And here to wind and that blows away all the chaff and dust that is either in us or about us 2. This Spirit refreshes too It renews the face of the Earth Psal. civ 30. It giveth rest and quiet Isai. lxiii 14. It upholds and establishes the faint and decaying spirit Psal. li 12. It refreshes us in our Bonds and sets us free Rom. viii 15. It comforts us in all distresses for he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Comforter that should come into the world St. Iohn xiv 26. 3. Nay I may add one thing more It not only refreshes us when we are faint and weary and almost dying but it revives us even when we are dead is a quickning Spirit St. Iohn vi 63. Like that wind the Naturalist tells us of which in the Spring time quickens the dull
sinneth not 1 John v. 18. He is able with Simeon to break all the cords of it to smite all such Philistims before him when this Spirit comes upon him Nor Death nor Life nor Angels nor Principalities nor Powers nor things present nor things to come nor Height nor Depth nor any other Creature can overcome him Rom. viii 38. Over all these he is more than Conquerour Those things which before we were regenerate seem'd impossible when we are once born again are light and easie we can do any thing then through his Spirit that dwelleth in us Stablish us once with this free Spirit and 't is not cold or nakedness hunger or thirst wearisome journeys or dangerous shipwracks stripes or imprisonments racks or gibbets fire or faggot that can force us from our hold or over-power us This very Spirit upholds us in all our pains and at length blows away every thing that troubles or offends us Nor is this Spirit only a Spirit of Power but 2. of Liberty also and where the Spirit is there there is Liberty says St. Paul 2. Cor. 3. 17. that is he that has it is free too Free he is 1. from the bondage of Moses Law redeem'd from under that Gal. iv 5 6. Free 2. though not from the Obligations yet from the Rigours of the Moral Law Gal. iii. 13. Rom. vii 6. Free 3. from Sin made free from that Rom. vi 18. from the Dominion of it Free 4. from the Captivity of the Devil recovered out of his snares 2 Tim. ii 26. Free lastly from the Dominion of Death the sting of it is lost the victory of it gone 1 Cor. xv 55. So is every one free that is born of the Spirit Well may now his fame go out into all the World and his name into all the corners of the earth And indeed it does so in the next words in the next Point of the similitude Thou hearest the sound thereof Evident it is and evident it is to any heard it may be and any one may hear it Thou and Thou and Thou every Thou that will Evident it is first The Spirit is not a fancy nor are the Operations of it so neither The Spirit though it cannot be seen it self yet something there is of it that may be heard heard somewhat of it by the hearing of the ear the effects not always in the understanding only these very ears we carry are oft refresht with the sound of it our very senses sensible of the strength and power of it And he that tells us of grace or Religion all within of so serving God in the Spirit that neither our own nor other bodies are the better for it or shew any signs of it has turn'd his Religion and Devotion into air and imagination and not to Spirit By his fruits you shall know as well the spiritual man as the Prophet Nor has he secondly one peculiar ear-mark one tone and canting Dialect to discern him by He that is born of the Spirit is a free and noble and generous Spirit uses a Language that every body may understand 'T is not the Mystery of the Spirit but the Mystery of Iniquity that thus invelops it self in a private and affected Phrase which sounds 't is to be fear'd the Spirit of Schism Singularity and Rebellion and not of Love and Peace And yet as plain a sound as the Spirits is it is not lastly without some obscurity but that is not of the sound that 's plain and open but of the motion and course of which we may have leave to be ignorant and in many things can be no other That 's the last point wherein the Spirit and spiritual man are like Thou canst no more tell whence or whither those great things the regenerate man acts are than whence the wind or Spirit comes or whither it goes 4. But that so it is the amazements and doubts that this Day possessed those who were the witnesses of the wonders of this days work and their several judgments and conjectures concerning the Apostles this day filled with this holy Spirit will make it without question Some said What meaneth this Others said mocking these men are full of new wine All were amazed and in doubt Acts ii 12 13. The Apostles seem'd such strange things to them now since the Holy Ghost had faln upon them that they knew not new what to make of them or of any thing they did In the progress afterward of their lives and courses they were as little understood as much misconstrued by the world They were thought fools and mad-men when most wise and sober Acts xxvi 24. condemn'd for wicked when they were most innocent reckon'd the scum and off-scouring of the world 1 Cor. iv 13. when they were the Treasures and Jewels of it judg'd as dying when they only truly liv'd accounted sorrowful yet were always rejoycing esteemed poor yet so far from being so that they made many rich thought to have nothing and yet possessed all things 2 Cor. vi 9 10. So it was then so it always was so it ever will be The World will never never can conceive the nature and way of him that is born of the Spirit 1 Cor. ii 14. We know not what to make even of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Text whether to read it born or begotten for 't is both and how he should be both by the same Spirit or how the same Spirit should be both Father and Mother to him we cannot tell How he is begotten by the Spirit how he is new born the ways of his brith the ways of his life the way of his death how he is wrought and form'd and moulded out of his old stiff stubborn temper into mildness and softness how the old man is mortified in all his members how the new man rises and grows in all his parts how he resists so many strong temptations how he can so chearfully renounce the World how he can so wholly deny himself how he can so merrily pursue a troublesome and despised vertue why he should do all this when there appears nothing but trouble sorrow and disadvantage by it are all mysteries so obscure and dark that night it self is mid-day to them Nor is it less to see with what calmness and contentedness he passes hence through pains and tortures nor can we conceive the glory and happiness that attends him Thus is the spiritual Heroe's life and death a mystery so far above the apprehension of dull-ey'd earth that it knows no more of its course or motion than it does of the winds neither what it is nor whence it comes nor whither it goes But after all these mysteries I end in plainness 'T is a Day indeed as well as a Text of mysteries and wonders but both Day and Text and Wind and Spirit will be all satisfied if they can leave these plain Lestons upon our Spirits That 1. we now get us up with Elij●h 1 King xix
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
