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A30238 An expository comment, doctrinal, controversal, and practical upon the whole first chapter to the second epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1661 (1661) Wing B5647; ESTC R19585 945,529 736

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the Trinity but as assuming our Nature for otherwise the truth would be no wayes comfortable to us if the Sonne of God had not also been made man The Observation shall be the words in the Text viz. That God is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Which truth shall be first explicated and confirmed Doctrinally and then illustrated Practically As for the Doctrinal part the Socinians they have raised up much dust and have obscured the point with their subtill heretical depravations For whereas the Church of God formerly did believe Christ to be the Son of the Father by eternal generation They deny this reason and assert some new ones of their own invention Yea and the Remonstrants also though they assert Christs Sonship from the Father by eternal generation yet they affirm also a second way of communication of this Sonship and that is By a gracious vouchsafing of supream power and glory to him So that they must acknowledge two filiations in Christ the one Eternal by that secret and ineffable generation the other Temporal or in time viz. A gracious communication of supream power and glory to him But this is false as is to be shewed But to explain this Consider First In the Scripture we read of four ways whereby a person may be entituled to be the Son of God and to have God his Father For as for that more common and general notion whereby God is said to be a Father in respect of Creation and so to all men Isa 54. 8. And the Apostle sanctifieth that expression of the Poet For we are his off spring we do not here meddle with And 1. There is a Sonne of God by Creation after the Image of God Thus Adam Luk. 3. ult is called The Sonne of God and the Angels also Job 1. 6. These are the Sonnes of God and have him for a Father because they they were at first created after his Image in holiness 2. God is a Father by gracious Adoption Thus all believers have received The Spirit of Adoption being thereby enabled to call God Abba Father 3. A Person is said to be the Sonne of God by communication of some power and office Thus our Saviour argued from the lesse to the greater That if they were gods to whom the word of God came viz. who were appointed by God to be Magistrates how much more was he God Lastly There is the Son of God by eternal generation and thus Christ is onely Hence he is called His only Sonne Secondly Take notice That Christ is called the Sonne of God only from one respect and that is because of eternal generation from the Father It is not my purpose to enter into a Dispute about this secret and unspeakable mystery This is enough for us to know That Christ is never called the Sonne of God or God said to be his Father but because of that eternal generation as the Apostle proveth Heb. 1. from Psal 27. Thou art my Sonne This day have I begotten thee which is so attributed to Christ that thereby he hath a supereminency to all the Angels who yet are called the Sonnes of God upon a gracious foundation Hence 1. Christ is not called The Sonne of God because he is predestinated to be the Mediator of his people 1 Pet. 1. 20. For he is not therefore the Son of God because fore-ordained to be Head of his Church but this latter doth presuppose and is grounded upon the former because he was the second Person in Trinity and Son of the Father therefore was he ordained thus to be a Mediator for his people 2. Christ is not called the Sonne of God because of his Incarnation or that wonderfull manner of the production of his Humane Nature in the womb Indeed some orthodox Divines and so Maldonate the Papist do grant That Christ was called the Sonne of God because of that extraordinary conception Luk. 1. 32 35. for the Evangelist seemeth to favour such an interpretation because when the Angel had said The holy Ghost should overshadow the Virgin Mary he presently addeth Therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Sonne of God Now though these men hold Christ was called thus the Sonne of God because of that extraordinary and peculiar way of the production of his Humane Nature yet they acknowledge his Sonship by eternal generation also But it is well observed by other learned men That it is an impudent concession to the adversaries of Christs Divine Nature to grant Christ is ever called the Sonne of God but because of eternal generation And therefore that expression Therefore also c. is not an argument from the Cause but the Sign That extraordinary conception was not a Cause but a true and sure Sign that he was the Sonne of God and therefore it 's said He shall be called not be the Sonne of God which relateth to the manifestation and notification of it And no doubt the Angel doth allude the ninth of Isaiah where a Virgins bringing forth a Sonne is made a Sign of his being Emmanuel God with us For if this extraordinary conception had been a cause of this filiation he would rather he called The Sonne of the holy Ghost then of God the Father because immediately conceived by him Neither is that of Maldonate true excepting against this interpretation That a pure man might have been so conceived by the holy Ghost and it would not follow that he was God properly For besides that it is a bold assertion to say so we must take this extraordinary conception in its circumstances as it was fo promised by the Prophet and thus it could not agree to any but to God 3. Neither is Christ called the Son of God because of his sanctification and mission into the word as John 10. 35. Nor 4. Because of his Resurrection from the dead His eduction from the earth as it were a womb to life being like a new birth Nor 5. Because of his being placed at the right hand of God Heb. 1. 4. For although in those Texts Christ is proved to be the Sonne of God by his Sanctification and Mission into the world by his Resurrection and by his Exaltation yet not so as if these did make him to be a Sonne So that he was not a Sonne before but by way of declaration and manifestation When these things were done there was a plain discovery that he was the true and proper Sonne of God he was the Sonne of God from all eternity but none could so rise and be exalted but he who was so And therefore the Socinians who make Christ the Sonne of God by degrees by his Incarnation and first and afterwards more perfectly a Son in his Exaltation do most palpably wrest the Scripture The Summe therefore of this Discourse is That as Christ was called the Sonne of man only because born of a woman so the Sonne of God only because by eternal
grace so a God of all consolation and Gal. 5. Joy is the fruit of Gods Spirit as well as Faith Love and Repentance are in other places attributed to God But you will say It may easily be granted that a man being dead in sinne he needeth the mighty work of Gods Spirit to raise him up and to give spiritual life but doth it follow that he needeth the same spirit to establish and assure him of Gods love Yes no doubt but that the same Spirit of God which bringeth thee out of the gulf of thy lusts must also out of the gulf of thy doubts and fears It 's as impossible for thee to have comfort of thy self as grace of thy self And therefore you see the Scripture speaking of this twofold operation of Gods Spirit as being necessary to antidote against our twofold corruption and the grounds of this necessity of Gods Spirit are these First The heart of a man is naturally opposite to any thing that is spirituall Whatsoever is of God though never so desirable in it self yet meeting with our corrupt natures it findeth opposition therefore we cannot of our selves any more receive the promises though infinitely needing of them then we can obey the commands We cannot endure honey any more then gall The way of Gospel-joy is contrary to a troubled heart as well as Gospel-obedience to a secure carnal heart Secondly We need the Spirit of God to this sealing because that which doth oppose this is indeed nothing but the fruit of sinne running down another channel He that once lived in divers pleasures did continually grieve the holy Spirit of God Let this man finde the guilt of sinne Let the Law wound and sting him then he grieveth the comforting spirit of God by fears and doubts No wonder then if it must be Gods Spirit only that sealeth because that alone can remove the guilt within thee that only can take off these objections these discouragements that are upon the soul As God raised an East-winde that suddenly delivered Pharaoh from those Locusts that molested him this was miraculous none could do it but God so it is the Spirit of God that alone can take off the heavy burthen of sinne upon thee It is Gods Spirit alone that can overrule thy conscience that can pacifie it that can comfort it It is the Spirit of Adoption that maketh us cry Abba Father but more of this may come in afterwards SERM. CXXXV A further Discovery of the Spirits sealing the People of God 2 COR. 1. 22. Who hath also sealed us THe third particular in the Description of the Spirits sealing cometh to be considered and that is the subject thereof which is two-fold 1. Of Inhesion And 2. Of Predication First Of Inhesion so it is said to be the work of Gods Spirit upon the hearts of the godly For after this manner the Scripture speaketh He hath sent his Spirit into our hearts Gal. 4. 6. And in this Text He hath given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts By this expression is denoted that deep radicated and full possession which the Spirit of God hath upon the hearts of true believers So that hereby is excluded that vanishing and superficial perswasion which may be in a temporary believer of his interest in Christ As a temporary believer hath something like true faith like true joy and like true grace upon the soul so he hath also something like this sealing and like this assured perswasion upon his heart Therefore as the former is much disputed and it doth greatly exercise tender hearts viz. How they may know when they are carried on in the work of sanctification beyond those inchoate and imperfect workings which an hypocrite may have So this latter also doth cause great sollicitude and care of spirit in many gracious souls How shall they know their assurance is not a delusion is not a false perswasion arising out of an inordinate love to their own selves For the Devil doth not only transform himself into an Angel of light as light is taken for holinesse but also as it is taken for comfort Now amongst other characteristical differences this is one the perswasion of a godly man is more full plenary and powerfull Even as sanctifying grace entereth efficaciously into the heart so also doth this sealing grace whereas what hypocrites feel is in a confused general and flashy way neither is it drawn out upon permanent and enduring motives Although doctrinal characters given by the most able Ministers of the Gospel are not enough to make us find out this difference in our selves without a rectified constitution of the powers of the soul within unlesse we attain to that qualification spoken of by the Apostle Heb. 5. 14. who by reason of use or habit or perfection as the word may be rendred have their senses exercised to discerne between good and evil This Text is much to be pressed upon you For it is not every godly man at first that can separate the precious from the vile in his soul but there must be an habitual use of the senses this way Where mark also the Apostle attributeth to the soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a metaphorical manner That as the taste when well constituted is able to discern between bitter and sweet the eye between white and black the ear between what is melodious and what is harsh and displeasing Thus the soul of a godly man being used to heavenly and spiritual things can know what is of God and what is of Satan or of nature in him For you must know there may be four principles of operations in us 1. Nature and that when polished with education and moral principles may appear very glorious 2. Satan insinuating himself as a subtil Serpent as an Angel of light imitating the works of God though he cannot efficaciously work the heart to any thing all that he doth is by suggestion and moving the imaginative and sensitive part of a man 3. There is the Spirit of God and that worketh in us either in a common way by gifts and assistance or by a sanctifying way Now is there not required much spiritual skill and experience to discern which is which of all these So that it is no wonder if he require these senses to be exercised 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a word from those who did exercise themselves in the Heathenish games and that naked thereby to fit and prepare themselves to be more agile and expedite for that service In this dispute therefore enquire not onely for doctrinal symptomes and signes of this sealing of Gods Spirit but heartily pray for these exercised senses in spiritual things The other subject is the subject of predication of whom it is affirmed that they have this sealing of Gods Spirit and that is sanctified persons We speak of adult persons for it is plain that infants though they may be sanctified yet because not having actual faith they neither have this sealing And
other helps no more than he will make you understand Greek and Hebrew Know then it is a very sad and almost incurable condition when the holy Scriptures do become a snare to us when we suck poison out of these sweet herbs Although indeed we cannot from the Scripture get any hurt but our own corruptions procure it to us because we bring the Scripture to our ends and affections not them to the Scripture Thirdly To the having of a well-ordered conscience There is greatly required pure aims and intentions For although a good intention cannot sanctifile an unlawfull action yet corrupt intentions will blast and defile the best actions Insomuch that if we had the gifts and parts of the ablest men yea of Angels themselves yet sinfull aims would be like Locusts and Caterpillars to devour this hopefull fruit But oh the unsearchable hypocrisie and deceitfulness of mans heart even in this very respect How ready is every Pharisee every Heretick and Papist to appropriate this to themselves How often do we find them professing to the whole world that it is not any outward advantage any temporal emolument that they look at or regard but the glory of God and that therefore they have much rejoycing because of this But if the counterfeit will bring such peace what will the real and sincere intentions of a man do And certainly though a man be cloathed with never so much glory in the Church of God so that we are ready to say not only a greater than Austin or Chrysostome but even than Paul or Peter For some have cried up the heads of their parties as having greater gifts than the Apostles themselves Yet without sincere intentions they are but as a tinkling cymbal This therefore is the life soul and the all in a good conscience But that will come in more seasonably afterwards Fourthly To a right ordered conscience whose witness may be received and comfort taken thereby That there is required the inward sanctification and effectual renovation thereof So that till this be every mans conscience is like a man himself a meer liar There is no believing of it no trusting of it When it is said Jer. 17. That the heart of a man is deceitfully wicked or crafty and supplanting a man This comprehends conscience as well as any part else For you have heard that original sinne is in this as well as in other powers of the soul So that in these two respects the natural conscience doth alwayes fail For either it doth not witness that which is right or not to a right end Insomuch that though a natural man is not to gainsay or contradict his conscience yet nothing lieth upon him more than to have his conscience rightly informed or regulated by Gods word What is the reason you see every civil man every formal man so applauding himself in his good condition It is because his conscience is not a spiritual conscience a Scripture-conscience for that would make him abhor himself and flie out of the Sodome he was in For in most things the conscience doth not witness the truth at all but it doth fl●tter and deceive thee How seldom doth it tell thee thou art the drunkard the hypocrite the neglecter of private duties c Or if it doth then it is to a false end either to drive to despair and to flie from Christ whose blood only can cleanse the conscience or else to quiet it again by some superstitious usages and non-instituted remedies And this is the reason why so few are brought out of the troubles of their conscience into an Evangelical and Gospel way Know then here is the root of all thy misery thy conscience being unsanctified lulleth thee asleep whereby thou rejoycest in thy condition when thou hast cause to fear and tremble SERM. LXXXVI Further Discoveries of what is required to a well-regulated Conscience with Distinctions concerning it 2 COR. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience THere remain more particulars to be insisted upon which are requisite to make a well-regulated conscience whose testimony you heard is the cause of such unspeakable comfort And First There is in a peculiar manner necessary the witnessing and sealing power of the holy Ghost to and with our consciences The illumination and sanctification of Gods Spirit is not enough to make our consciences speak fully and clearly so as to have rejoycing thereby unlesse the Spirit of God doth also bear witnesse with it Hence we have them both put together Rom. 8. 16. The Spirit it self beareth witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God And therefore you heard that Bernard understood this testimony of conscience in the Text of a Testimonium percipientis not Perhibentis but they are both included For our conscience cannot give any eviden●e and sure testimony of the grace inus unlesse inabled thereunto by the Spirit of God and this is called The work of Gods Spirit sealing and witnessing with our spirits The Text is very famous and greatly agitated in the controversie about the assurance of our sanctification and salvation Grotius and some others neglect the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and would have it no more than simply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But the word is not any where so used the instances of Grotius are against him Rom. 2. 15. For Conscience there is said to bear witnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in respect of God and so doth relate to his testimony We therefore conclude That the Spirit of God is here said to bear witnesse with our spirit only the difficulty is How this is done And 1. It is not done by any external voice and sound made in the air as Christ had when it was said This is my beloved Sonne Neither may we apprehend any immediate testimony by an extraordinary revelation as some have pleaded for but in a mediate way partly by exciting and inabling of our spirits to call God Father against that slavishness and servility which is apt to bear us down and partly by working in us those heavenly and holy qualifications by which we do certainly gather that we are the children of God Indeed the Papists make the testimony of Gods Spirit to be no more as applied to particular subjects though in it self they say it is infallible then a moral certainty by probable conjectures and signs But this is derogatory to the Spirit of God and taketh away all that Evangelical joy and holy boldness which we are allowed to have at the throue of grace This witnessing then of Gods Spirit is two wayes 1. Effectivè When it doth enable the conscience of man to cast off all legal terrors and tormenting fears and so in serenity of spirit to believe God is our Father And for this end it is called The Spirit of Adoption For alas take the conscience of the most holy man without this Spirit of Adoption How legal and timorated