still unseen and unheard or however expedit vobis it was expedient for them that Christ should go away that the Comforter might come for us it is not I am sure if we have none to come Settle we therefore this for an Article of our faith that he comes still I told you before how you should know it by his breathings inwardly in you good thoughts and desires his breathings outwardly good words and expressions by his workings with you good life and actions in a word by his gifts and graces But if this be all why is it now said When he is come Came he not thus before to the Patriarchs and Prophets were not they partakers of his gifts mov'd and stirr'd and actuated by him why then so much ado about Christs sending him now and of his coming now as if he was never sent never came before We read indeed in the Old Testament often of his coming never of his sending but by way of promise that God would send or of prophesie that he should be sent and that but once neither expresly Psal. civ 30. Emittes spiritum creabuntur So though come he did in those days of old yet voluntarily meerly we might conceive never sent never so distinct a notion of his person then then only as the Spirit of God now as the Spirit of the Father and the Son then only as the Power of God now as a Person in the God-head This the first difference between his coming then and now 2. Then he came as the Spirit of Prophesie now as the Spirit of Truth that is as the very truth and fulfilling of it of all the former Prophesies 3. Then upon Iudea and few else besides it may be Iob in the land of Vz and Rahab in Iericho and Ruth in Moab here and there now and then one now upon all flesh upon Iew and Gentile both alike the partition-wall like the walls of Iericho blown down by the breath of this Spirit by the blast of this horn of the most High 4. Then most in types and shadows now clearly and in truth 5. Then sparingly they only sprinkled with it now poured out Ioel's Effundam fulfilled Acts ii 1. a common phrase become now full of the Holy Ghost Acts vii 55. and filled with the Spirit Ephes. v. 18. 6. Then he came and went lighted a little but staid not motabat or volitabat flew or fluttered about mov'd and stirr'd them at times as it did Sampson Iudg. xiii 25. coming and going now 't is he is come He sate him down upon the Apostles Acts ii 3. sate him down in the Chair at their Synod Acts xv 28. Visum est Spiritui Sancto nobis calls us his Temples now not his Tabrnacles places of a during Habitation and is to abide with us for ever Lastly Then he came to help them in the observance of the Jewish and Moral Law now to plant and settle an obedience to the Christian Faith For Christ being to introduce a more perfect and explicate faith in the blessed Trinity and a Redeemer to wean men from the first elements and beggarly rudiments as the Apostle calls them to raise them from earthly to heavenly promises to elevate them to higher degrees of love and hope and charity and vertue and knowledge and being besides to arm them against those contradictions and oppositions that would be made against them by the world those persecutions and horrid ways of martyrdom they were to encounter with in the propagation of the Christian Faith for these ends it was necessary that the Spirit of Truth should come anew and come with power as it did at first with wonder that by its work and power those great and glorious truths might be readily received and embraced For this seems the very end of his coming to convince the world ver viii of this Chapter and to testifie of him Chap. xv 26. and to glorifie him in the very next verse to the text ver 14. to evince this new revealed truth to the souls and consciences of men that Messiah was come that Jesus was the Christ that the Iewish Sacrifices were now to have an end that the Prophesies were all fulfilled in him that his Law was now to succeed in the place of Moses's that he justified where the Law could not that through him now in his Name and in none other Salvation henceforth was to be preached to Iew and Gentile and God had open'd now that door of hope to all the world To bear witness to this and perswade this truth so opposite to Natural and Iewish reason or so much above the ordinary reach of the one and the received customs of the other thus to enhance Piety and Perfection thus to set up Christ above the Natural and Mosaick Law thus now to glorifie God in Christ and Christ as Christ need there was great need that the Spirit of Truth himself should come himself after a new fashion in a greater manifestation of his power than in former times bring greater grace because he required of us a greater work All this while we have given you but general notions of his coming either when he first came in his fulness on the Apostles and first Disciples or when secondly he comes on any as the Holy Spirit in good motions and affections We are yet to see when he comes as the Spirit of Truth to descend now thirdly to a distinct and particular enquiry When the Spirit of Truth is in us or come to us when we have him in us Nor is this way of consideration less necessary than the other though it may be harder far forsomuch as we daily see many a pious Christian Soul seduced into Error in whom yet we cannot doubt but the Holy Spirit has a dwelling many a good man also err in many opinions of whose portion of the good Spirit we make no question whilst some many others of less Piety it may be none more fully know the truth than either of the other Understand therefore there is a double way of knowing even divine truth 1. the one by the way of natural reason by principles and conclusions rationally and logically deduced out of the evidences of Scripture 2. the other by particular assents and dissents of the Understanding and Will purified and sanctified to all ready obedience to Christ. By the first it comes that the greatest Scholars the most learned and rational men know always the most truths both speculative and practick both in their Principles and Inferences and are therefore always fittest to determine doubts and give counsel and direction both what to believe and what to do in all particular controversies and debates which concern either Truth or Error or Justice and Injustice Right or Wrong the practices and customs of former times and Churches or their contraries and disuses and this may be done without the Spirit of Sanctification or the holy sanctifying Spirit under that title at least though indeed
under another title it comes from him as the gift of Tongues or Interpretation or Prophesie or the Word of Wisdom or the Word of Knowledg are reckoned by the Apostle to come from the same Spirit 1 Cor. xii 8. it may be most properly from him as he is the Spirit of Truth By the second way of knowledg it comes to pass that men of less capacities and lower understandings applying their affections as well as understandings to embrace the Truth do know and understand it more effectually are more resolute in the defence of it express it better in their lives and know more sometimes of the particular ways of God in his particular Providence and Direction of the affairs of his Saints for of this kind of wisdom the fear of the Lord always is the beginning and it often happens of the passages of the World too as they relate to Gods disposing order Yet by reason of the inabilities of understanding or want of the course or means of knowledg it falls out that they oftener err in the conceits and apprehensions of things than the other And more than so it as often comes to pass whether to humble them when they begin to be proud of their holiness and piety and think themselves so much above other men wiser better more holy more righteous than they or to punish them for some particular sin as disobdience curiosity of enquiring into depths above them singularity discontentedness self seeking or the like or to stir up their endeavours now beginning to languish or to make them yet more circumspect and wary in their ways for these or some such causes I say it comes to pass that God suffers them to run into grand and enormous errors foul and foolish extravagancies of opinion which if once they trench on practise and are deliberate in or might with easie industry have been avoided even grieve and quench that Holy Spirit that was in them and expel him too but if their errors be unvoluntary not easie for them at that time to be avoided or of lesser moment stand they may with the Spirit of Grace and they good men still How therefore now shall we know what is from the Spirit of Truth when he comes so to us is but a necessary enquiry yet the resolution is hard and difficult I know no better way to resolve you than by searching the nature of this Spirit of Truth as Christ has pleased to express him in his last most holy and comfortable Discourse of which the Text is but a part the several expressions of whose nature and office set together will I am confident assure us of a way to discern the Spirit of truth when it is that He speaketh in us You may turn your leaves and go along with me Chap. xiv 17. The Spirit of truth whom the world cannot receive so then 1. if the Article or Opinion which we receive be such an one as the world cannot if it be contrary to worldly interests carnal respects sensual pleasures 't is a good sign at first If it cannot enter into a carnal or natural mans heart if mans wisdom teach it not as the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. ii 13. if it grow not in the garden of nature that 's a good sign 't is the Spirit of truth is come that thus enables us to receive a Doctrine so disadvantagious and displeasing Look into the next verse ver 18. I will not leave you comfortless If then 2. it be such an assertion that has good ground in it to rest upon that will not fail us in distress that will stick by us in our deepest agonies comfort us in our greatest discomforts not leave us when all earthly comforts do then 't is from above then 't is a true comfort a truth from this He this Spirit of truth that is the Comforter too See next v. 26. He shall teach you all things bring all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you If then 3. it be an assertion that carries the analogy of faith along with it that agrees with all the other principles of Christian faith that is according to the rule of Christs holy word that soberly and truly brings to our remembrance what he has said at any time or done for us that remembers both the words that he spake and the deeds that he has done his actions and example if it be according to his example of humility obedience patience and love if it bring us heartily to remember this Christs pattern in our lives and opinions too then it comes from him that should come and is worth your receiving and remembring it In the same verse again in the words just before he is called the Comforter and Holy Ghost who is also there promised to teach us too And if the Doctrine be such that not only comforts us in the receiving and remembrance but such also as becomes Comforters too that teaches us to comfort others the poor and needy the afflicted and distressed and to do it holily too as by the Holy Ghost that is with good and pure intentions and do it even to their Ghosts and Spirits as well as to their bodies if it teach true holy Ghostly spiritual counsel and all other convenient comfort to them our Christian brethren Then 't is 4. a doctrine from this Spirit of truth he comes in it Turn ye now to Chap. xv 23. But when the Comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father even the Spirit of truth which proceedeth from the Father c. When the Doctrine 5. is no other than what either establishes the Doctrine of the holy Trinity Father Son and Holy Ghost or contradicts it not and in all benefits received refers thanks and acknowledgment to the one as well as the other as from the one through the other by a third In this particular it is no other than the Spirit of truth for no other Spirit can reveal it Go on now through the vers He shall testifie of me The Doctrine 6. that bears witness of Christ that he is God that he is Man that he is Christ the Saviour of the World that he came to save sinners all whosoever would come to him not a few particular ones only that he is a complete and Universal Saviour such as he profest himself by entertaining all comers sending his Spirit and Apostles into all Nations commanding them to preach to every creature which are no other than his own words this is also from the Spirit of truth a Doctrine worthy Him that is the Comforter that brings so general a comfort with it Step now into the next Chapter Chap. xvi to which we owe the Text. When he is come he will reprove the world of sin of righteousness and of judgment ver 8. When the Doctrine is 7. such as it reproves the world of sin that it can do no good of it self that it is full of evil and corruption convinces
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
ready and willing to guide us into all truth yet and 2. to shew us how he will do it that we may learn how to be guided by him This the sum And the Vse of all will be that we submit our selves to him and to his guidance to be taught and led and guided by him to his guiding and to his truth and to all of it without exception To guide and to be guided are relatives infer one another If we will have him guide us he will have us be guided by him and give up our selves to his way of guiding Oh that we would that there were but a heart in us to do so we should not then have so many spirits but more truth one Spirit would be all and all truth would be one this one single Spirit would be sufficient to guide us into all truth He would guide us into all truth But I must from my wishes to my words where we see first we have a guide that though Christ be ascended from us into Heaven yet we are not without a guide upon the Earth I. I will not leave you comfortless said he when he was going hence St. Ioh. xiv 18. Had he left us without a guide he had so comfortless indeed in a vast and howling wilderness this earth is little else But a Comforter he sends ver 7. such a one as shall teach us all things St. Iohn xiv 26. that 's a comfort indeed none like it to have one to guide us in a dangerous and uncertain way to teach us that our ignorance requires to do all the offices of a guide unto us to teach us our way to lead us if need be in it to protect and defend us through it to answer for us if we be questioned about it and to cheer us up encourage and sustain us all the way II. Such a guide as this is 2. this He we are next to speak of He the Spirit of Truth so 't is interpreted but immediately before He shall teach you teach you the way reveal Christ to you for