this and then from those conjoyned we may be able to finde out the nature of this obsignation for although our principall endeavour is to be made partaker of it yet it is very necessary in its kinde to know what it is Though it cannot be denied but many of Gods people may have it and yet not give the definition of it Even as they may beleeve and be regenerated and not happily be able to give an exact description of these things As many a man hath health may sleep well and yet is not able to tell you what health or sleep is The first Text which will afford much light to this we are upon is that famous place set like a beacon upon the mount and much agitated between Papists and Protestants in the doctrine of assurance Rom. 8. 18. where the spirit it self is said to bear witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God I shall not insist upon the controversies on this place either grammaticall or reall but take the positive truth plainly delivered Here the godly who all have the spirit of God first sanctifying and leading them on in all their waies whereby they are said to be spiritually minded are in the next place declared to have the spirit of God in another manner working upon them and that is to witnesse with our spirit So that the spirits Testimony is not single and immediate as when there was a voice heard saying This is my beloved Sonne No such Enthusiastical impressions and impulses are to be dreamed of but mediately and conjunctly with our spirits By it our consciences are so enlightned that we are thereby enabled to be perswaded that we are the Children of God for that you see is the object of the Testimony that is the matter witnessed that we are the children of God You see then here is no encouragement for the Popish doctrine of doubting nay when they go the highest allowing a moral certitude such which excludeth all fear to the contrary yet it doth not rise up high enough to this glorious priviledge spoken of For as with the spirit in Sanctification of us moral vertues came far short of the graces and fruit of the spirit So doth an humane perswasion from the sincerity of our conscience within us of this witnessing and sealing of Gods Spirit A second Text reducible to this is Gal. 4. 6. Because ye are sons God hath sent forth the spirit of his Sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father This is nothing but the sealing in my Text only the words are 〈◊〉 of divine worth Because ye are sinnes Therefore none but the Sonnes of God have this priviledge Children of the devil cannot pretend to this Thou who art not born of God stand aloo● off this doth not belong to thee As thou knowest not what it meaneth yea with Esau for thy mo●sels dost prophanely despise this priviledge so neither doth God give such childrens bread to dogs or Pearls to swine Again God hath sent the spirit of his Sonne you see our Son-ship is built upon Christs Sonship our Son-ship of Adoption is established upon that Son-ship which is by nature in him He doth not speak here of that eternal mission of the Holy Ghost proceeding from the Father and the Sonne but a temporal one bestowed on beleevers and he saith the spirit of his Son because by Christs death this spirit in its peculiar operation is as it were purchased for the godly For had not Christ made an atonement the Spirit of God could not have been given us either for sanctification or consolation Further This is sent into our hearts not into our memories or mindes only for the temporary beleever hath some superficial and vanishing perswasion of Gods favour towards him but it is sent into our hearts implying the full deep and through possession that it hath of the godly Lastly Here is the notable and glorious effect it maketh us to cry that is fervently confidently and boldly God Father Abba Father Some reade it indicatively in this sense God is my Father Some by way of wish and prayer it cometh all to one These are two words signifying the same thing teaching us that both Jew and Gentile is indulged this priviledge or else it 's germinated for assurance sake Oh then how unquiet and restlesse should the people of God be till they finde this work of the spirit of Adoption upon them Thou daily enquirest after the spirit in its sanctification of thee how it maketh thee more heavenly how it mortifieth thy lusts and dost mourn because thou dost not partake of it in a greater measure Why doth not thy soul also long after the fruit of this spirit of Adoption in thee Dost thou observe how it subdueth thy slavish fears how it inclineth thee to a filiall and Evangelicall affection towards God as a Father I tell thee thy life is never a Gospel-life till this be obtained As therefore these blinde men cryed Jesus have mercy on us though the Disciples reproved them and bid them hold their peace so also let it be with thee whatsoever temptations guilt and fears thy heart suggesteth to the contrary do thou notwithstanding boldly cry God my Father The third Text to illustrate this 1 Cor. 2 12. Now we have received not the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are freely given us of God Here we see two principles opposed as contrary to one another the spirit of the world and the spirit of God and he who hath the spirit of God hath it for this end partly that he might know the things which God hath freely given him implying that without this spirit we could not discern of these things Even as if a man had not a rationall soul bestowed upon him he could not discern the things of reason but would be as a beast So did not God bestow his spirit upon us we were no wayes able to discern of those Gospel-mercies which are bestowed upon us He saith which are freely given us us in particular that we might not think he speaketh of the priviledges of the Gospel in the generall remission of sins and sanctification in the generall but as applyed to this and that subject So that if a man have no more than the spirit of the world if he have not as yet this spirit of God dwelling in him he is not a fit auditor for this truth If Aristotle thought not young persons fit auditors for his morall Philosophy how much more are we to judge every man though of never such abilities and parts yet if destitute of the spirit of God altogether incapable of this truth Therefore the spiritual hearers are only such who can give their testimony to these things There must be a spiritual life a spiritual foundation before there can be this spiritual superstruction A fourth Text is 1 Joh. 3. 24. and indeed that Apostle doth often
the Rock followed the people of Israel in the wildernesse to refresh them this man may say verily God is here verily God is with me Lastly The Spirit of God doth give us Consolation by the antecedent workes of sanctification Rom. 8. 9. If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his But the godly they have received the Spirit of God And if the soul which is the spirit of a man manifest it self present in the body by its operations shall we not much rather thinke that the Spirit of Christ where it dwelleth in a man will make knowne it selfe Shall we have these coales of fire in our bosome and not perceive them Now there is an order in the works of Gods Spirit which we also must attend unto and not think to have one before the other The order is this the Spirit of God doth 1. Enlighten the minde 2. It doth sanctifie the will and affections 3. It doth witnesse and seale to us these blessed effects To looke therefore for consolation before sanctification is preposterous Oh how happy is it when the childe of God earnestly seeketh after all these effects upon his soule and that in the order God hath appointed These few qualifications may suffice by these and the like the Spirit of God doth confirme Onely you must know these doe but objectively offer themselves if the Spirit of God doth not rightly constitute our inward man and enable us all these blessed effects may be upon our soules and yet we be disconsolate as if we had them not Even as there may be pleasant flowers in a garden yet if we have not light we cannot see them So that the cause of assurance is more from the Spirit of God efficiently establishing the heart than from these qualifications which doe objectively onely declare themselves Even as in faith dogmatically assenting to divine truths the work of Gods Spirit is more upon the understanding giving firmnesse and stedfast adhesion than upon the motives of credibility in the truths themselves But what is necessary to a fuller clearing of this will upon another occasion be considered I proceed to the last thing in this Description and that is the final cause which is That under the sense of this we might live boldly c. I say under this sense For this sealing of Gods Spirit doth make such a divine impression upon the soule that we feele it and perceive it not indeed bodily as we doe the fire that burneth but rationally and spiritually in our inward man So that not onely grace is from Gods Spirit but the experimental feeling of it is likewise from the same Hence it is not to be called an humane but divine sense For a gracious constitution is required to feele what is grace and to discerne the effects thereof But I hasten This sense and apprehension of Gods sealing being thus experimentally in us we find a three-fold advantage thereby First We walke boldly confidently Insomuch that we can cry Father Ephes 3. 12. We have boldnesse and accesse with confidence There is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We are able to speake any thing in the presence of God whereas in fears and doubts our prayers are interrupted we question whether we may say this or that Secondly Hereby we walke comfortably Yea it is called Joy unspeakable 1 Pet. 1. 8. and Rom. 14. 17. Peace and joy in the Holy Ghost The Kingdome of God is there said to consist in this Alas how contrary doe the people of God walke to this Text for want of sealing as if godlinesse lay in doubts in fears and dejections of spirit Surely the people of God are to bewail their ignorance and low principles in these things Thou makest thy self to be like an heir under age as the Apostle alludeth Gal. 4. 1. and so not differing from a servant whereas the Gospel-light and Evangelical principles set home by the Spirit of adoption should fill thee with liberty and exceeding great joy Lastly Hereby we also live thankefully never satisfying our selves with admiring and commending the unspeakable and unsearchable riches of Gods grace Two great gulphs the Spirit of God hath delivered thee out of the sinfull lusts and corruptions thou didst once wallow in and the slavish sad tormenting feares thou wast once almost overwhelmed with Oh what cause is here of thankefullnesse How sorry art thou that thou art no more enlarged That thou hast but one heart and one tongue to be exercised in this matter And the aggravation of all this is that we may be thus bold joyfull and thankfull notwithstanding all discouragements to the contrary for they are many and dreadfull How many failings within How many temptations without What fiery darts from Satan And yet a sealed Christian is able to looke upon these with as much joy as the Israelites did upon the Aegyptian carcasses that lay dead upon the Sea-shore But if God should let open these flood-gates upon the most sanctified person he would be immediately swallowed up with them as Dathan and Abiram were suddenly in the earth And then Lastly You have the terme till which this sealing shall last and that is Till we are made happy compleatly in Heaven So Ephes 4. 30. We are sealed till the day of redemption This way of faith and assurance will then cease it will be turned into the immediate vision and fruition of God Then there will be no feares no doubts any more than lusts and corruptions How mercifull then is God that giveth us such manna in the wildernesse which will cease when we come into Canaan SERM. CXXXVII Whether all the People of God are his Sealed ones 2 COR. 1. 21. Who hath also sealed us THe nature of this sealing being largely described I shall conclude with an answer to that Question Whether all sanctified ones are Gods sealed ones for it might seem to be true of all seeing the Apostle speaketh universally in the person of beleevers who hath sealed us and Eph. 1. 13. those that beleeved were sealed there is no difference made neither are any exempted And not only by Scripture but by the testimony of many learned Protestants it should also seem so especially of such who defined faith to be an assurance for then if no assurance no faith To this purpose Calvin seemeth to speak on this very Text which Stapleten looketh upon as depraving the meaning of the Apostle Whosoever saith Calvin hath not the spirit of God a witnesse within him so that he can say Amen to God calling him to the certain hope of salvation he doth falso Christianum nomen obtendere pretend only to a Christian name not being so indeed To the same sense also in his Institutions lib. 3. cap. 2. par 16. Vere fidelis non est c. he is not truly a beleever who is not perswaded with a solid perswasion that God is a propitious and reconciled Father to him whereby he doth promise to
in these Sunnes no wonder if they be in the Moons the lesser lights of the Church Yea Gal. 1. there we may read of an high contest and that was not indeed about a doctrinal matter of Religion but in practice which did relate to Religion for there Paul resisted Peter to the face and blamed him before them all Thus you see that though there were none but Pauls and Barnabasses none but Pauls and Peters and such eminent Apostles in the Church of God yet we could not look for such an absolute and perfect concord that there should not be the least difference in any thing The Church never was or will be like the upper region that is not molested with the least turbulent vapour Secondly There is a full conformity or agreement in the substantials and necessaries of Religion and also in all the accessories and circumstantials therein And this is the next perfect Unity to the former and this was in the Apostolical Church Those that were the true Officers of Christ had no difference either in Doctrine or Church-government or worship of God but they were all unanimous as farre as may be observed Indeed Act. 15. 1. we read of some Pharisees who were said to believe That they taught a necessity of circumcision and observation of Mosaical Rites to the converted Gentiles which made a very great rupture and schisme in the Churches while newly planted And although there was a Councel gathered together to stop this breach and Decrees made to regulate the Church herein yet it should seem that their Authority and Interest did not pluck up this division by the root For Paul in some of his Epistles makes this his great doctrinal scope to establish them in their Christian liberty but for the Apostles themselves and the faithfull Officers in the Church they seemed as to teach the same thing so to walk in the same order and wayes of Christ Lastly There is a consent and agreement in the essentials and fundamentals of holiness but difference and hot dissentions in those things that are praeter or circa fundamentals as also in matters of Discipline and Government Now although we maintain against Papists That by the good blessing of God all the Reformed Churches excluding Socinians c. do agree in the essentials to salvation yet it must be likewise granted That in respect of accessories there are sad divisions and wofull rents in the Church of God The name of Lutherans and Calvinists as also of several forms of Government do argue that there is a great breach amongst us And this we must expect to have alwayes in the Church as long as men are subject to ignorance mistakes and carnal affections And therefore we are not to be offended and scandalized at it much less hearken to Popish Emissaries who take this advantage amongst weak people to perswade them that the Church of Rome is therefore the only true Church These things premised let us consider what are cementing and uniting principles what do conduce to Unity amongst the Officers of God in his Church And First That which is alwayes willing to be last is Humility and a spirit of meekness and moderation You never heard of an humble man that he was a disturber of the Church or broacher of heresies Hereticks have alwayes been proud haughty and ambitious men as Marcion Nestorius and others especially the Pope of Rome who exalteth himself above all that is called God Were then men of more humble and lowly spirits having low apprehensions of their gifts and abilities this would wonderfully make to consent and agreement Secondly Earnest and servent prayer unto God for the holy Spirit For seeing it 's the Spirit of God that is promised to lead us into the truth And Officers of the Church have a more peculiar promise for it above ordinary believers as being in a more peculiar Office and receiving a proper Commission from Christ It is therefore necessary to implore this assistance of Gods Spirit For whereas the Papist doth scornfully and with derision ask How comes it about that seeing every Sect in the Protestants doth lay claim to the Spirit of God all owning it to be their guider in their several wayes How comes it about that yet these spirits are so contrary to one another Can the holy Spirit of God be opposite to it self To this calumny it is easily answered That all Officers and Teachers do not equally and in the same measure partake of Gods Spirit For besides that there is not now any such measure of it given to any Officers in the Church that makes them infallible There is an inequality and difference in the degrees of partaking of this holy Spirit of God so farre as it is communicable Some have it more in the gift of illumination some more in the gift of sanctification and withall some are more negligent and faulty than others And therefore the holy Ghost is not communicated to all alike For pride negligence want of servent and earnest prayer makes the Spirit of God to keep off from us Oh then that all who have inspection in the Church of Christ were more earnest for Gods Spirit that he would enlighten us and direct us howsoever that he would so sanctifie us that if we did erre yet we shall not be obstinate and pertinacious in it Thirdly An uniting principle is to take heed of self-will and self-conceit to make our wils and humours or apprehensions the Law and Rule of truth The Apostle amongst other qualifications in an Elder requireth Tit. 1. 7. That he be not self-willed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one that pleaseth himself or is self-conceited of his own abilities For all herefies and divisions are bred in the womb of this self-conceit and commonly the more ignorant and the less knowing the more obstinate and self-conceited For the more knowledge any man hath the more he apprehends his own weakness and ignorance he also seeth the strength of such arguments which one of a shallow capacity can no more reach unto than a Pigmy can the Pyramides More principles might be offered unto you but I have spoken to this at large from John 17. where our Saviour prayeth over and over again for unity amongst believers as if it were the only pillar of all sound Doctrine and true holiness Only the usefulness of this agreement is seen in the good influence that it will have upon the body of believers a divided Ministry will also make a divided people If those bright luminaries of Heaven should oppose one another as the Moon doth sometimes the Sunne what sad Eclipses doth it produce We read 1 Cor. 3. that amongst these Corinthians there were heavy divisions though that seemed to be the peoples sin most who made such a difference one saying I am for Paul another I am for Apollo Let the Use be To us all to importune God who is the God of peace and who alone can fashion the hearts and