unless he do you cannot know him teach you how to pray Rom. viii 26. teach you what to say how to answer by the way if you be called to question in it St. Luke xii give you a mouth and wisdom too St. Luke xxi 15. teach you not only to speak but to speak to purpose He 2. shall lead you too deducet lead you on be a prop and stay and help to you in your journey He 3. shall protect and defend you in it as a guide free you from danger set you at full liberty 2 Cor. iii. 17. be a cover to you by day and a shelter to you in the night the breath of the Holy Spirit will both refresh us and blow away all our enemies like the dust He 4 if we be charged with any thing will answer for us like a guide and governor 'T is not you says Christ but the Spirit of your Father that speaketh in you St. Matth. x. 20. He lastly it is that quicken our spirit with his Spirit that encourages and upholds us like a guide and leader for without him our spirits are but soft air and vanish at the least pressure He guides our feet and guides our heads and guides our tongues and guides our hands and guides our hearts and guides our spirits we have neither spirit nor motion nor action nor life without him III. But here particularly he comes to guides us into the Truth And God knows we need it for surely men of low degree are vanity says the Psalmist and men of high degree are a lie Psal. lxii 9. not lyars only but a very lye as far from truth as a lie it self things so distant from that conformity with God which is truth for truth is nothing else that no lie is further off it Nor soul nor body nor heart nor mind nor upper nor lower powers conformed to him neither our understandings to his understanding nor our wills to his will nor any th●ng of us really to him our actions and words and thoughts all lye to him to his face we think too low we speak too mean we deal too falsly with him pretend all his yet give most of it to our lusts and to our selves and we are so used to it we can do no other we are all either verbal or real lies need we had of one to guide us into the truth God is Truth to guide us to him Christ is the Truth St. Iohn xiv 6. to guide us to him His Word is Truth to guide us into that into the true understanding and practise of it His Promises are Truth very Yea and Amen to guide us to them to rest and hold upon them His way is the way of Truth to guide us into that into a Religion pure holy and undefiled that only is the true one Into none of these can any guide but this guide here He sheweth us of the Father He reveals to us the Son He interprets the Word and writes it in our hearts He leads and upholds us by his Promises seals them unto us seals us again to the day of Redemption the day of truth the day when all things shall appear truly as they are He sets our Religion right he only leads us into that Man cannot he can speak but to the ear there his words dye and end Angels cannot they are but ministring spirits at the best to this Spirit Nature cannot these truths are all above it are supernatural and no other truth is worth the knowing Nay into any truth this Spirit only can we only flatter and keep ado about this truth and that truth and the other but into them we cannot get make nothing of any truth without him unless he sanctifie it better else we had not known it Knowledge puffeth up all knowledge that comes not from this Spirit so the very truth of any truth that which truly confirms it to the divine will and understanding that makes truth the same with goodness is from this Spirit from his guiding and directing his breathing it or breathing into it or upon it IV. Thus we are faln upon the fourth particular that he will guide us into all truth Gods mercies and Christs are ever perfect and of the largest size and the conducts of the Spirit are so too into all goodness Gal. v. 9. into all fulness Ephes. iii. 19. into all truth here into all things That we are not full is from our selves that we are not led into all truth is for that all truth does not please us and we are loth to believe it such if it make not for us he for his part is as ready to guide us into all as into one For take we truth either for speculative or practical either for the substance against types and shadows or the discerning the substance through those shadows or take we it in opposition to obscurity and doubting understand we it
may be perfect thorowly furnished unto all good works 2 Tim. iii. 16 17. Inspir'd purposely by this Spirit to be a way to guide us into all truth and goodness But this may all pretend to and every one turns it how he lists We must adde a second And the second is the Church for we must know this says St. Peter know it first too 2 Pet. i. 20. That no Scripture is of any private interpretation There are some things so hard to be understood both in St. Pauls Epistles and also other Scriptures says he that they that are unlearned and unstable wrest them unto their own destruction 2 Tim. iii. 16. and therefore presently his advice follows to beware least we be led away with that error the error as he calls it of the wicked and so fall from our own stedfastness ver 17. When men unlearned or ungrounded presume to be interpreters or even learned men to prefer their private senses before the received ones of the Church 't is never like to produce better The pillar and ground upon which truth stands and stays is the Church if St. Paul may be allowed the judge 1 Tim. iii. 16. The pillar and ground of truth In matters of discipline when a brother has done disorderly tell it to the Church says Christ St. Mat. 18. 17. and if he neglect to hear that let him be unto thee as a heathen man and as a Publican He is no Christian. In matters 2. of doubt and controversie send to the Church to Hierusalem to the Apostles and Elders there conven'd in Counsel and let them determine it so we find it done Acts xv 2 28. In a lawful and full assembly of the learned Fathers of the Church such shall be determined that 's the was to settle truth In matters 3. of Rites and Ceremonies the Spirit guides us also by the Church If any man seem to be contentious about them St. Pauls appeal is presently to the Churches Customs We have no such custom neither the Churches of God that 's answer enough full and sufficient thinks the Apostle 1 Cor. xi 16. If the Churches custom be for us then 't is good and true we think or speak or do If against us 't is all naught and wrong whatever purity or piety be pretended in it Nay so careful was the Apostle to preserve the publick Authority of the Church and beat down all private ways and fancies by which ways only Schism and Heresie creep in that he tells Timothy though a Bishop and one well read and exercised in the Scriptures from a child 2 Tim. iii. 14. of a form of sound words he would have even him hold fast to 2 Tim. i. 13. and the Romans he tells of a form of Doctrine to be obeyed Rom. 6. 17. so far was that great and eloquent Apostle from being against forms any forms of the Church though he could have prayed and preached ex tempore with the best had tongues and eloquence and the gift of interpretation to do it too so far from leaving truth to any private interpretation or sudden motion whatsoever Nor is this appeal to the Fathers any whit strange or in Christian Religion only first to be heard of it was Gods direction from the first For ask now says Moses of the days that are past that were before thee Deut. iv 32. Stand you in the ways and see and ask for the old paths where is the good way says God Ier. vi 16. As if he had said Look about and see and examine all the ways you can yet the old way that 's the good one For enquire I pray thee of the former Age and prepare thy self to the search of their Fathers for we are but of yesterday and know nothing Iob viii 8. See how slightly things of yesterday new interpretations new devices new guides are accounted of And indeed in it self 't is most ridiculous to think the custom and practice and order and interpretation of all times and Churches should be false and those of yesterday only true unless we can think the Spirit of truth has been fifteen or sixteen hundred years asleep and never wak'd till now of late or can imagine that Christ should found a Church and promise to be with it to the end of the World and then leave it presently to Antichrist to be guided by him for above fifteen hundred years together Nor can I see why the Spirit of truth should now of late only begin to move and stir except I should think he were awak'd or delighted with noise and fury Nor is it reasonable to conceive a few private Spirits neither holier nor wiser than others for ought appears nor arm'd with Miracles to confirm their Doctrines should be more guided by the Spirit of truth than the whole Church and succession of Christians and Christian Fathers especially wherein at any time they agree Yet 3. not always to go so high Thou leadest thy people like sheep says the Psalmist by the hand of Moses and Aaron Psal. lxxvii 20. Moses and Aaron were the Governours of the Church the one a Priest the other a Prophet by such God leads his People by their lawful Pastours and Teachers The one the Civil Governour is the cloud to cover them from the heat The other the Spiritual is the light to lead them in the way The first protects the other guides us and we are bid to obey them those especially that watch for our souls Heb. xiii 17. Such as labour in the Word and Doctrine 1 Tim. v. 17. By such as God sets over us in the Church to teach and guide us into truth we must be guided if we will come into it In things unlawful nor one nor other is to be obeyed In things indifferent they always are In things doubtful 't is our safest course to have recourse to them provided that they be not of Corahs company that they exalt not themselves against Moses and Aaron nor draw us to it If they do we may say to them as Moses did to those Ye take too much upon you you Sons of Levi. God leads his People like a flock in peace and unity and by the hands of Moses and Aaron Thus 3. the Spirit guides into all truth because the Spirit is God and God so guides You have heard the way and means the first part of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the Spirits guiding The Second follows his act and motion 1. He leads or guides us only he does not drive us that 's not the way to plant truth by force and violence fire and fagots not the Spirits sure which is the Spirit of love 2. Yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is we told you in it Some Act of the Spirit He moves and stirs up to it enlightens our understandings actuates our wills disposes ways and times occasions and opportunities to it that 's the reason we hear the truth more willingly at some time than other Paul
too yet in measure and order too no other then the Spirit gives them utterance 4. And lastly though first it be in the Text yet because it is but the circumstance and time of the story and not the main business or second of it and fittest to close up all in good time and order The Time when all this was done when these things came to pass when the Apostles were so dispos'd when the Holy Ghost thus descended when this strange issue fell out When the day of Pentecost was fully come in very good time the promis'd time Christs time Gods own time such as he had prefigur'd them in in the Law too at the fifty days Feast after the Passover a solemn day and somewhat more as you shall hear anon Thus we best join the History and the Moral the Doctrine and Use of Pentecost or Whitsunday nay the very Holy Spirit of the day and our souls to day together that we may not be like men that only come to hear news a story and away but such as hear the Word and profit by it Which that we may Come O mighty wind and blow upon us Descend O holy Fire and warm our hearts give me a tongue O blessed Spirit out of this days number and utterance give thy servants capacious spirits and remembrance that thy Word may rush in upon them as a sound from Heaven and fill the houses of all our souls with joy and gladness with holy fire of Piety and Devotion that we may with one accord one heart and mind speak forth thy praise and glory The first Point in the order I have set you is the disposition of them that the Holy Spirit will come and light upon 1. They are of one accord 2. in one place 3. sitting quietly and expecting there and that 4. also upon the solemn day when the day of Pentecost any solemn day or occasion is presented them They are first of one accord whom this Spirit vouchsafes to descend into This unity draws the Spirit to them that keeps it with them the house of unity is the only Temple of the Spirit of Unity That soul which breaks the bond of unity and divides it self from the Church of Christ from the company of the Apostles and their Successors the still Fathers of it cannot hold this holy wind cannot enclose this holy fire they are broken and crackt crack only of the Spirit but are really broken from that body in which only the Spirit moves Take and divide a member from the body be it the principal that in which most spirit was the heart or the head and once divided the Spirit vanishes from it will not sit nor dwell in it just so is it it in Christs Body the Church If one of the chiefest members of it one erst while of the devoutest and most religious in it once grow so proud of his own wisdom or gifts so singular in his conceits as to separate himself from his fellows from that body whereof Christ is the head he goes away like a member from the natural body and leaves the Spirit behind him that retires from him for it is one Spirit and cannot be divided from the body though it work diversly in it If this being of one accord of one mind be the temper for the receipt of the Holy Spirit as here you see it is and in reason it can be no otherwise it being the Spirit of love and unity What spirit are they of Whose Religion is Faction whose chief pretended Piety is Schism whose business is to differ from all the World Nothing can be more evident than that men are now adays much at a loss for the Spirit however every one claim to it seeing there is no accord but discord not diversities only but contrarieties but contradictions amongst them that most pretend the Spirit Indeed were this they any less a They than the Apostles themselves and the whole number of the then Disciples or had there been but the least division among them either about the manner of staying or expecting Christs Promise or which is less about the place to stay in It may be these men might have had a shadow for their separations but Apostles