that chastisement and wounds which brought peace to us And truly this is much to be meditated on For what man considering his sinfulness his unworthiness can perswade himself that God will have any peace with such as he is Do we not see what a laborious work it is to bring the troubled and loaden soul to Christ for ease How many times ready to despair What constant qualms and swoons of soul How often with the Disciples crying out I perish I perish And is not all this because they think their sinnes have so offended God he is so provoked against them that they can never obtain reconciliation Doth not this proneness to unbelief and despair arise from not considering that the chastisements of our peace are upon Christ Were we with our tears or graces to work our peace then our estate would be incurable But Christ is our peace-maker and if peace-makers among men are blessed How blessed is our Lord and Saviour Christ who made peace between man and God Fifthly Faith is the hand to receive and imbrace this peace by believing we come to have this heavenly tranquillity Those that are strangers to this life of faith are also strangers to this life of peace Rom. 5. 1. Being justified by faith we have peace with God It 's faith that prepareth the way for peace Isai 26. 3. Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on thee because he trusteth in thee in perfect peace peace peace as in the original full and universal peace But how shall he thus be kept By trusting and staying his mind on God So Isai 27. 5. God there inviteth men to believe which is emphatically called a laying hold upon God Let him take hold on me that he may make peace with me and he shall make peace with me Take hold as we do upon a man that is turning away from us and seemeth to be offended with us but we lay hold on him intreating him to look upon us This doth faith and therefore by it we are said to have boldness Oh then acquaint thy self more with this life of faith If you see a tree wither in all its branches and boughs it is because it dieth at the root So if you see a Christian abating in his peace in his joy in his consolations it is because faith is weak within This is the breast that gives suck as it were to all the serenity we enjoy Sixthly This peace as it is thus wrought by God in us and received by faith so it is conserved and preserved by an holy and diligent attending to the exercise of all grace For although a godly life be not a cause of this peace yet it is alwayes conjoyned with it and our negligence and ungodliness will be like an Eclipse to this Sunne it will darken and obnubilate the whole soul Hence this peace and a wilfull course of wickedness can no more stand together than the Sunne and night The Apostle Peter 1 Pet. 1. biddeth us Give all diligence to make our calling and election sure which is by adding of one grace to another Hence Rom. 8. 6. To be spiritually minded is said to be life and peace No wonder then if Gods own children do so seldom attain to a calm and peaceable frame they are doubting and discouraged often they are cast down and hopeless often they are full of tormenting fears often for whence is this but because Gods own people are subject to dulness slothfulness they break their peace they interrupt this communion they do not keep the oil alwayes ready to keep the lamp burning Oh then say to thy soul why am I a man of so little peace within me Why do I find like Rehekkah two strugling within me faith against diffidence joy against sadnesse hope against fear Is not all this from my own folly and vanity The way then to keep this blessed peace is to walk with all diligence in the whole course of all godliness Seventhly This peaceable calme and joyfull disposition of the soul is the proper effect and fruit of the Gospel This is the fi●al and Evangelical temper we under the Gospel and the Spirit of Adoption ought to walk in We may stand and wonder to see what great expressions Paul useth Rom. 8. and in other places concerning the love of God in Christ how consident and assured of it how triumphing over all difficulties as if he were in Heaven already For the glorified Saints can scarce say more than he doth And this he speaketh not in his own behalf but in the name of all the children of God they ought to have such peace assurance and filial perswasions as he hath Now alas we are like worms crawling on the ground in comparison of him We spend our dayes in tumults fears and disquietness of heart We are tossed from one temptation to another and have not this peace this joy unspeakable this Evangelical perswasion and why but because the Gospel hath not had its full work upon us Doth not the Apostle 2 Cor. 3. and in other places speak of the Ministration of the Law killing and condemning Doth he not speak of a spirit of bondage and of servants as opposite to children And as the immediate contrary to this he tels us of the Ministration of the Gospel and the Spirit of Adoption accompanying it which Spirit we are to pray for and are to be transformed more and more from glory to glory by beholding of the glory of God revealed in the Gospel Therefore Ephes 6. 15. We are to have our feet shod with the preparation of the Gospel of peace We tread among thorns and briars Now this Gospel munition is the only defence against all hinderances in our way to Heaven Oh beloved let us at last know that the Gospel doth not only consist in an holy exact and humble walking but in a chearfull peacefull and gladsome conversation arising from the sense of Gods grace to us in Christ The Apostle speaketh fully to this Rom. 14. 17. The Kingdome of God is not meat or drink but righteousnesse peace and joy in the holy Ghost You see here the Kingdome of God is not onely in righteousnesse but in this peace and joy Did the children of God possess their souls with this truth they would no more let in unbelief and discouragements into their soul then they would the prince of darkness and his Angels Know therfore that though thou hast lived so many years under the Gospel yet till thou obtainest this peaceable calm frame of soul coming from the love of God in Christ thou hast not the Gospel-work in its full upon thee Do not live as if thou hadst only received the Spirit of bondage to fear but the Spirit of adoption and consolation also And know this assuredly That the more any Christian groweth under the Gospel the more this dispensation affects him the nearer in communion and lovely imbracements by faith he cometh unto God as a
God ruleth in our heart The fire doth not more easily dissolve the frost and ice then this peace of God in our souls doth chase away all slothfulness and negligence if this grace and peace of God were shed abroad in thy heart thou wouldst like a Gyant runne thy race of Christianity whereas now thou art but a Dwarf feeble hands and weak knees will not go through much work especially if difficult and laborious Now the way of Christianity is compared to a race to fighting and combating there are thousands of discouragements and oppositions in the way it behoveth thee therefore to have this peace within that so the work of grace begun in thee may go on more prosperously But you will say This indeed is a mercy like that Pearl in the Parable we may well fell all to have it But how may we be directed to obtain it Take notice of these things briefly First Distinguish between carnal presumption and this peace from God Many have been deluded by taking one for the other The Jews and Pharisees did confidently boast in God as their Father and that they were Abrahams seed the Covenants of Grace did belong to them yet who were further off from it than they were When the Pharisees said Lord I thank thee I am not like other men he might have boldness and confidence upon his soul but yet here was no true peace And thus there are many hundreds who have quiet still and it may be feared stupified consciences Now these find no trouble no aches or pains of heart because of sinne but thank their good God all is well with them when yet alas they are miserable being upon the very borders of Hell in which they may fall every moment Secondly Take heed of living in sinne or omitting of those Duties God requireth of thee For although these be not the cause of this peace in thee yet without these no peace can either be obtained or preserved This is to be throwing water upon the fire till it quite go out Thirdly Perswade thy self of those Doctrinal Truths against the contrary Errours which help to establish this peace Such as the Nature of Justifying Faith in the particular application of it as also not only the possibility but the duty of Assurance the certain and unchangeable love of God to all those who are his as also the acceptablenesse of such a quiet and joyfull spirit unto God himself Fourthly Regard Gods promises as well as precepts Look upon the Gospel as well as the Law let not one destroy the other but make them to be subservient in thy whole life Lastly Pray much for the Spirit of Adoption For it is not thy own power or meditation upon all the Rules that Ministers may give which will give this peace of God till the Spirit of Adoption doe reigne in thee SERM. XXVII Of the Names of God 't is he alone who can give Grace and Peace to his People He is a Father to all Believers even the weakest as well as the strongest 2 COR. 1. 2. From God our Father VVE have dispatched the choice and special mercies here prayed for we now come to the Original and Spring of them The Efficient Cause who alone can vouchsafe this to us and that is two-sold God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ Let us consider the first and there we have a description of him 1. Absolutely God 2. Relatively a Father 3. The Community of this to all Believers or the Extension of it Our Father We shall dispatch all these particulars briefly The first head is the absolute consideration of God expressed in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whether that word come from fear or to runne or to behold is doubted of In the Hebrew there are several Names given to God insomuch that the Rabbins call him Hashem the Name Whether God himself revealed his Name to Adam or Adam imposed a name upon him it is hard to determine This is certain that the Scripture names do very emphatically represent the Nature of God especially those two Jehovah and Elohim The word Jehovah is commonly rendred by the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet in the New Testament Christ is commonly called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and God the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 especially when named together as is to be shewed in the verses following Now of these two mentioned words one in the singular the other is in the plural which doth denote especially having light from other places of Scripture that there is One Divine Nature and Three Persons Hence sometimes Jehovah Elohim is put together although also the former word signifieth the fulness of Gods being and giving being to other things For which reason say some he is not named Jehovah till the second Chapter in Genesis when all things were compleated and in another place God is said Not to be known by the Name Jehovah Exod. 6. 3. because they had not seen the great things promised accomplished and Elohim denoteth God as governing and ruling the world in which sense the fool is said to affirm There is no God no Elohim Psal 14. 1. Yet having light from other places of Scripture especially from the New Testament we ought not to reject this consideration that therefore Jehovah is in the singular number and Elohim in the plural to signifie the One Nature and Three Persons For though from the plural number meerly we cannot pitch upon the number three more than four yet from other places joyned to this we may So then as God in making of man spake in the plural number so we shall find in the Scripture in other places speaking of God as Makers in the plural number Isa 54. 5. Psal 149. 2. Job 35. 9. for this reason Though some Divines dare not say Tres Jehovae Three Jehovahs yet they say Three Elohims as Zanchy nameth a piece of his works Indeed there are others who do wholly reject and dislike that expression The word God is applied sometimes properly sometimes improperly Improperly so it is given to Angels and Magistrates The Apostle saith They are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 called Gods in Heaven and Earth Though a learned man observes That never any Angel or Magistrate is called a god in the singular number but they are said to be gods in the plural number now the Apostle sometimes layeth an argument even upon the number Improperly also it is given to Magistrates Moses is said to be made a god to Pharaoh here is the singular number but the respective limitation is added because of his dominion God gave him over Pharaoh to bring judgements upon him Yea the Devil is called the god of this world who is said to blind the minds of disobedient persons Although some expound that of the true and eternal God who doth in just judgement harden the hearts of wicked men Non impertiendo malitiam sed denegando gratiam But properly and truly it is
That spiritual comfort comes alone from God is plain because the Spirit of God is called the Comforter We cannot have one drop of heavenly consolation till Gods Spirit infuse it into us If the children of God could have comfort when they will would they walk so disconsolately and cry out of their dark troubled souls as they do but then even earthly comfort to take delight in the lawfull contentments God doth allow us to take delight and joy in these corporal mercies this is also from God Eccles 2. 24 26. Eccles 3. 13. Eccles 5. 18. You see the Wiseman affirmeth it often That a man cannot take any joy or delight even in those lawfull things unless it be given him of God All comfort then of all sorts ariseth from him But let us consider the way or manner of Gods comforting For as it is a great and profitable Question to examine How God doth convert and sanctifie so also how he doth comfort And First You must lay this foundation That God doth comfort two wayes either immediately when he doth by himself work upon the soul Or mediately when he comforteth by such means as he hath appointed thereunto Let us then in the next place consider What are those immediate workings of God upon the soul whereby he maketh the heart joyfull For David Psal 4. saith God had put more joy into his heart then any man can have in the abundance of all temporal mercies And First Therefore God doth comfort by illuminating and opening the understanding and opening the understanding to know and see the grounds and reasons of comfort And certainly this is of great conducement to have the heart comforted when the understanding is rightly convinced of the grounds of comfort For as the dark night is apt to beget fears and terrours so darkness in the understanding is a great cause of all that terrour and disconsolateness which Gods own children may many times lie under So that as God in conversion and humiliation for sinne begins with conviction upon the heart so also in consolation and comfort The great impediment to a godly mans comfort is want of spiritual knowledge and conviction about the causes of comfort As it was with Hagar in the wilderness she sate weeping for her child and gave over all as desperate till God opened her eyes and made her see a fountain Thus the broken heart judgeth it self in a wilderness destitute of all comfort seeth nothing but matter of despair and damnation till God enlighten the understanding about comfortgrounds in the Gospel As for example when the Spirit of God enlightens us to receive comfort it giveth us the eye salve 1. To look upon Christ revealed in the Gospel as the full cause and ground of all our comfort as well as on sinne Generally the people of God in the first workings of the soul look upon nothing but their sins behold nothing but sinne but God will not let them alone in this agony he enlightens them further that they shall see Christ as well as sinne the Gospel as well as the Law he giveth them eyes to behold the brazen Serpent when stung Hence the Spirit of God John 16. 9 10. doth not only convince of sinne but of righteousness also The Devil he indeed moveth in those troubled waters of thy soul and would keep thee off from Christ as the Disciples did the blind man but the Spirit of God will not leave the soul in these wounds in these straits but doth carry him up from the mount of cursing to the mount of blessing And certainly the wise men could not more rejoyce to see the starre than the godly heart doth to behold Christ after the storms and tempests in his soul Hence the Apostle Gal. 1. calleth it The revealing of the Sonne in him This then we are inabled to do by God not only to know sinne in the terrour and sting of it but also Christ in his fulness and excellency How was Paul affected with this 2 Cor. 2. 1. I desire to know nothing but Christ crucified This therefore is a special work of God to make us look with both eyes to make thee see sinne as well as Christ and Christ as well as sin 2. As God doth convince the soul of Christ what a full and glorious Saviour he is so also in the second place Of our duty to receive him and to lay hold on him And this is a further step to comfort when God doth so farre open the eyes as to see not only a full and sufficient Christ but also that it 's a duty in particular to apply this Christ and to rest upon him for comfort and salvation This is a further discovery still Paul said Gal. 2. Who gave himself for me and loved me And Thomas said My God and my Lord. It is one of the blessed truths discovered in the Reformation out of Popery That it is not our duty to believe in the general onely that Christ is a Saviour but to rest on him also for the pardon of my sinnes That this is the Faith that justifieth That this is most acceptable and precious unto God That unbelief not only in the general but as it faileth in this particular in not applying in not appropriating Christ to the soul is that which will damn a man Oh then what blessed and comfortable light is that which God bringeth into the soul when he shall make thee see that though a sinner though burdened though unworthy yet it 's thy duty to go to Christ to be eased That he commands thee with that woman not only to touch the hem of his garments but to lay hold on Christ himself This particular faith is that which the soul is hardly convinced of Though others may draw nigh to Christ yet may I But he cometh at last to be perswaded of this truth 3. God comforts by enlightning the mind that a comfortable joyfull life arising from peace with God is a most acceptable thing to God that it brings honour and glory to God and that on the other side to walk heavily and in a dejected manner is to dishonour and reproach God That God doth not only look to our gracious walking but also to our comfortable walking and that we demonstrate the Kingdom of Heaven to be begun in us in joy as well as in mortification Rom. 14. 17. The Kingdom of God is righteousnesse and joy in the holy Ghost You see Joy as well as Righteousnesse The children of God they are not quickly perswaded of this they think such as they are may not walk comfortably It 's not for them to rejoyce but at last they come to see that they were sinfully kept up by slavish fears and servile dejections that the Kingdome of God requireth Consolation as well as Sanctification Thus you see the first general way how God comforteth viz. by enlightning the mind Secondly and principally God comforteth By preparing and fashioning the heart by making it