they were and in one place they were too altogether agreed in all were all in unity were all in uniformity not their minds only but their bodies too together Men thought it nothing a while since to withdraw themselves from the Houses of God as if no matter at all for the place they could for all that be of the same faith but too woful experience has prov'd it now that with the one place the one faith is vanisht with the ceremony the substance gone too with the uniformity of Worship the unanimity of our minds and the uniformity of our faith too blown into the air How shall we do O blessed Spirit in so many crackt vessels to retain thee Needs must the Spirit expire out of that body which has so many breaches and divisions in it so many divided houses so many broken Churches so many rotten Congregations I know if it be only necessity divides us and drives us into several dens and caves as it did the Primitive Christians in the days of those fiery persecutions that the Holy Spirit will ransack all the cranies and search out all the privatest corners be they above ground or under it but it is because the mind of all those several places is but one and in that respect they are no more than so many several cells of the one Catholick Church but where choice and not necessity wilfulness and not force singularity and not purity of Truth or Conscience makes the division and draws Disciples into Chambers Parlors Barns or Mills Woods or Desarts go not says Christ out after them say they what they will of Christ or Spirit there believe it not St. Matth. xxix 26. Two in a field and yet one taken and the other left two at the mill and one taken and the other left ver 40. So at the most I fear great hazard that any if they be no better no more orderly gather'd when the Master comes Or were they yet perhaps in several places sitting as they are here that is quietly and in true peace and faith expecting the promise of their Lord something might be said to excuse their separations but not only actually to break the unity of the Spirit and the bond of Peace but to breath out nothing but war contention and dispute to be so far from sitting down and either suffering for Christ or humbly expecting his time of assistance and deliverance out of their perplexities and discomforts as to take the matter into their own hands and prevent the coming of the Spirit of Peace by rising and raising spirits of war and confusion they must give me leave to tell them they know not what spirit they are of a heady guiddy furious spirit zeal I bear them witness with St. Paul
too Holy in glorifying of his Angels holy in justifying his Saints holy in punishing the Devils Holy in his Glory and holy in his Mercy and holy in his Justice holy in his Seraphims and holy in his Cherubims and holy in his Thrones holy in his Power and holy in his Wisdom and holy in his Providence Holy in his Ways and holy in his Laws and Holy in his Promises holy in the Womb and holy in Manger and holy on the Cross holy in his Miracles and holy in his Doctrines and holy in his Examples holy in his Saints and holy in his Sacraments and holy in his Temples holy in Himself holy in his Son holy in his Spirit Holy Father holy Son and Holy Spirit Therefore with Angels and Archangels and with all the company of Heaven and all the Saints in Heaven and Earth we laud and magnifie thy glorious Name evermore praising thee and saying Holy Holy Holy Lord God of Hosts Heaven and Earth are full of the Majesty of thy Glory Glory be to thee O Lord most High Lord God Almighty which was and is and is to come Glory and Honour and Thanks be unto Thee for ever and ever Amen Amen Amen THE FIRST SERMON UPON THE Calling of St. Peter St. LUKE v. 8. Depart from me for I am a sinful man O Lord. A Strange Speech for him that speaks to him 't is spoken from St. Peter to his Saviour One would think it were one of the Gadarens who thus intreated him to depart the Coasts Strange indeed to desire him to depart without whom we cannot be stranger to give such a reason for it a reason that should rather induce us to intreat him to tarry than to go for being sinful men we have most need of him to stay with us but strangest of all it is for St. Peter to desire it and upon his knees to beseech it To desire Christ to go away from us to go from us because we have need of his being with us and for such a one as St. Peter and that so earnestly to inintreat it is a business we well skill not at the first dash Yet if we consider what St. Peter was when he so cried out or what made him to do it or how unfit he being a sinful son of man thought himself for the company of the Son of God we shall cease to wonder and know it is the sinners case for ever so to do to be astonished at miracles not to bear suddenly the presence of our Lord and when we first apprehend it to cry out to him with St. Peter here to withdraw from us for a while for that we are not able to endure the brightness and terrour of his Splendour and Majesty It was a miraculous and stupendious draught of Fish after they had given up all hopes of the least suddenly came to Net which thus amazed St. Peter and his Fellows They had drudged and toyl'd all night and not a Fish appeared but when Christ came to them then came whole showles and thrust so fast into the Net that they brake it to get in as if the mute and unreasonable creatures themselves had such a mind to see him by whose Word they were created that they valued not their lives so they might see or serve his pleasure And yet St. Peter makes as much means that he might see him no longer whom if he had not seen and seen again notwithstanding his desires to the contrary it had been better he had never seen nor been at all But such is our mortal condition that we can neither bear our unhappiness nor our happiness unreasonable Creatures go beyond us in the entertainment of them both according to their kinds though it may be here St. Peters humility speaks as loud as his unworthiness or inability to endure the presence of his Lord. St. Peter we must needs say was not thorowly call'd as yet to be a Disciple this humble acknowledgment of his own unworthiness to be so was a good beginning Here it is we begin our Christianity which though it seems to be a kind of refusal of our Master is but a trick to get into his service who himself is humble and lowly and receives none so soon as they that are such none at all but such whom by the posture of their knees and the tenours of hearty and humble words you may discern for such And to sum up the whole meaning of the words to a brief Head they are no other nor no more than St. Peters profession of his own humble condition that he is not worthy that his God and his Redeemer should come so near him and therefore in an Extasie as it were at the sight of so glorious a Guest desires him to forbear to oppress his unworthy servant with an honour he was not yet able to bear Yet we cannot but confess the words may have a harder sense upon them as the voice of a stupid apprehension or an insensibleness of such heavenly favours as our Saviours company brings with it We shall have time to hint at that anon It shall suffice now at first to trouble you only with two evident and general parts Christs absence desired And The Reason alledged for it I. Christ desired to