perswaded this as a special help to premeditate on evils before they came Others they refused this as making a man miserable before he was so Others supported themselves with the thoughts of necessity and that it could not be otherwise But of all these we may say as Job to his friends Ye are miserable comforters and are of no more advantage then the rending of garments or pulling off the hair in grief which Bion derided in one as if a bald head would take away grief We therefore conclude That no Philosophers had the true art or grounds of comfort and that 1. Because they were wholly ignorant of Jesus Christ in whom alone is all the cause of comfort Therefore he is called our Peace and he is said to be the Prince of peace Foelicissimum est cui non est opus foelicitate and such an one is the man in Christ for he will never thirst more than hath drunk of that fountain No sinne no guilt no curse can be removed but by the bloud of Christ Insomuch that all their Philosophical precepts about comfort were as the influence of the Moon which doth rather rotten than ripen in respect of the Sunnes influence 2. They were without the Spirit of Christ the efficient cause of comfort Christ is the subject matter in whom alone we can have comfort and the Spirit of God is the efficient cause that doth alone give a comfortable and glad heart 3. They were altogether unbelieving of a Resurrection to leternal glory which is an admirable ground of all true joy This the Apostle presseth against immoderate sorrow about those that are dead Not to grieve as those that are without hope Lastly They were wholly unacquainted with the life of faith that is only instrumental to receive joy Use of Exhortation in all thy tribulations to look up to God in Christ for comfort Thou runnest to this creature to comfort and thou thinkest this and that condition would comfort thee but how can the chanel have any thing in it if the fountain doth not give it Say not it 's thy affliction so greatly to be aggravated that makes thee disconsolate No it is for want of Gods presence in it SERM. XXXIX What are these Apples which Christ refresheth his Spouse with Or what are those Scripture-grounds of comfort which support the hearts of Gods children under all their afflictions 2 COR. 1. 4. Who comforteth us in all our tribulation THere is no tribulation either for the kind or degree of it but God can and doth comfort his people therein It is therefore requisite to know what are those cordial comforts what is that balm and oyl by which he healeth the wounds of his afflicted ones For seeing Gods comforts do farre exceed all Philosophical remedies as much as the Sunne doth a Gloworm And Paul's admirable temperament I know how to abound and how to want doth infinitely transcend that so much celebrated carriage of Socrates who was noted to be alwayes Eodem vultu let whatsoever befall him It is very usefull to know what are these Apples of comfort as the Church calleth for Cant. 2. 5. And the rather this is to be done because many of Gods children are deficient in a three-fold respect about Gods consolations For either 1. They are in a great manner ignorant of what foundations and sure grounds they have of comfort They do not know what fountains of living water they may abundantly bathe themselves in They are as Elisha's servant who though there was a great host of Angels to help him yet he did not see them So that the Spirit of God doth not only illuminate us in the matter of duty but also in matter of comfort hence he is called The Comforter Or 2. Though they know many arguments of comfort yet their memory faileth them that in the very hour of their temptations in the midst of their furious assaults they forget what comfortable supports they might make use of So that it is good to preach of these principles of consolation that thereby we may be remembrancers to you and put you in mind of that joy which in the midst of your afflictions your corruptions and the Devils temptations are so apt to strike out As the Disciples were sometimes blamed for their forgetfulness they did not remember the miracle of loaves Thus also the children of God may often rebuke themselves and with David say Why wast thou cast down O my soul And why wast thou so troubled within thee Hadst thou thought on such a promise such a place of Scripture Hadst thou remembred such a precious and sweet truth the temptation had not prevailed so much upon thee Come we then to lead you up into the Mount of transfiguration let us see even in this life as farre as our narrow hearts can comprehend What are the good things God hath prepared for those that love him And First Take this for a foundation That God comforts only through and by the Scriptures He must enter into this pool that will feel these consolations descending upon him he must buy this field of the Scriptures that will have this pearl hidden there The Spirit of God is that indeed which doth efficiently reach to the soul and make it to receive comfort but the means by which or the harp as it were whereby the evil spirit of sorrow and dejection is removed is by the word of God So that as the Spirit of God doth powerfully change and alter the heart yet the word is organically and instrumentally used for that end So though the Spirit of God be the Comforter yet it is through the Word Hence the Apostle Rom. 15. 4. That we through comfort of the Scriptures might have hope And David doth not only admire the word of God because it fore-warneth of sinne quickeneth up to duty but also because it was a reviving comforting Word whereby he was kept from fainting and being utterly overwhelmed in his troubles And this is the more to be considered by the godly that so they may not be deluded by false joyes When the Devil is said to transform himself into an Angel of light 2 Cor. 11. 14. that is into light of comfort as well as of truth There are false joyes there are comforts from the Devil as well as doctrines of the Devil The Papist hath his comforts The Socinian the Antinomian all these have a spirit of delusion in their joyes as well as in their opinion The Spirit of God doth first lead into truth before it vouchsafeth comfort But we detain you too long The first ground therefore of Scripture that may be had out of the treasury thereof is this viz. That all the tribulations we fall into they are precisely determined by God as a Father out of much love both in regard of the beginning of them the degree of them as also the continuance of them And if this truth be well rumiated and digested here is
God as that known expression of Luthers Fiat voluntas mea Domine In Savo●●r●la likewise even Machiavil did acknowledge a Divine Spirit in him Many things he fore-told which came to passe and had bold accesse to the throne of grace as if he had been another Moses speaking to God face to face In his Homilies upon Micah he hath wonderfull assertions about his predictions But extraordinary priviledges and that in some cases onely must not be extended to all When the glory of God and the good of his Church is concerned God doth come with more familiar discoveries of himthan at other times But though this be so yet the godly are many times deceived in themselves and about others and that because they judge according to outward appearance Fourthly Then are the people of God apt to be deceived about themselves When they yeeld too much or give too much credit to the strong affections and raised zeale as they thinke for the glory of God In such particulars they have many times failed as men yea so as they have sinned thereby and offended God Thus Peter did exceedingly fail Matth. 16. 23. when out of his great affection to his Master he said Master save thy self What a severe reproof did his humane affections meet with Get thee behind me Satan for thou savourest not the things of God but of man Little did Peter expect such words for that which he thought was his good will if not piety to Christ The like also we find in those Disciples Luke 9. 55. when they would have fire come from Heaven to be avenged on the Samaritans because they would not receive Christ for there Christ gave them a check saying Ye know not what spirit ye are of They thought that to be a Divine Spirit they thought the same heavenly breathing and motion to be upon them as was upon Elias but alas they did not know what spirit it was We find also Paul deceived or at least forbidden in some passages which he thought greatly promoting the glory of God Act. 16. 6. Paul was forbidden to preach the Word in Asia which implieth a desire and an attempt in him to do it And vers 7. Paul essayed to go into Bythinia but the Spirit suffered him not And often he purposed to come to the Churches he had planted And although he saith in one place 1 Thess 2. 18. I Paul would have come to you once and again but Satan hindered yet Satan could not have hindered had not God permitted him So that though Satan hindered Paul sinfully yet God did hinder him justly and for wise ends Which instances shew what vehement affections the godly may have and that as they think for Gods glory when yet God disposeth farre otherwise So that as God may sometimes for just and holy ends let false prophets speak truth as Deut. 13. 1. a false prophet or dreamer may tell a thing which may come to passe and the Lord suffer this to tempt and try his people Thus Balaam though a wicked man and a Sorcerer did prophesie of the happy things that were long after to come upon Israel Yea the Philistims Priests and Diviners did by Gods special permission 1 Sam. 6. direct to such means about the Ark and order strange wayes about the milch Kine to discover whether their evil was of God or not and all this proved successefull As I say God may for wise and just ends suffer the Devils instruments to foretell that which is true and speak aforehrnd of things that shall and will come to passe so on the other side God may sometimes hide things from his own people yea his own Prophets so that they may not know them As Elijah told Gehezi The Lord had hid from him what the Shunamites grief was The people of God then are to walk in all humility and as they are not to believe every spirit but try the spirit of others so also they are not to believe their own spirit but to try that Fifthly The people of God are apt to be deceived about themselves thinking otherwise than indeed it is and that about the frames of their heart in respect of the workings of grace As Paul received a sentence of death upon himself so sometimes the children of God a more terrible sentence upon themselves even that they are damned that they are cast-awayes that God hath forsaken them that they have no true grace that all their Religion is but hypocrisie Even these sad decrees the godly in their temptations do receive in themselves but God doth not passe this sentence upon them neither doth the word of God it is their deceived and tempted heart Thus also it is for grace they many times are deceived thinking they can do those things for God which when put upon the trial they cannot As Peter thought Though all men should for sake him yet he would not Oh how little do the godly know of their hearts how mutable how contradictory to themselves And all because they think that is not in them which indeed is As there are dangerous Rocks in the Sea when you would think by the waters that cover them all were safe and harmlesse It was this made David so affectionately cry out Psal 19. Who can understand his errours Cleanse me from secret sins and thereupon prayeth Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sinnes Remember that in thy heart there are secret concavities and windings that it will put on many shapes and forms seeming an humble heart when it is proud an heavenly heart when it is earthly SERM. LXVII The People of God often pass false judgement upon the dispensations of God towards them The Reasons from whence this false judgement proceeds with Rules to prevent it 2 COR. 1. 9. But we had the sentence of death in our selves that we might not trust in our selves WE have observed from the first part in this Verse That even the godly themselves are apt to be deceived about Gods dispensation towards them They make false conclusions because they erre in some premisses It remaineth that after some generall and remote instances we come to insist on that which the Text affordeth viz. That then the People of God are deceived when they judge of Gods dealings according to sense and humane helps not according to Gods power and his promise And with this deceit the Children of God are frequently overtaken How often do we find David in many of his Psalmes thus deluded what false conclusions doth he many times make about himself and his affaires and all this did arise because he limiteth God to his own thoughts and expectations if God remove not such impediments if his helps come not in before such a time then they conclude all is hopeless It is said of the people of Israel that they limited the holy one of Israel Isa 78. 41. And wherein did this appeare The Psalmist spake of it before viz. Can God furnish a Table in the
the person of a regenerate man because he cals himself carnall and yet this Authour though of the same judgemen with them will by a naturall man understand a babe in Christ or a weak Christian The Apostle I say making this distinction between these two saith The naturall man receiveth not the things of God because they are spiritually discerned Now there must be alwayes some proportion between the faculty and the object The eye cannot see musick nor the eare heare colours nor doth a Beast understand reason but then the spirituall man having received the Spirit of God he judgeth all things and such have the mind of Christ There is then that Heavenly and holy wisedome which if we receive from above if we plow with this Heifer we are able more exactly and certainly to judge of Gods proceedings then otherwise we could do for as God giveth it to his people to understand the mysteries of the Gospell when they are hid from other mens eyes so to the godly it is impart given to understand the wayes and workes of the Lord that thereby they may prevent those delusions or deceits which otherwise they are lyable unto Whereupon it is that because in this particular as well as in other we know but in part we have heavenly wisedome but in part Therefore it is that we do so often miscarry As in all civill Governement there are arcana imperii secrets of state which only the wise favorite is admitted unto the single and credulous Subject he believeth the pretences and appearances of things Thus God also though in a wise and just manner hath his secrets in governing of his Church he proceedeth in such methods that to the judgement of flesh and blood do appeare very improbable and unlikely ever to produce any blessed end and hence it is that the carnall wise men of the world are so often taken in their own craft and wherein they deale not only proudly but wisely God is above them whereas if they had understood the method of Gods proceedings they would not have been found so foolishly to fight against God but the godly have Scripture wisedome and prudence and therefore are not wholely in the dark but while they follow them are kept from those bogs and pits which others are very ready to fall into we may instance in some of those Divine Maximes of state As 1. The understanding of this truth will prevent much false judgment viz. When we consider that God delights to carry on the great things of his Church in a contrary way to humane thoughts and expectations let us instance in that main foundation of all our comfort and duty Christ Crucified with the benefits and effects flowing from him Was not this the master piece of Gods wisedome and power and mercy yet how contrary and unsuitable to the judgement of flesh and blood for God to be made Man and Man not in a glorious externall way as the great Potentates of the world but in a most abject and ignominious way and then by such an accursed and reproachfull death to procure our pardon of sinne and acceptation with God it hath so much absurdity in it to flesh and bloud that to the Jewes it was a stumbling block and to the Gentiles foolishness Non pudet quia pudendum omnino credibile quia prorsus impossibile What the thoughts of men were about Christ while working out our redemption appeareth Isa 13. 2 3 4. There is no beauty that we should desire him he is despised and rejected of men we did esteem him smitten of God So that generally all the Nations of the Jewes were deceived about a Messiah yea the Disciples themselves were full of prejudices in this Point This then is Gods way to do the great things of his Church in a super-humane way So that even then when the things themselves are not super-naturall yet the manner of accomplishing them is wholely above nature What therefore God speaketh in one case to his people about the pardon of sinne Isa 55. 8 9. is true in all the rest of Gods administrations My thoughts are not as your thoughts For as the Heavens are higher then the Earth so are my wayes higher then yours By this it is plain that a Dwarfe is as able to reach to the Heavens as we are to comprehend Gods wayes so that whatsoever God doth for thee whether body or soul it is a mystery All will be wonderfull and marvelous in thy eyes As he said that was not worthy the name of eloquence which did not beget admiration in the Hearers So the Lord accounteth of nothing as beseeming his Majesty which may not put the soul in admiration possess thy soul with this principle and thou wilt not be often in thy complaints I looked for this and hoped for that but God hath taken away that I never dreamed off 2. Another Rule is That when God hath promised to do any thing for his people yet he doth for the most part seem to go contrary to it especially at first as when Abraham was promised a great Posterity David a Kingdome they met at first with nothing but what did make against these so that his providence did seem to gainsay his promise Now if this be not known how quickly will the godly be deceived The world was a great Chaos and confusion before it was made so glorious as now it is 3. This will prevent mistake also when we consider That God doth usually hide himselfe and deny help till every thing be desperate and then he cometh to help When the poore creple that lay so many years and could not be put into the Poole said I have no help then Christ healed him Christ did not provide Wine at the Marriage Feast till all was spent Moses cometh when the ●aske of brick is doubled in the Mount the Lord will be seen Would not this truth alone deliver thee from many conclusions as if God had forsaken thee and would be mercifull no more What if Christ do with thee as that Woman of Canaan to put thee off to call thee Dog Is it not to provoke thy faith and importunity more 4. The Heavenly Artist remembers this Rule also That God will sometimes alter his ordinary wayes do things because of his soveraignty and prerogative What Disputes and different thoughts had Job and his friends about Gods dealing with him in his particular wherein both Job and his friends were at a loss only Job spake more rightly then they Yet God discovereth his greatness and Najesty to Job thereby informing of him that he did not sufficiently consider his own weakenesse and Gods infinite greatness 5. And lastly God delights to put his people upon a life of faith and that in temporall and spirituall mercies The just shall live by his faith This faith doth exalt God and debase man now saith and sense they are opposite one flyeth up to Heaven the other crawleth on the ground and therefore
as it is said Davids heart smote him that is his conscience did witnesse against him and condemn him And because of that remorsus that regreting and displicency which conscience putteth forth Durand is singular in his opinion holding that the practical understanding is not the conscience only but the will likewise is included in it The Hebrew word Leb signifying the Heart doth also originally denote the sprinkling of the meal with leaven Thus the heart hath naturally some principles in it which are like leaven to it as speculative and practical axiomes concerning God and just and unjust In the New Testament likewise it is called the heart 1 John 3. 20. If our heart condemne us that is our conscience God is greater than our heart But no more of this here This conscience is here described by one special act it hath and that is To bear witnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word in the Scripture is commonly used for that publick testimony and witness which either God did give unto the Gospel by miracles and signes or men by their publick profession and attestation Hence 1 Cor. 2. 1. the Gospel is called the testimony of God because so wonderfully confirmed by him So to men it is applied Act. 4. 3. The Apostles with great power gave witnesse of the Resurrection of Christ and because believers by their deaths did give the greatest testimony to the truths of God hence they are called Martyrs and their death is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Martyrdome in a principal sense Hence some have expounded that place Heb. 11. 4 39. where we render it The Elders obtained a good report of their Martyrdome They were made Martyrs because it is the passive sense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sometimes the word is used metaphorically as James 5. 3. the rust of covetous and wicked rich mens gold and silver is said to be a witnesse against them But here it is used concerning the work of conscience within a man and is in other places compounded denoting some joynt-witnesse with another Romans 2. 15. Their conscience bearing witnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So Rom. 9. 1. My conscience also bearing me witnesse The Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though some think is not to be regarded yet it doth denote as most say a respect to God who is our Superiour and to whom our conscience doth attend and therefore called not Science but Conscience So that Gods witness and the witness of conscience are both conjoyned together yea seem to be but one testimony as it were Hence the very Heathens could say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Conscience is a God to every man Therefore Paul useth an equivalent expression in other places Rom. 1. 9. Phil. 1. 8. God is my witnesse Salmeron out of Bernard speaks of a two-fold testimony of the conscience Testimonium conscientiae perhibentis that which the conscience doth actively exhibit and Conscientiae percipientis that which it doth receive from the Spirit of God of which we read Rom. 8. 16. and in this later sense he understands it But we take both in viz. that witness which the conscience did actually give of Paul's sincerity But because this could not be done without the Spirit of God inabling thereunto therefore it is a witnesse received from Gods Spirit first and from that conscience is enabled to deliver it to us Now when so much rejoycing is attributed to the testimony of conscience you must take along with you who it is that speaketh thus The testimony of our conscience of Paul who was sanctified enlightned and guided by the Word otherwise there is a testimony of a deluded conscience of a secure conscience that speaketh peace when there is no peace and this doth not afford any true or solid ground of rejoycing it must be therefore the testimony of such a conscience which Paul had And so observe That the witnesse of our conscience rightly guided in acquitting of us is a ground of unspeakable comfort He that hath his conscience rightly clearing of him he need not care for all the accusations of the Devils in hell and wicked men upon the earth It breedeth confidence both towards God and towards men Towards God 1 Iohn 3. 21. If our hearts condemn us not we have confidence towards God and whatsoever we aske we receive of him This encourageth and imboldeneth in prayer And towards men As you see Paul justified himself by this when called before the Council and made to plead for himself Act. 23. 1. Yea the Heathens though they could never attain to a true spiritually sanctified conscience yet not to live according to the natural dictates thereof they accounted the only happinesse Nil conscire sibi was the onely thing that made happy And Hic murus aheneus esto Pindar called it The good nurse in our old age So great a matter is it to have the testimony of a good conscience void of offence for that is Mille testes more than all the testimonies in the world Seeing therefore men have such constant recourse to this witnesse within and their comfort is true or false according as that is guided Let us enquire first into the constituent or ingredient qualities of a rightly guided conscience And First There is necessarily required to a good and true testimony of our conscience That it take the word of God as a Rule to judge by to witnesse by to accuse by and to acquit by The conscience of a man is not the supream rule but an inferiour and therefore is Regula regulata as well as Regula regulans a rule to be ruled by an higher rule which is the Scripture To the Law to the testimony if they speak not according to this it is because there is no light in them Isa 8. 20. If a man pretend to never so much light within if he rejoyceth never so much in the light that he hath yet if it be not from the light of the Word if it be not examined tried and judged to be according to that it is but a false light a light that will end in darkness So then though conscience be a testimony yet you see that bath another testimony to be guided by though it be a Law in a man yet there is a superiour Law to that which is the word of God By this you may see what a rotten foundation they have to build their comforts upon who take up other rules for their conscience besides the Scripture These joyes are all but like the morning-dew Some make their rule in Religion to be the tradition of their Fathers The Papist doth so extoll tradition that they think that alone without Scripture is starre bright enough to guide us Paul's zeal while a persecutor seemed to be grounded much upon this because they were the traditions of his fathers And truly tradition is the greatest reason of most mens faith whether it be in a right way or a true But this
is an improper foundation for thy faith As thy faith is hereby a blind faith so thy comfort is but a blind comfort How greatly do the Popish Casuists perplex their people with such cases of conscience and about such superstitious things that they have only tradition for and that it may be not many yeares neither without any stamp or superscription of the Scripture Have not they comfort in their Penances in their Indulgences Will not their Friers and Monks not those slow beasts and idle bellies who from deluded principles of conscience do severely and austeerly mortifie themselves say They have the testimony of their consciences and make a bulwark from thence But where is the rule they go by Is it not tradition On the contrary side in another extream there is the Enthusiast who rejecteth the Scripture as a dead letter and doth adhere only to revelations to pretended workings of Gods Spirit to the manifest light within them Doe not these even boast in their joyes and ravishments Doe they not when unable to answer arguments flie to a light within them But what ground is there for this Is not the Apostles command That we should not believe every spirit but try them 1 John 4. 1. And how must that be but by the Scripture You see then that it is not conscience simply and alone but a Scripture-conscience that is the ground of comfort To leave that and to trust in our conscience is to make our consciences a Bible to attribute infallibility to our selves Now this Scrigture is not only a Rule for our conscience in matters of faith but also of manners of righteousnesse towards man Conscience must witness to thee not only that thou art in the true Religion but also doest walk in holy conversation It must testifie of thy righteousness towards man as well as of Religion towards God This was Paul's continual exercise Act. 24. 26. To have a conscience void of offence towards God and towards man There are many voluminous Tractates of Cases of Conscience De jure justitiâ Of Righteousnesse towards man And although the Scripture doth not particularly decide Law-cases yet it layeth down such general rules that by them particulars may easily be decided if our hearts were not corrupt As for example that famous rule What you would have men do to you do ye to them Mat. 7. 12. Our Saviour after he had given religious precepts about prayer c. he addeth this to shew that Religion and righteousness must alwayes go together And Adrian the Emperour was so affected with this Rule saying He had it from the Jews or Christians that he commanded it to be written on the doors and gates of his Palace and before he would punish any offender would inform him of this Rule And our Saviour saith This is the Law and the Prophets A great expression Look then to thy conscience that it take the Scripture for a Rule in its adequate nature For faith and conversation this is no rule for conscience to go by Others do say every one is to look to himself but the word of God that must bear evidence to thee by thy conscience Secondly To the right guidance of our conscience in witnessing to us there is not only required the Word as a Rule But the Spirit of God to enlighten thy mind to receive the true meaning thereof Such are the powerfull delusions of Satan that when he can no longer dethrone the Scripture from its authority but men will appeal to that then he looketh about to advance his Kingdom by the Scriptures ill handled and wrested to corrupt opinions and by this means men are brought into a worse condition and more incurable then those who walk by no Scripture at all For if a man be delivered up to this perswasion that his opinions and wayes are allowed by Scripture warranted by Scripture what way shall we take to reduce him The Apostle Peter telleth us of some unstable and unlearned men 2 Pet. 3. 16. which did wrest the Scriptures to their own perdition And nothing is more ordinary which made Luther say That the Bible was the Hereticks book not in the sense the Papists do accusing it thereby of insufficiency and imperfection But for the dignity of it having such authority that every Heretick would gladly runne to this Sanctuary The Scripture then though a perfect Rule yet is not enough to guide our conscience unless the Spirit of God as is promised lead us into truth As the Sunne though never so full of light yet cannot guide a blind man We grant indeed that the Scripture is but a dead letter and of it self without Gods Spirit doth not enlighten the mind and convert the heart Only we say The Spirit doth this in and by the Scripture and that all mens consciences impulses light revelations and joyes must be examined and stand or fall according to this Rule Let this be granted and then we plead as fervently as any can for the work of Gods Spirit This must enlighten the conscience to be able to understand and believe the things revealed there Hence the Disciples could not attempt their office of publishing the Gospel without this assistance from the holy Ghost John 16. 13. he is said To guid them into all truth To guide them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this signifieth that they did not know the way or if they were in they would quickly divert into by-paths if this Spirit did not guide them When David said The Word was a lamp and light to his feet If we understand it effectually so that it did not only propound the light objectively but that also he was subjectively thereby illuminated this doth necessarily presuppose the work of Gods Spirit No wonder then if so many may be exceedingly acquainted with Scripture be ready with some Texts upon every occasion yet for all that be deluded with errours because they want Gods Spirit to enlighten them and instruct them thereby Let us look upon the Jews the sad dest object in the world at this day they have been so skilfull in the Old Testament that some could remember how many words and syllables were therein and that is read to them daily yet who more maliciously opposite unto the Lord Christ promised in the Old Testament than they are But the Scripture giveth a full reason thereof The veil is upon their eyes And long before there was such a prediction of this spiritual judgement upon them That seeing they should not see hearing not hear lest they understand and be converted Therefore to have a pure and true conscience we must be sure to pray and exercise our selves herein that the Spirit of God would direct us into the true sense and meaning of the Word which is to be expected in the holy use of those means which are necessary to find out the sense thereof For you must not expect that Gods Spirit will immediately reveal the sense of the Scripture without
is it How slavish and unbelieving Hence is it that the people of God need so many instructions and informations Hence is it that they are often in prayers and groans unutterable ere they can truly and cordially call God Father They fear him as a Judge and flie from him rather as an enemy Even as if there be never such glorious and delightfull objects to refresh the eyes with yet if a man be in the dark he cannot take any pleasure therein Thus many of Gods dear children who walk with a tender conscience who are diligent in all the wayes of holiness yet have not this testimony of conscience to comfort them it is hid from their eyes only because the Spirit of God doth not enable them thereunto Now the Apostle telleth us 1 Cor. 2. 17. It is the Spirit of God whereby we know the things that we have freely received of God 2. The Spirit of God doth witness unto us Objectively as I may so call it and that is by some effects and fruits of his grace upon our hearts by which we gather as by so many sure signes that we are in the state of grace and not hypocrites But because this will come in more fully in the ensuing particulars I shall only touch upon those effects by which the testimony of our conscience is rightly guided in witnessing to us And First By having a full and serious purpose to avoid all sinne as it shall become manifested to us As David professed That he did hate every evil way Psal 119. 104. He that doth allow and indulge himself in any known sinne cannot have the testimony of this good conscience It is true as is to be shewed there is no man living though never so holy but his conscience convinceth him of much sinne and many infirmities and this maketh him so highly esteem Christ and a Gospel-righteousness but yet it doth not witness to him that he liveth in the customary acting of grosse sinnes if it doth the Spirit of God never witnesseth with such a mans conscience that he is the child of God No if thou livest quietly without the smitings and condemnations of conscience it is because it is stupid and the Devil hath deluded and hardened thee for Gods Spirit witnesseth with our conscience and by this effect that we have a tender respect to avoid all known sinne Secondly Another effect is A zeal for the glory of God to honour him to magnifie Christ and to set up his Kingdome as much as we are able The more zeal and fervency men have had for Gods honour the more powerfull testimony of a good conscience they alwayes enjoyed As we see in this Paul in his whole ministerial course with what burning zeal did he flame forth continually and on the contrary so much remisness so much negligence and lukewarmness so much is the abating of consciences testimony Thirdly An holy confidence and boldnesse in our approachings to God And of this the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8. The Spirit of Adoption removing our fears our unbelief and dejection raising us up also with an holy confidence and humble boldness doth hereby testifie with our consciences that we are the children of God Hence the more distrustfull fears the more tormenting doubts that we groan under the weaker and more feeble is the witness of our conscience yea if those prevail and are predominant then our conscience is set against us and witnesseth against us and then the child of God is in sad desertions when his heart witnesseth against him that he is an hypocrite that he did serve the Lord without integrity For though this be false yet till Gods Spirit remove this darknesse and fill thee with an Evangelical confidence thou art not able to hold up thy head Fourthly Another effect by which Gods Spirit witnesseth with our conscience is An unfeigned love to the brethren a delight in all those that love God Where this is that thou lovest godly men for their godliness sake this demonstrateth thou art born of God and hast the same Image in thee as they have And if thy love also extend to thy enemies if thou findest that thou canst pray for them that curse thee do good to them that revile especially thou pitiest their souls and wouldst be helpfull to them in the way to Heaven though they are enraged adversaries to thee and that without cause By this frame of heart the conscience doth give a full and precious evidence Fifthly In daily and faithfull exercises of self-denial in the wayes of God doth the Spirit of God greatly assure the conscience In sufferings for Christ in enduring the losse of name liberty and li●e it self for Gods cause is the clearest testimony of our conscience Hence the Martyrs had so much serenity of spirit such unspeakable consolations because they found they loved Christ better than all things As they gave a testimony to the word of God called therefore Martyrs so God also gave them a testimony within whereby they did glory in tribulations and triumph over all aduersaries We see that if men suffer in false wayes if they be Martyrs for the Devil if they die for that which is highly offending God they many times glory in the comfort they have from the testimony of their conscience Now if a deluded conscience if deluded joyes can do so much what shall not the Spirit of God do sealing and confirming his love to us by our patient sufferings for him Thus when happily the world doth witness against thee wicked men they condemn thee and lay many heavy accusations against thee as the false Apostles did here concerning Paul yet this testimony with in will answer all and God doth come in with fuller evidences of his love in such passages of self denial Lastly The Spirit of God doth witness to our spirit in this blessed effect viz. When we do with delight and joy meditate think and speak about heavenly things when the Ordinances of God are matter of pleasure to us David doth often pro●efs what delight he had in the Ordinances of God how the word of God was more precious than gold more sweet than the honey-comb Now when the heart is thus affected to holy things that they find more joy as David professeth Psal 4. in the things of God then worldly men do in their corn and wine when these increase By this excellent heavenly temper the Spirit of God witnesseth with our conscience that we are the children of God But I shall enlarge no more on this because the Doctrine of Assurance will follow upon the next words We shall now lay down some distinctions to clear this truth to you because it is plain That many times the people of God being cast down with black thoughts that cannot say with Paul The testimony of our conscience is our rejoycing And on the other side many heretical pharisaical and self-deluded persons will at least outwardly boast