be gone Depart from me And II. Why he is so For I am a sinful man O Lord. The Desire seems to be the voice of a threefold person and such is St. Peters now 1. Of a man 2. Of a sinful man and yet 3. Of an humble man Me that me here confessing my self a sinful man The Reasons equal the variety of the desires or Desirers Three they are too 1. For I am a man 2. For I am a sinful man 3. For thou O Lord thou art God and I a man 'T is a Text to teach us what we are to whom we speak and how to speak to him And if you go hence home without learning this you may say perhaps you have heard a Sermon but you have learnt nothing by it It shall be your faults if you do not And unless we cry in a sense contrary to St. Peters meaning Depart from us O Lord out of a kind of contempt and weariness of his Word and not out of the conscience of our own unworthiness of so great a blessing then though our words be somewhat indiscreet though we sometimes speak words not fitting for our Saviour to hear though they seem to shew a kind of refusal of him yet being no other than the meer expression of the apprehension of his glorious presence and our own unworthiness Christ will comfort us and call out to us presently as he doth to St. Peter ver 10. not to fear we shall not lose by his Word or Presence nor by our so sensible apprehension of his glory though we be but a generation of sinful men That our desires first may be set right though peradventure not always speak so the desires being the hinge upon
from their Persons Ye Rechabites ye your wives and your children Because ye have obeyed 2. From the expression of it by a Threefold Act Obedistis Custodistis Fecistis You have obeyed kept and done 3. From a Threefold Object The Commandment of their Father all his Precepts and according to them all 4. From the Power or Person whom they obeyed Ionadab their Father II. In the Reward First for their Triple Obedience we shall find a triple blessing 1. The blessing of a Posterity still to succeed them Ionadab the son of Rechab shall not want a man Non deficiet vir de stirpe Ionadab 2. Of an honourable and pious Posterity Not want a man to stand before me such upon whom God will always cast an eye of favour and honour 3. Of a lasting everlasting Posterity Not want a man for ever Then secondly the Certainty and Assurance of it Thus saith the Lord of Hosts the God of Israel and you may take his word He will perform it And because we come not hither only to commend others but to learn our selves and God therefore sets the Rechabites obedience upon record that we may know what he likes have a president to follow and do accordingly we will in the close of every several point of their obedience examine our own see how neer or short we come where if I chance to say you have not done so much pardon me that person all the way 'T is the person in the Text and I therefore use it I mean not you nor you none of you unless your actions apply it I know not If they do you must forgive me if I strike home I come not so far to flatter you and the times require a sharper Physick Yet if I may perswade you by the Approbation Example or Reward of Obedience in the Text or the Punishment of disobedience by the rule of contraries implied there I shall so conclude in full desires that what God here says of the Rechabites he may hereafter say of you Because you have obeyed the Commandment of your Father and kept his Precepts and done according to all that he commands Therefore thus saith the Lord of Hosts the God of Israel you shall not want a man to stand before me for ever 1. You see my Method I begin with the Approbation The stile of it Thus saith the Lord. And that 's a good beginning And is it God indeed that speaks for Obedience who is it then that speaks against it What Spirit are they of They pretend St. Pauls Be ye not the servants of men 1 Cor. vii 13. 'T is true that not so theirs as to forget to be Christs But to remember withal you are the children of men some of whom you must obey as Fathers if you mean to be Christs servants He tells you so St. Mat. xxii 21. Render to Caesar the things which are Caesars as well as to God the things which are Gods He puts Caesar first too to shew they talk vainly who say they serve God when they leave out the King First thy Father whom thou hast seen then God whom thou hast not seen is the Apostles rule for us to judge by and his is Gods Well then we have God on our side whoever be against us Him speaking for it and speaking of it and they are words of Commendation while he so well likes obedience that he cannot forbear to speak of it 'T is no small matter that that can command the eye or tongue of the Princes of the earth It must be more that even forces a Panegyrick from the Lord Almighty something sure worth Commendation Man indeed makes great matters of little or nothing God sees not as man sees Man may be deceived God cannot He says the Rechabites have obeyed commends them for it say who dare against it And I am afraid we shall find too many in the upshot that neither like their obedience nor Gods commending them say all they can against it 'T is no matter what they say God doth more than say it says it with delight goes with it over and over again Obedistis Custodistis Fecistis thrice in a breath takes notice of every tittle fills the whole Chapter almost every verse with it loves to speak of it it so much contents him Says it incircled with his glories talks of it amidst his Hosts tells them as it were of it For he had told his Prophet and his People of it before Now he even tells it his Angels would have them take notice of it He goes further almost forsakes his Israel to look on them is now become the God of the Rechabites They are they that shall now stand before him for ever He goes on still is so well pleased that he tells it to themselves commends them to their faces a thing not usual with God but to the very chiefest of his Saints and Children At least then only when he is most highly pleased with any Ye have obeyed Lastly Says it not in the form his other speeches go not dixit but dicit in the present Is still saying it said it then and says it still said it to them says it to us that we also might say it after him Say it in our actions that he might have some ground to say of us what he does of them Ye have obeyed Which brings me the Parties into sight whose Obedience is the ground of all this Approbation And the first is from their Persons Ye Rechabites Every verse almost tells you it They Kenites some say descended from Iethro Midianites by original strangers from the Covenant yet even they obedient to their father taught to be so by the Law of nature commended for that Abulensis is loth to derive them from so poor beginnings He makes them of the Family of Caleb of the Tribe of Iudah the royal Tribe That even Princes too as well as people might know obedience to their Father sometimes in those commands that seem to divest them of that honour But that Obedience is the greatest honour greatest in such persons Whether they were such or no they were the Sons of Ionadab He was a devout man Spontaneus Domini says St. Augustine One that would serve God though it were for nothing Some of our age would have told them they might have excused them being the seed of the Godly 'T is a part of their Commendation that they thought not so 'T is another that they excused neither Age nor Sex You Who We our Wives our Sons and our Daughters ver 8. Oh happy Family where Obedience is thus taught by Authority learned from Example suck'd from the breasts where the Wife learns it from the Husband hers to him from him to the Magistrate the Children from both Time yet lifts their virtue higher Three hundred years had Ionadab been gathered to his Fathers while yet his Sons persist in his Commands with as much constancy as integrity that we might prescribe no time against