The preaching of this truth is to take off those prejudices that doe too closely adhere even to such who are come out of that spiritual Babylon There is a causlesse and sinfull suspition in people that if the faithfull Pastours in Gods Church do indeavour a Reformation from the accustomed superstitions or evil and prophane disorders that through length of time have taken full and quiet possession they presently attribute this to carnal and corrupt ends they will not believe that these things are undertaken from pure and holy ends they will not be perswaded that the motive to these things is pure respect to Gods glory but that the Ministers of God have their carnal and sinister respects in all this either to get dominion or to advance themselves in one way or other Now although it may not be denied but that in perusing of Ecclesiastical History we may observe that carnal interest and humane respects were eminently dominative in Church-affairs yet God forbid that any should be given up to such a temptation as to think that there is no truth or fidelity in any When Lot did but courteously and civilly reprove the Sodomites for their high impieties see how wickedly they interpret this Genes 19. 9. He will needs be a judge over us They construed his endeavour against sinne to be nothing but usurpation Thus also Corah and his complices accounted all that Moses and Aaron did tyranny and pride Numb 16. 5. Ye take too much upon you seeing all the Congregation is holy c. Wherefore doe ye lift up your selves above the Congregation of the Lord. And we may see by many Apologies that Paul maketh the Galatians and other Churches could hardly be perswaded of his sincerity and love to them If then thou shalt once satisfie thy self with this that those Ministers of God who endeavour to bring a people out of their disorders and to make them conformable to Scripture-directions dare not look to themselves herein yea they goe against themselves and shew no fleshly wisdome at all but rather if they consulted with that they would let people goe quietly in the broad way to perdition as they have done If I say this be once believed by thee it will make thee with all alacrity and chearfulnesse to go along with them and encourage them in their work But it is the Devil that moveth upon that unruly sea of thy heart he putteth thee into many vexations and commotions whereas if the Spirit of God should rebuke both Satan and thy own corruptions thou wouldst with clamnesse reflect upon thy self yea reprove thy selfe saying Why should I be offended at those wayes which are for the good of my soule which make to the getting of knowledge and to the overcoming of those former lusts I have been intangled with which would have done mee no good but have destroyed my soul These things premised let us instance in some principles of fleshly wisdome that men have used and doe use in the matters of Religion And First This is the Proprium quarto modo as it were of all heretical persons To cover their falshoods with pretended Authority from the Scripture Now this is meerly fleshly wisdome to regard the Scripture no further then by the words and phrases thereof thou canst protect thy errours Not to go to the word of God as that Rule by which thou wilt stand or fall to give up thy heart and soul and all thy thoughts to be moulded and framed by that but having afore-hand swallowed down thy corrupt tenets then to go to Scripture to wrest and compell it as it were to speak for thee There is a great deal of fleshly wisdome in managing of false wayes but it is never more hainous yea and sacrilegious then when it doth thus prophanely and irreverently handle Scripture If we expostulate with the Socinian he will grant the Scripture words he will tell you he holdeth Christ to be a God that by Christs blood we have remission of sinnes but then come to ask him In what sense Christ is a God and in what manner we have remission of sinnes by Christs death then the poison of the Viper doth break forth So if we contend with the Pelagian Arminian and others about the injury they doe to the Grace of Christ they will tell you they are for Christ they doe owne all the Texts of Scripture that speak of grace But then ask what they mean by grace And how farre they extend the efficacy of grace then their deceit will appear So that it it is true of most Hereticks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They speake the same words but doe not thinke the same things Let then all fleshly wisdom be abhorred whereby we goe to the Scripture onely to apply the words thereof to our lies and so would father them upon the Spirit of God not that we love the purity and holinesse of the Scriptures but because we cannot be received with any approbation unlesse we bring our authority pretended at least from that Therefore it falleth out many times as Tertullian observeth When such erroneous persons can no longer hide themselves by Scripture-words that they directly fall to accuse the Scripture either to deny it to be the word of God or debasing of it as but a dead letter that so their corrupt hearts may be more believed than the Scripture it self Secondly A second principle of fleshly wisdome is To hide and conceale those monstrous births we have brought forth or else secretly and in a clandestine manner to acquaint others with them that so many weake persons may be infected before those who are able and skilfull had any opportunity to gain-say them 2 Pet. 2. 1. The Apostle Peter speaketh of some Who should privily bring in damnable heresies Privily because as the thief hateth the light seeing he onely comes to steale so do those who vent their false errours delight in secresie because the light will quickly manifest their falshoods As it is with Moles all the while they are under ground you can hardly take them but if once above ground then they are presently destroyed Thus all the while errours and falshoods creep under ground will not come to the light they are hardly discovered and stopped but when once found out then they are easily overcome Now all this is but fleshly wisdome to appear no where but in the dark to be alwayes hiding our selves under ground Therefore they are said 2 Tim. 3. 6. To creep into houses as thieves do by night they doe all things closely and secretly not willing to be brought to the light Whereas we have our Saviour professing the clean contrary concerning himself John 18. 20. I spake openly to the world I ever taught in the Synagogue and in the Temple whither the Jewes resort and in secret have I said nothing Thus the Ministers of Christ imitate him in an open publick way Not but that in times of persecution the Disciples of
concerning me We may very well take in both together for the latter doth necessarily suppose the former they could not continue in their acknowledgement of his integrity unlesse Paul also did persist in his uprightnesse Now in that Paul saith He trusteth viz. in God that he shall be thus preserved you see the humble and holy frame of his heart he doth not put confidence in his own strength in his own gifts and graces but alone in God which might teach us That though never so godly yet we are to depend upon God alone for our perseverance in the way to Heaven But we have already spoken to this in the general That it 's the property of the godly to acknowledge the grace of God towards them in all things We shall therefore pitch upon another which floweth from both the interpretations joyned together viz. That hopefull beginnings in the wayes of Religion are not enough without a faithfull perseverance therein It is not enough for a man that runneth a race to set out at first with all speed and swiftnesse unlesse also he hold out to the end Neither doth it avail a Traveller to get up betimes and to beginne his journey with all haste if afterwards he loiter or come back again Now this falleth out too often very sadly in our course of Christianity many that were once first are now last Yea are now nothing at all but turned clear out of the narrow way into the broad way that leadeth to Hell and destruction Thus the Apostle upbraideth the Galatians Galat. 3. 3. For ginning in the Spirit and ending in ●he flesh are you so foolish saith he It is the greatest folly that can be For hereby all our former zeal all our by-past activity for God is forgotten all is in vain Have ye suffered so many things in vain as it followeth in the next verse And again it is extreame folly because we part with God for sinne with Heaven for Hell with honey for gall we lose our sweetnesse and fatnesse to become briars and brambles that are fit for nothing but to be burnt To enlarge this consider First That a man who doth first set upon the way of Religion who will become a Disciple of Christ must above all things look to his foundation well He must have a special care that he layeth a good beginning otherwise though he may make a glorious shew for a while his fall at last will be very great and terrible Therefore our Saviour knowing the hypocrisie and inconstancy of mans heart doth much presse this point and that to such hearers who did shew exceeding great zeal and forwardnesse in following after him witnesse the Parable of the several kinds of grounds that received the good seed Matth. 13. and Luke 8. The difference between the good and bad lay in this that one had a good and honest heart wherein the word of God had deep rooting The other had onely a superficial worke and therefore when hardship came could not endure So likewise the Parable of the foolish and wise builders Luke 6. 47. is expresly to this purpose that none should please themselves in hearing of the Word in publick duties and profession but look to their foundation to observe what all their duties and expressions are built upon For what is built only upon a Rock will endure when stormes and tempests shall arise It is necessary to instance in some of those particulars that will thus qualifie our beginnings For as in diseases yea and in sinnes the Rule is To looke to the beginnings So in another sense it is good counsel to observe what was the first beginning that ever brought you into the wayes of God How came you to leave off what was formerly done by you and to appear in a contrary way For in some sense we may say here not dimidium but principium est plus toto And First We are to look to our motives whether they were temporal external upon some outward advantages or whether holy and spiritual Christ had many followers because of the loaves There are many that know Christ after the flesh that come with the petition of Zebedee's children Grant that we may sit in thy Kingdome one on the right hand and another on the left thinking Christs Kingdome would be outward and glorious Now such as these will never continue It is but painting and near the fire it will melt It is but the morning-dew when the Sunne ariseth it will vanish away Oh then above all things look to thy motives Consider what it was that brought thee off from thy former wayes Was it from beholding a spiritual excellency in Christ and holy things Was it for godlinesse sake Then because Christ is the same and godlinesse is the same thou wilt also be the same but if to get the favour of men to get wealth to obtaine paces of credit and profit then thou art but a meteor compounded of terrestrial materials and so wilt be tossed up and down as any winde driveth thee A second thing necessary to look to in thy beginnings is to see That the workings of Gods Spirit make impressions deep enough that it have full rooting For Matth. 13. and in many other places we read of many common gifts of Gods Spirit bestowed upon men whereby they may make very hopefull beginnings they may be furnished with excellent gifts and abilities so as to be able to work miracles they may taste of the good word of God they may be enlightned they may believe they may receive the Word with joy and are not these great and rare things How few are there that attain to thus much They have not that common illumination nor those transitory affections whereby we may say they do for a season rejoyce in the light When therefore we begin to take the first step to Heaven we are to consider whether we have any more than the common breathings and inspirations of Gods Spirit whether we have more than gifts or abilities more than some bodily ravishments or extasies For all these do not necessarily inferre the new creature o● a divine nature within us Indeed we could not have these things without the assistance of Gods Spirit and therefore when carnal and natural men are partakers of these they admire them they take these for grace they never had such workings upon their souls before there is a vast difference in themselves as they find between what they were once and what they now feel and this maketh them very secure and confident but because a good foundation was not at first laid therefore many of such a frame of spirit going no further do greatly apostatize and are more taken with their opinions experiences and apprehensions than Christ dwelling in them they are affected with them and not renouncing all go out of every thing that Christ may be exalted and they debased Thirdly And I will instance in no more It behoveth those who are
because none believe enough none love enough none are heavenly enough Several wayes the best Hearers may grow First In the amplitude of their knowledg They may know more things in Christianity than they did for seing we know but in part 1 Cor. 13. this light in our mind may still encrease more and more not indeed in more necessaries and Fundamentalls for then none could be saved because still ignorant of some Fundamental or other but in the Additionalls and Superstructures which have also a special use and efficacy to carry on the work of Salvation Even a Godly man may live in many Errors in many sinnes and not know them to be so as we see in many Ages when clearer light hath discovered that to be Superstition and a dishonour to God which was accounted once the great onour due unto him When God dispelled the Egyptian darkness of Popery from of the face of the face of the Church their Image-Worship their Indulgences their vowed Obedience and poverty which were admired as such eminent acts of Religion were manifested to be contemptible as having no foundation upon the Scripture and also very injurious to the Offices of Christ and in how many things do the best of men still continue ignorant and therefore with David though he had more understadding than his teachers are to pray that God would open their eyes that they might understand the wonderfull things of Gods law Psal 119. 18 Davids eyes were opened yet they must be opened more all the scales are not fallen from his eyes and therefore the Apostle prayeth for those Ephesians whose understandings were already enlightened Ephes 1. 17. that their eyes might yet be more opened and that God would give unto them the spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledg of him 2. By the Ministry they are to grow in the efficacy and experimental power of their knowledg For these two differ exceedingly men may grow much in speculative knowledg understand controversies in Divinity and dispute much about the Doctrines of the times that are agitated but unless a man grow in the savoury power of it he is but a tinkling cymbal if he do notgrow in the love of the truth if that knowledg doth not make him more pure more sanctified more reformed this will turn to his greater condemnation Therefore Tit. 1. 1. It s called the acknowledging of the truth which is after godliness Savanarola Hom. 3. p. 29. bringeth a distruction of Divinity out of Aquinas to this purpose a man may know a thing saith he either per modum studii or per modum inclinationis men may know many things by way of study in Divinity and yet not have the least knowledg of them by way of inclination to love and delight in them May not a man have obtained much discoursive knowledg about Christ in respect of his Person and Offices as to be able to confute Arrians and Socinians yet be far from that heavenly inclination which Paul found in himself to know nothing but Christ crucified and to judg all things dung and dross in comparison of this knowledg That knowledg then which doth bring a savoury tast and experimental inclination to the good things we know that is to be imbraced that we are to grow in more every day He that knoweth a Country or a City by a Map cannot be so affected as he that hath really seen it 3. We may by the Ministry have a continued benefit in respect of the firmness and strength of our faith It is noted sometimes of the Disciples that upon some miracle that was wrought by our Sauiour that then they believed Not but that they did so before onely their Faith was then more strengthened and confirmed and truly this firmness of Faith this steadfastness of it is a precious Antidote against all fickle and sceptical Opinions Men do not grow in Faith but fancy and that maketh inconstancy in Religion How can a man be a Martyr for Christs truth now can he lose all he hath rather than deny it unless he have this quieting and satisfying work of Faith upon the soul Hence Faith is called Heb. 11. 1. The substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen Those two words substance and evidence do denote the great power that Faith ought to have upon the soul Again this firmness of Faith is not onely seen in dogmatical Assent but in in fiducial Application of the Promises to our selves in which sense it is said twice or thrice The just shall live by his faith Such are the weak actings of our Faith so strong are our temptations so supernatural and mysterious is this way of believing that all have cause to cry out with the Apostles Lord increase our faith Lastly The best hearers need the Ministry for increase in Godliness to grow in grace more Thus the Apostle writeing to those whom he supposeth as converted already yet exhorteth to put off the old man and put on the new To be renewed in the spirit of their minde Epes 4. 23. 24. And our Saviour prayeth for the Apostles even in that Prayer wherein he acknowledgeth that they had believed and received the word of God That they were not of the world John 17. 17 That God would sanctifie them by his word which is to be understood of the progress therein There is no Doctrine so practically opposite to the Scripture as that of Perfection for every where the Godly are commanded to grow to be mortifying the body of sin to be perfecting holiness which were ridiculous Exhortations if we had already attained Perfection Hence we are compared to those who run in a race and therefore till death do not come to our prize Thus where the Minister may have little to do in respect of Conversion it may have very much to do in respect of Edification And the Godly are to Examine whether every Sabbath day the Minister doth not come with a new benefit a new advantage to them look for a new grace and favour in every new Sermon And so we proceed to the Use which is of Instruction What all people should look at under the Ministry Spiritual advantages spiritual light spiritual heat spiritual quickenings As where Christ went up and down he healed their diseased people so where the word of God is preached it should heal soul-diseases Thou art not to have the Pride the passions the worldly cares as thou usest to have but oh how rare are such Hearers who aimeth at this who prayeth for this in every Sermon he heareth Oh fear least some spiritual judgment upon thee deprive thee of this benefit If an Israelite had looked upon the Brazen serpent and yet not be healed If a diseased person had stepped first in order into the Pool of Bethesda and yet not have been recovered they would have been greatly troubled to see their hopes frustrated No less ought it to make thee grieve and tremble
Hence it is that the Apostle doth exhort to a full perswasion of minde even in those points that were more controversal and disputeable Rom. 14. 5. How much more then are we to be perswaded fully in our minde concerning those truths that are fundamental and do so immediately concern our Salvation This uncertainty then this Yea and Nay in matters of Faith ariseth from a meer humane faith whereby we are carried out to believe these things upon no better grounds than the Turk doth his Alcoran Education custome and Universality This is the whole reason of our Faith whereas a Divine Faith is wrought by the Spirit of God as the efficient it is that which lifteth up the heart to receive the Word as Gods word Though Men have never such parts and understanding in the sense of the Scripture yet they cannot believe it unless inabled thereunto by the Spirit of God And again Divine Faith hath also a divine Motive the Authority and Testimony of God revealed in the Scripture so that we believe not because man saith so but because it is the Lord that speaketh Thus the Thessalonians chap. 2 13. are commended that they received the Word not as the word of men but as it was indeed the word of God Now then when a mans Faith is wrought by Gods Spirit and established upon Divine Autority then it becomes more immoveable than the Heaven and Earth for as God is alwayes the same his word is alwayes the same so is Divine Faith This then all are to labour for is even a full perswasion in their own minde about the truths of Religion to take heed of inconstancy and instability herein We see the Martyrs could not by any terrible menaces or fair Promises be drawn of from the truths of God they had embraced and was it not because they had a powerfull assurance of the truth of them from Divine Motives such as could not fail 2. In matter of our Conversion and Repentance for our sinnes it is very sad and dreadfull to shew Inconstancy To be Yea and Nay in this respect sometimes to mourn and complain of them and at another time to wallow our selves in the mire again how terrible is this But yet how frequently doth it fall out so what is this but to mock God and dally with our soules In times of afflictions or under quick convictions of Conscience to be then afraid of sin then to bewail sin then to resolve against sin but when this fear is over then to imbrace our Dalilah again There are few sinners but they come under this crime of Inconstancy in this respect for many do not alwayes continue in an obstinate sensless way they finde some thawings and meltings of heart with Pharaoh and therefore cry out that God is righteous and they are sinners and they resolve to let their Lusts go as Pharaoh did the people of Israel but they quickly change their Resolutions again Such therefore as finde these Yeas and Nays these ebbings and flowings let them seriously consider what an high provocation this Inconstancy is of God against their soules This unsteadfastness was often complained of by the Prophets in the people of Israel They were as so many Grashoppers that leap up on high from the ground but then settle on it presently again In their afflictions they cryed out of their Idols they called upon God but then proved like a deceitfull bow and is not this an Epidemical sin What is more ordinary than to be soul-sick to be conscience-smitten under some Sermons or some sad afflictions and fears but in all these things to have Reubens Curse upon their soules unstable like water upon which you make any impression but it receiveth none It s one of Solomons wonderfull things that leave no footsteps to be observed A ship in the Sea none can tell which way it passed Thus it is with many they sin and they repent and they repent and sin insomuch that when you see them overcome with their old lusts and passions would you think they were ever the men that prayed so that resolved so you cannot see the least footsteps of any such Repentance Now that all may be afraid of such lightness and uncertainty it is good to consider these Particulars First If there be reason at any time for thee to look upon thy sinnes as bitter and terrible the same will hold at all times Oh the time hath been when in thy thoughts such sinnes thou hast committed were intolerable the memory of them was as gall and wormewood Thou didst cry out take them away or that the Lord would pardon them Now do but consider Is there not the same reason still to think so Is sin grown any better Is it less damning Is it less sinfull to God then it was formerly Know then sin is not altered that is hath as terrible guilt as ever but thou art changed those convictions those powerfull Operations of the Spirit of God are not happily now upon thee they are witdrawn and thou art left to thy own natural corrupt self Remember then thy self saying The time was no serpent or toad was more odious to me than my sinnes the time was when night and day they were a burden and torment to me but now they grieve me not they trouble me not sin is not changed but I am changed 2. Consider this For thee to sin after such convictions and terrors doth admit of the greater aggravation because it is done against sense and experience of the bitterness thereof it s committed against more experimental and practical knowledg which maketh any sin to be exceeding sinfull Those senseless wicked men who run into all excess of impiety and have no troubles of heart they know not what they do they cannot tell whether it be a bitter and evil thing or no to depart from God They indeed hear the Word of God and the Ministers of God say that though sin be sweet yet at last it will bite like an adder and sting like a serpent they hear them say that the evil of sin is far greater than the evil of any punishment and torment but they think them words only they never had any experience or taste of any sech bitterness But it is otherwise with thee thou hast had wounds in thy heart the terrors of God have fallen upon thee The Law hath appeared in its accusing and condemning power therefore thou art the more inexcusable who wilt run into this fire when thou hast been burnt with it yea with this taste there hath been practical light and experimental knowleg and therefore thy sin is the greater a general knowledg of any thing is but confused and weak in respect of a practical and experimental one Hence wicked men are said not to know God because they have onely a general knowledg they do not practically improve this so as to love God to fear him and obey him If then thou hast been in the
Christ is Jesus a Saviour to his people 2 COR. 1. 19. For the Son of God Jesus Christ c. VVE have in a brief manner declared the former description of Christ in respect of his divine nature The Son of God whose Deity so much oppugned by blasphemous Heretiques is yet the Foundation of our Christianity Therefore those Socinians who would reckon the manner how he is God among the Accessories and not Fundamentals in Religion are justly to be exploded If we believe he is God say they it is enough to salvation but whether he be an essential God or made and constituted one that is not necessary Even as they instance prophanely concerning Alexander to some he was accounted a God to others a man but because both these though different in their Opinions did reverence and obey him as a King that was enough But oh prophane mouth The Lord rebuke such spirits and let not the Godly so much as bid God speed or receive into their houses such as bring this blasphemous Doctrine But let us proceed to the other descriptions of Christ which are partly in respect of his Humane Nature Jesus and partly in respect of his Office Christ. We have already said enough from the first Verse to clear the Grammatical Interpretation of these words as also what the judgments of Learned men are about those two Names So that I may not actum agere I shall insist upon New matter not then delivered and first we Observe That the Lord Christ is a Jesus and a Saviour to his people This Name containeth the glad Tydings of the Gospel If so be the news of a Physician that can cure all Diseases be so welcome to diseased Persons if the year of Jubilee was so acceptable to all those whose Lands were morgaged amongst the Jews and they perplexed in extream Debts how precious and dear should the name of a Saviour be to poor undone sinners who while they look upon themselves only and their own power see no way to escape Eternal wrath Did the Angels so much rejoyce when this Jesus came into the World who were not concerned so much in his Redemption and shall distressed and sinfull man not have his heart leap within him for joy hereat That we may be affected herein let us consider what is implyed in this Title He is a Saviour 2. Of whom he is a Saviour First In that Christ is thus called a Saviour their is necessarily implyed that all mankinde are lost that we are all in an undone and hopeless condition Thus our Saviour Mat 18. 11. For the son of man is come to save that which is lost What blessed words of comfort are here He is come to save it is of his own accord of his own good will he cometh there is no necessity he might have chosen whether he would or no but of his own meer will he is come and then he is come to save that implyeth this is the work he had no other thing to do if man had not been lost he had not come into the world If then it be Christs proper work and Office to save shall we think he will be frustrated therein and then it is to save in that it comprehended all things He came to convert to sanctifie to justifie to glorifie for Salvation includeth all these Hence the Scripture speaketh of the Godly as saved already though but in the way 2 Tim. 1. 9. who hath saved us and called us Lastly He came to save that which was lost actually lost not in danger to be lost not in probability to be lost but lost and then lost that doth imply our hopeless estate It s grace must finde us out it s Christ that must seek us out as the good Shepherd did his wandring sheep So that we see in what condition every man is though never so great wise and learned till he hath an Interest in Christ though a Great man a lost man though a Rich man yet a lost man and that to all Eternity for ever lost till this Saviour doth recover What then hast thou to do but to sit down and bewail thy loss to aggravate thy loss Oh wretched and undone man I have lost God I have lost his image I have lost Eternal glory Is it not a reproach to thee to see how thy heart can mourn and mert for outward losses I have lost my dear Relations I have lost all I am worth and to have it like a stone and a rock in this particular It is one thing to be lost and another thing to be sensible of this All men by nature are lost though they do not feel it though they rejoyce and are carnally jolly but then some few only whose hearts God doth soften by his Grace they feel and groan under this lost estate 2. We are to consider what kinde of Saviour he his and what kinde of Salvation it is And now that is plain he is not a temporal Saviour but a spiritual one so the Angel interpreteth it for he shall save his people from their sinnes Mat. 17. 21. In the Old Testament we read that God did raise up his people many temporal Saviours Thus Moses was a Saviour Joshua who hath the same name with Jesus he was a Saviour and the Apostle to the Hebrews maketh Joshua the son of Nun delivering the Israelites from their dangers and enemies so that at last he bringeth them into the Land of Rest to be a Type of Christ our spiritual Saviour who delivereth us from all our spiritual enemies sin and Satan not leaving us till he hath made us sit on Thrones of Glory Now this carnal Opinion that Christ would come as a temporal Saviour did almost infect the whole Nation of the Jews yea the Disciples were leavened with this sower leaven And because some places of Scripture did plainly speak of the lowliness and afflictions of the Messiah and other of his glory and greatness therefore some Jews fancyed two Messiahs one humble lowly and poor the other magnificent and glorious And certainly if Christ had come as a temporal Messias to vindicate his people from all external bondage and to bestow on them outward pomp and greatness this world would have suited with flesh and bloud but it is a spiritual Salvation he bringeth and though natural men do not think so yet this is the greatest Salvation this alone deserveth to be called Salvation To be saved from thy sinnes to be saved from hell to be saved from damnation This is that which alone makes happy The Romans they sacrificed to Jupiter as their Saviour and that was only for temporal Deliverances But with what praise and joy are we to acknowledg Christ our Saviour who doth thus vanquish our most potent and spiritual enemies But no hearer can relish this truth unless he be spiritual he must be like the man of Jericho wounded not in body but in soul crying out I am not a dead
God may forsake gradually that thereby he may not forsake totally and finally Such desertions that are for a season are sometimes mercies and very usefull being a substraction of grace in order to fill us with more grace And the end of such providential administrations is to convince us fully of this truth that we do not settle our selves but it is God that doth it for us Lastly This truth may be demonstrated from the nature of that grace which is habitual and permanent in us For though that there be in us as a principle qualifying of us to work holy things with delight joy and content yet it cannot put us upon working without a further actual efficacious work of grace upon our souls which you heard the Apostle calleth Working in us both to will and to do Phil. 2. 13. So that although there be never so much grace planted in us yet that lieth asleep as it were and worketh not till this efficacious grace actuate it and put it into motion neither ought this to be any wonder to us For we see in natural causes it is not enough to have a principle of life unless God also enable us to move For in him we live and move and have our being much more then must this be in supernatural things where the Actus primus and secundus is of God Not but that in the progresse of grace we act and move but Acti agimus moti movemus It is the grace of God that doth efficaciously incline the sanctified will to spiritual operation then the North-wind and the South doe as it were blow upon the spiccs that they may send forth their fragrant smell It is true at the first work of grace there we are meerly passive but God doth not then force our will he only changeth it as water which naturally descends when made air doth naturally ascend upwards Thus the will of a man which was depressed to earthly things by sinne when sanctified and made heavenly ascendeth up towards God and heavenly objects By these discoveries it is manifest that the best Saint in this world is setled by the grace of God alone Those corruptions within him are treacherous and would betray him into the hands of Satan did not Christ corroborate him And is this any wonder of man fallen seeing Adam fell for want of this confirming grace and the elect Angels do therefore not leave their habitation as the Apostate have because the grace of God doth confirm them So that the good use we are to make of this Doctrine is to be exceeding watchfull and tender about all sinne lest thereby we provoke God to leave us How terrible do such desertions many times prove To whom are woes to whom are wounds and gripes of conscience but many times to those who being left of God have thereby ingaged in sinfull wayes and so having lost an holy frame of heart have thereby deprived themselves likewise of an Evangelical comfortable one Take heed through thy lazinesse negligence pride or some other sinne God forsake thee and thou become worse than Nebuchadnezzar of a godly man made like a beast This will be bitternesse in the latter end As for the second Doctrine I shall not say much to that because it hath been in part already spoken unto it is That in Christ alone we are established That as in the building other stones are strengthened because of the corner stone or the foundation stone or as the branch in the Vine doth therefore live and flourish because in the Vine so it is with us because in Christ we are setled with Christ in Christ we are confirmed with Christ which made Austin say In Christo sumtis Christus extra Christum nihil In Christ we are even like Christ out of Christ we are nothing at all To consider this we are to know First That all the godly through the efficacy of Gods Spirit are united to Christ and so become his mystical and spiritual body By reason of this it is that Christ dwelleth in them and they in Christ Christ actively communicating of his goodnesse and virtue to them and they passively receiving influences of grace from his fulnesse This union is represented in Scripture by many similitudes of a building of a vine and branches of an husband and wife but none so expresly as that in the Sacrament of bread and wine denoting us those elements are naturally turned into our nourishment and made one with us so we are in a spiritual and mystical manner made one with Christ This being laid as a foundation then Secondly From this our establishment and settlement followeth whereby we are sure to persevere and nothing shall be able to dissolve this union whence once made a true member of Christ there cannot be any separation made so as ever such a person should at last be damned in hell for that would redound to the highest dishonour of Christ the Head as could be imagined The reason why Adam fell though without any inherent corruption in him was partly because he was not united to Christ in that manner as the weakest believer is now under the Covenant of Grace And although these things are derided by the Arminian yet this Doctrine of spiritual union with Christ may compell every one to believe the truth thereof so that if we now fall Christ must fall with us we are not to be considered as single persons standing upon our own bottome but as united to Christ Therefore Thirdly Being thus in Christ our stablishment ariseth two wayes from Christ 1. By meritorious impetration Christ as our Mediatour hath deserved this through his propitiatory death that we should alwayes be kept his and therefore when we have a thousand times over deserved that God should leave us yet because Christ hath deserved that God should alwayes love us therefore it is that we stand faster than Mount Zion which yet is said not to be moved The second way is by efficient application for he doth communicate of his power and strength to us whereby when we are ready of our selves to fall yet he doth prevent it So that our being in Christ is the foundation of all strength and all comfort and therefore this discovereth the wretched estate of such who can claim no interest in Christ these are tossed up and down from one lust to another they roll from one iniquity to another the Devil doth what he pleaseth with them he throweth them sometimes in the fire and sometimes in the water and all this is because not in Christ If at any time through the common graces of Gods Spirit they are got up to the pinacle of the Temple they are eminent for gifts and place in the Church of God all the godly have admired them for a while yet at last you find them blasted and cursed in this way you find them like swine wallowing in the mire that were judged to be the sheep of
God to have a dogmatical faith to be kept from heresie it 's no lesse to have this fiducial application with the sense thereof upon our souls Wonder not then if we make it the Spirits worke to have this assurance 4. We need the Spirit to confirm us because the flesh within us is full of objections and bringeth many plausible arguments against it Insomuch that what Bellarmine and other subtil Papists bring as Engines to demolish this foundation are very sutable to the corrupt heart For they think the heart is very deceitfull there is much hypocrisie I may think I do that for God which I do for vain-glory that I am humbled for sinne when worldly motives only afflict me Again flesh doth doth suggest there may be much unknown evil in thee thy heart may be worse than thou takest it to be Though the Sea seeme calme sometimes yet there are dangerous Rocks under the water and thus though outwardly there may appear much tendernesse yet there may be a rock in the bottome Furthermore the flesh may suggest Wilt thou be perswaded of Gods favour to thee in particular Is not this to enter into Gods secrets Is not this to climb up into Heaven in an arrogant manner Yea is not this the way to nourish security in thee and make thee presume of Gods favour though thy iniquities be never so many and grosse Lastly The flesh telleth thee of former sins thou didst once wallow in as also the present failings that thy own soul doth frequently condemn thee for Now are not these very plausible Do they not importune to diffidence And certainly these would overwhelme thee did not the Spirit of God overcome all and support thee against them Yea 5. We need the Spirit of God to seal us because the Devil is very busie and active in destroying this perswasion He knoweth that those who enjoy this priviledge walk with joy peace thankfulnesse with strength and activity in the wayes of God therefore to weaken them herein that their graces may wither he tempteth about their comforts that they may wither thus the Devil as he opposeth the Spirit of God in its holinesse called therefore the unclean spirit so he doth also in its comforting effects and therefore is called the tempter Yea 2 Cor. 2. we reade how active he was to have the incestuous person humbled for his sinnes even swallowed up with too much sorrow And do not many of Gods people feel this experimentally Doe they not see they should sink and fall into all horrour and despair did not the Spirit of God support Little doe the natural men of the world apprehend what the agonies and spiritual conflicts are which a tempted soul endureth in this case Lastly The Spirit of God must seal us because this assurance is not obtained in a natural way as if we had perfectly obeyed the will of God and therefore we merited pardon but it is by the gracious promises of God made to a believer though accompanied with infirmities Indeed if it were thus that we could purge out all sinne from our selves and be perfect in every good work then assurance would naturally follow as the Saints in Heaven because cleansed from all sinne cannot doubt of Gods favour but our establishment is more upon the promises of grace without us than any thing that is within us while we behold our own unworthinesse and are deeply humbled under it yet even then are we inabled to assure our selves of the grace of God towards us SERM. CXXXVI Of the Object Manner and End of the Spirits sealing 2 COR. 1. 22. Who hath also sealed us THe next particular considerable in this Description of the Spirits sealing is the Object about which it is conversant and that is said to be the Promises of Grace as belonging to a sanctified person in particular and herein doth the most expresse and efficacious effect of this sealing appear that it particularizeth the Promises of grace what is spoken generally that it doth bring home in a peculiar manner to our own breast What is it to hear of health if it be not thy health What of wealth if not thy wealth So what comfort is it to hear of a Christ if not thy Christ To know there are blessed and precious promises if they doe not belong to thee Doe not the Devils know in the general that Christ is a Saviour that there are excellent promises declared in the Word But they are miserable and wretched howsoever because not applicable unto them We may therefore divide Faith according to the object thereof First Into a general Faith whereby we are carried out to believe the whole word of God upon a divine motive whether it be the historical or comminatory part as well as the promissory Thus whatsoever is revealed in the Scripture though it be but an appendix to any History as that Sauls father had asses though we cannot call it an Article of the faith yet when sufficiently propounded to us then not to believe argueth a wicked and an obstinate spirit because we despise the authority of God and his testimony in that particular though but little Secondly There is a special Faith and that I call The worke of Gods grace for all faith is the gift of God whereby a man is enabled to believe the promissory part in the Scripture whereby he believeth this truth that Jesus Christ is a Saviour to those that believe in him And this the Papists yea and others too make all the faith that is required of us that this is it which doth justifie us but very absurdly Thirdly There is a particular Faith and that is When the Spirit of God doth enable us to receive Christ as our Christ to apply the promises as belonging to us in particular To say with Thomas My Lord my God And with Paul Galat. 2. Who loved me and gave himself for me Such a particular faith is not onely possible but a duty of which much excellent and profitable Discourse might be made but I forbear because I am to treat of it God assisting upon another account Therefore for the present you are to know that this worke of Gods Spirit in confirming and sealing of us is especially manifested in this particular and appropriating way of the promises of grace as our portion Therefore it is said to cause us to call God Father which implieth our peculiar interest and propriety in him Doe not then be discouraged from this Canaan because of the Anakims that are in the way Fear not to call God thy Father though thou findest many discouragements within thee The Devil would not have thee taste of this honey But I proceed and the next particular in the Description is the Manner how the Spirit of God cometh thus to witnesse unto us how we come to be sealed and that is said to be First By the meanes God hath appointed thereunto This is very observable