Common Service Every Magistrate that is every Governour of a Country every Maior of a City every Master of a Company every Father of a Family Some of these have their Statutes to be kept all of them their commands to be obeyed These are Secular Powers you have besides Spiritual such as take order for your Souls as the other for your Bodies and Estates your Bishops and Clergy Bishops are Fathers by their Title the Fathers of the Church so the first Christians so all since till this new unchristian Christianity started up Fathers in God 't is their stile however some of late Sons of Belial would make them Fathers in the Devil Antichrists perhaps that they might make them like themselves Strange Antichrists to whom Christ hath left the Governing of his Church these 1500 years 1. If you value them by their Antiquity they are Fathers for that their enemies being judges who would fain distinguish between their Offices and their Names that they might have some pretence to disobey them though more commonly they fill their mouth with scoffs and calumnies the language of the Devil than their books with the language of Antiquity truly understood 2. Fathers secondly for their Authority Time was when their Commands their Councils and Canons were Laws to Christians none of the least neither when their breach inferred the greatest punishment spiritual malediction 3. Fathers lastly for their tenderest Care over the tenderest part your Consciences Such who would quickly set all in order would you not listen too engagedly to by-respects Such whose commands you cannot complain of when you have examined them A hat a knee a reverent posture of the body are no such tyrannies as some please to fancy them You would do more in a great mans presence more for a small temporal encouragement A habit a Hood a Cap a Surplice a Name are wonderful things to trouble a devout Conscience You have more Ceremonies in your Companies and Corporations and you observe them strictly You will find it if you compare them If thus Fathers now their Precepts then certainly are to be obeyed Yet with this Rule ever both for them and all other inferiour Magistrates beside So far as they contradict not the Supreme Authority 'T is a rule in natural reason In two contrary commands the Superiours is to be obeyed Now to the King as Supreme we told you out of St. Peter to Rulers as sent by him that is as far as they are sent by him no further no further than their Commission from him Else Obedience can find no bounds nor Consciences no rest if the Supreme be not enough to terminate and guide all obedience into Your Father There is an argument in that word may make you obey him above all the world besides The tenderness of a Father Never could any challenge this name with greater justice never any so far condescended to his children to part with his own priviledges maintenance conveniences provision attendance He hath done as much for his Sons as the Rechabites for their Father left all even his houses for them lest by the insolence of some tumultuous spirits he should be forced to punish them What natural Father like this Father But whether he hath been used like a Father indeed you used him lately in your entertainment like a Conqueror and are justly honoured for it but whether by others like a Father let the affronts at his own Palace gate the sawcy Language in every rascal mouth the rebellious Sermons the seditious Libels cast abroad his own words where he is fain to proclaim to the world He is driven from you let these speak I say nothing Your Inferiour Magistrates have almost every where found disrespect And whether your Bishops and Clergy have been used like Fathers if the usage they have had of late the tumults about their houses the riots upon their Persons the daily insolencies the whole Clergy have met with in your streets never seen till now in a Civil Common-wealth in any ordered City upon the most contemptible men if the injuries done their Persons in the Churches at the very Altars once Sanctuaries against violence now thought the fittest places for it in the very administration of the Sacraments in their Pulpits both among you and abroad the Kingdom in a word so many slanderous malicious accusations without ground entertain'd with pleasure besides the blasphemies upon the whole Order if these cannot tell you after-ages will determine and in the interim let the world judge Our Fathers imperfections are not to be divulg'd though true much less false ones to be imposed upon them This is a reverence but due to Fathers 'T was cursedly done of Cham and he paid for it he and his with an everlasting curse to uncover his Fathers nakedness 'T was wretchedly done of Absalom to tell the people there was no man deputed of the King to hear them no justice in the Land and he thrived accordingly And let all the enemies of my Lord the King be as that young man is says Cushi Yet say we 't were well it were no worse How is all this made Religion too Oaths and Protestations intended certainly to better purposes abused to maintain rebellion and prophaneness Construed so in Pulpits and professed by their Scholars in the face of God and man pray God it go no higher and dare you after all this look for a blessing Alas you must lay by those thoughts till you have learned the Rechabites Lesson They used their Ionadab like a Father so reverenced his memory so preserved his name so obeyed him in all his several authorities so punctually so constantly so couragiously so sweetly so universally so sincerely so really so carefully with that contentedness without grumbling that humility without disputing that patience that readiness that full content of every Age Sex and Condition no weakness tenderness or priviledges pretended against it that God himself presently upon it promiseth a full reward Therefore thus saith the Lord of Hosts the God of Israel c. I am now at the Reward and 't is a full one full of 1. honour full of 2. proportions full of 3. blessings Full of 1. honour at the first Therefore thus as if their Obedience deserved it or God at least would seem so far to honour it He had promised length of life in the Commandment for it and God is not unjust It deserves therefore by the Covenant of his Promise yet by the interpretation of his mercy And 2. full of proportions it is Proportionable to the three Acts and Objects of Obedience You have obeyed your Father therefore you shall want no Sons there 's one You have kept his commandments therefore shall your Sons stand in them and by standing in them stand before God there 's a second You have kept all and done according to all that hath been commanded you fail'd in nothing therefore shall you have a reward all of you not a man of you fail for