for hereby this gracious worke of God is differenced from all Enthusiastical delusions or from those prophetical extasies which the Prophets of God sometimes did partake off from that rapture Paul was in when he said Whether he was in the body or out of the body he did not know No we are not to expect such immediate operations of the Spirit upon us where the Spirit shall be both the efficient cause and the object also Neither may we hearken after some voice of Gods Spirit or immediate testimony within saying to us as sometimes a voice spake to Christ This is my beloved Sonne We may not expect that Christ should say to thee after some visible manner as he did to Mary Magdalen Be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiven thee We are not to hearken to such Doctrines that may presse for such a witnessing but we must give care to what the Spirit of God speaketh in the Scripture and so expect to have this confirmation and sealing by those meanes which he hath appointed Even as it is in the Doctrine of the Scripture it is the Spirit of God that doth fully assure the hearts of believers that it is Gods word But how doth it thus perswade the soul Not by any immediate testimony but by these implanted arguments therein as the holinesse of the matter the majesty of the style c. by which this undoubted perswasion is wrought in us Thus it is in this worke of sealing the Spirit of God though it be the efficient cause of it yet it is in such an order and way as he hath appointed For we must not thinke that it is suitable to the workings of Gods Spirit that we should have a blinde perswasion in us whereby we are assured onely we know not why and we are not able to give any reason that we are assured but because we are assured The Spirit of God attemperateth its operations to our rational nature But what are those meanes and wayes whereby the holy Spirit doth thus assure us They are either External or Internal External are two-fold First By the Sacraments in the right use of them the Spirit of God doth assure us Hence you heard the Sacraments are called seales neither may we thinke that Christ hath appointed these Ordinances in a barren formal and empty manner No God will accompany his owne Ordinance to the right receiver and therefore as truly as he received the bread and wine so truly is he also made partaker of Christs body and blood Whereas then the promises are indefinitely propounded the Sacraments they are particular applied and by these the Spirit of God doth assure us of our interest in the promises Secondly Another External way is By those notes and markes which are given of such to whom the promises doe belong The Scripture doth not onely declare the promises but characterizeth the persons to whom they doe infallibly belong Insomuch that he who findeth he doth truely beleeve and repent He that findeth he is made a new creature such an one may as undoubtedly conclude being enabled thereunto by the Spirit of God that the promises doe in particular belong to him as if he were named as if it were said Thou Thomas and Thou John thou art received into the favour of God So that this particular doth evacuate all those boasts and confidences which many may have of Gods love towards them seeing the marks and signs are not applicable unto them which the promises do require But these I call External There are Internal Qualifications by which the Spirit of God doth thus perswade and assure us not that they are a cause or that we are to put confidence in them but by them as signes and effects of Gods gracious love we come to be assured of the love it selfe As by the Rain-bow we come to be assured that God will not drowne the world again I shall not enlarge upon these having had opportunity from some passages in this Chapter to speak thereunto The first particular signe or marke by which the Spirit of God doth interest or seale unto that I shall instance in is The sanctified and savoury improvement of afflictions Such as are chastened from the Lord and taught by him these may unquestionably conclude Gods special love towards them Hebr. 12. Revel 3. The Scripture doth in those places abundantly evidence that whosoever is a sonne of God is afflicted by him Insomuch that he who hath no chastisements is to thinke that he is a bastard and not a sonne Now this is not to be understood of afflictions themselves meerly as so but as sanctified as working to our spirituall good And when they have this blessed fruit it is as comfortable an argument to be assured of Gods grace towards us as any may be thought on The Apostle maketh this a sure effect of Predestination Romans 8. 26. He did also predestinate us to be conformed to the image of his Sonne which is partly in suffering as he did that so we might be glorified as he was Look then with a more comfortable face upon afflictions than thou hast done Doe not flie from them with fear as Moses from his Rod when turned into a Serpent For when these doe worke to thy spiritual good when they are like fire to make the gold lesse drossie when they are like winnowing to purge the wheat from its chaffe then know this is an assured testimony of Gods favour Thou needest not say Who will goe up into Heaven What messenger will come immediately from God to perswade my soule of Gods favour towards me For the testimony is on earth it is neare thee doe not cast thy eyes from it Secondly A second signe or meanes by which we come to this sealing is The observation and experience of Gods gracious presence in us and with us whereby we are preserved from some and kept either from or in such temptations that might have undone us When we finde that grace accompanying of us which David prayed for Psalm 19. to keep us back from sinning As the childe of God hath the Angels of Heaven to take care of him they have it in charge to hold him as it were in their armes as a Nurse doth her little childe so is he also inwardly fortified by inherent grace to keepe him in his wayes to Heaven he hath habitual grace and actual grace and he hath preventing grace and co-operating he hath exciting and persevering grace Now that man who observeth how richly and mercifully the grace of God putteth it selfe forth in these several effects how often when he is ready to goe astray the grace of God seeketh him out how often grace prevented and excited him else he had beene swallowed up in such deepe gulphs of sinne he I say that findeth such prevenitng concomitant and subsequent grace of God he that findeth this Rock Christ to follow him with gracious effects as some say the waters out of
himself all things from his bounty By these passages you would think that unlesse a man hath this assurance that he is not truly godly yea that the very difference between an hypocrite and a true beleever lyeth in this particular about a solid perswasion of Gods love in Christ Then on the other side if you do consult with the experiences of these whom we have cause to judge truly godly we shall meet with few that say they have this sealing They have good hopes they will tell you in the favour of God and sometimes they finde such supports of soul that they walk with much peace and comfort but to say that they have ordinarily this sealing of Gods Spirit that they dare not what then shall be answered to the Objection I shall not in this place enlarge on it only I shall speak some things to satisfie the doubting soul in this Point And first You are to know That this priviledge of sealing is spoken of in the Scripture as belonging to all the godly There is none excluded It is the duty of every one to endeavour after it to make all diligence in prayer and in other means to obtain it We are not to conceive as Papists do that some may have it by a speciall revelation as Paul and other eminent Saints although we grant that whosoever hath this sealing hath it by a speciall revelation but not in the Popish sense that is the Spirit of God doth in a special manner evidence unto a beleever by the fruits of faith that he doth belong unto Christ This sealing then the Scripture speaketh of as a mercy vouchsafed to every sanctified person at least that he may be made partaker of it for not only the Texts fore-mentioned but that also Gal. 4. 6. doth demonstrate this truth Because yeare Sons he hath sent the Spirit of Adoption into your hearts Because you are Sonnes now a quatenus ad omne valet consequentia is a known Rule and Rom. 8. The Apostle speaketh generally The Spirit witnesseth with our spirits that we are the Sonnes of God You are not then to think that this admirable favour is destined only for some choice servants of God No this scep●er is held out to every beleever such honourall his Saints may have But yet in the second place It is no wonder if the primitive Christians who lived in the Apostelical daies did partake of it more powerfully and plentifully then beleevers generally do in this latter age The Apostle in his Epistles might speak of this sealing as partaked of by all because then beleevers had a greater measure not only of extraordinary gifts many of them I mean but also of the sanctifying graces of Gods spirit They lived up to higher degrees of fervency of zeal of heavenly-mindednesse then ordinari y we do Again their conversion was more eminent and remarkable and that by the Apostolical Ministry which was accompanied by signes and wonderful miracles so that as their dogmaticall faith had greater means to heighten it then ours so likewise their salvifical and speciall faith They were wonderfully coverted from Gentilism both from idolatry and prophanenesse whereby their change was the greater and so were more sensible of Gods Spirit working upon them Lastly They were exposed to great persecutions they lived under constant tribulations there were no outward encouragements for them Now it's Gods way to vouchsafe this inward comfort and peace most to those that are bereaved of all outward Thus the Martyrs even in these latter daies did in a great measure enjoy this Sealing of Gods Spirit else they could not have been carried through those bitter trials with such unspeakable joy and consolatton as they were These things considered no wonder if the primitive Christians might have an higher measure of this sealing then we have although it must be confessed that even in those daies there were many hypocrites and several temporary beleevers who had only vanishing apprehensions in these great things not solid perswasions Thirdly Although this sealing be propounded in the Scripture as common to all yet it is not of the same absolute connexion with eternal happinesse as sanctification is without holinesse no man shall see God without this sealing a man may Insomuch that the promises of pardon and glory are not made to this assurarce and consolation but to grace and holinesse It is not said Thou shalt not be saved unlesse thou have this for if it were so then many of Gods Children had cause to be greatly amazed but it is not in the same way of necessity as sanctification is Seeing therefore it is more than a temporall mercy and yet not so high as an absolute spirituall mercy to salvation it is to be reckoned in the number of such mercies that are spirituall but yet not of peremptory necessity such are degrees of grace These are promised to the godly but not as absolutely necessary for then all beleevers should be equally godly but they are distributed according to the wisedom of God Thus it is also in this matter of sealing Hence in the fourth place Sealing doth not follow sanctification as a naturall necessary property but by divine appointment and order It is not as when there is fire there must necessarily be heat or as when there is the Sun there might be light only God hath appointed such an order There is a great aptnesse and fitnesse for sealing to follow sanctifying Hence it is commonly Gods way to make one follow the other but yet this chain may sometime be broken if God sometimes hinder naturall agents from their effects as when the fire did not burn the bodies of the three Worthies No wonder if in meer positive and instituted waies of God sometimes there may be an interruption made so that experience doth unquestionably demonstrate this that many truly sanctified ones may yet for a season at least want this sealing yea go bowed down and afflicted with thoughts clean contrary as if they had received the spirit of bondage only Their love is so farre from casting out tormenting fea● th●● their slavish fears do cast out Evangelical love But how may this honey-comb cease to drop how may this Conduit of wine come to be stopped I answer First On Gods part for some speciall and peculiar reasons not known to us alwaies The Lord hath wis● and just reasons to leave his people in darknesse To bring them into the Whales belly as it were out of which they cannot finde any escape It was thus with Christ his only begotten Sonne that he might accompish the bitter work of redemption for us he was left to those strong agonies and fears the Scrip●ure speaketh of he had not consolation nor joy when he cried out My God My God why hast thou for saken me his enemies gave him gall to drink and his soul tasted of gall within his enemies set a crown of thorns upon his head and he had sharp thorns
in his heart in somuch that an Angel was sent to comfort him This might make us wonder that God should not spare his own Sonne but it was necessary for our redemption for as he could not have wrought our reconciliation for us unlesse he had a passible body that could suffer death so neither unlesse he had a suffering soul by fears and grief though all without sinne It was Jobs case likewise to be without sealing for he could have no comfort in his heart while he complained the Arrows of the Almighty did stick fast in him while he was terrified with dreams and visions in the night Thus the Lord still doth exercise his soveraignty therein he withdraweth the light of his favour from many choice sanctified ones They wander in a wildernesse their lives are a burthen to them they cannot meet God in any ordinance as if they were become like so many rejected Sauls when yet the favour of the Lord is exceeding great to them only they perceive it not But then secondly On our part many times yea too often when the cause is that we have not this sealing We may thank our selves for bloaching the Paper so that no comfortable thing can be written upon it I shall instance in one or two waies how we come to keep off this sealing And the first is by falling into some grievous and grosse sinnes if such do drive away the naturall peace of a meer natural conscience as is plain in heathens how much more the supernaturall peace of a tender enlightned conscience Davids penitentiall Psalm 51. doth fully speak to this he there complaineth of his broken bones he prayeth to have joy restored to him all which argueth that by sinne he had lost all comfortable enjoyment of God That he was in a chaos and dark confusion and truly if there were no hell no damnation to threaten the people of God with to keep them from grosse sinnes This of Gods iron turnace to be cast into is enough to make our hearts tremble Oh the wofull condition that godly manis in who in stead of the spirit of Adoption he once enjoyed is now delivered up to Satan to be under his fears his black temptations No outward comfort in the world can then give him a drop of case Oh then come not near any grosse sinnes fly from the appearance of it for this sealing cannot consist with that Secondly Any carelesse and remisse walking though we do not fall into grosse sins is enough to put this Sunne into an Eclipse Any angry and bitter words to another will do it Any loose and wanton discourse may bring thee into this deep dungeon For so you may see Eph. 4. 30. Grieve not the spirit by which yeare sealed But how is that done for so you may see the verse before by corrupt communications by unsavoury gracelesse words and then see the subsequent Verse Let all bitternesse all wrath and anger be put away Dost thou then complain thou hast not this sealing how can it be otherwise How many frothy foolish speeches hast thou How many angry bitter words come from thee If you hereby grieve Gods spirit no wonder that he leave thee to thy grief Thirdly By any inward security and secret self-confidence we may deprive our selves of this sealing For seeing this is a Gospel-privi edge a ray from the Sunne of righteousnesse it is only conveighed in an Evangelicall method Now all Gospel-dispensations are to the broken in heart to the poor in spirit to the humbled sinner renouncing all righteousnesse and worth of our own so that as it is in the work of sanctification no sooner hath a man any secret confidence in his own power but sanctifying grace in some measure leaveth him As we see in Peter when he said Though all men should for sake Christ yet he would not Thus it is also in the way of consolation no sooner doth a man begin to be lifted up within because he hath these comfortable refreshments but presently they are substrated from us Thus David did but say his mountain was established that he should not be moved and immediately God hid his face and he was troubled Psa 30. 6 7. Therefore that man who would enjoy this desirable priviledge must walk with a tender humble and yet an Evangelicall fiducial frame of heart Fourthly When we speak of Gods sealing you must rightly understand the meaning of it It is not as if thereby such a certainty were wrought in the soul that it doth exclude all fears and doubts No that is a proper priviledge to heaven as the flesh lusteth against the spirit in matter of sanctification so it doth also in consolation As therefore when the spirit of God sanctifieth on the spirits part grace is pure and perfect but on the subjects part which doth receive it so it hath much drosse and imperfection cleaving to it Thus it is also in this sealing though the testimony and witnesse on the spirits part be infaliible and undoubted yet as we receive it so there is much unbeleef and doubting adhering to us This sealing therefore and many fears and doubts may consist together because it is not absolutely predominant and prevalent only here is a conflict we are to strive against these doubts we are to pray against these fears till the Lord cause light to arise out of this darkness Therefore the godly may have this sealing and yet not attend to it nor perceive it because the corruptions of our heart are most perceived by us and we are so exercised by them that we do not consider what the spirit of God doth witnesse at that time This then maketh the godly think they have not this sealing at all because they have it not with that dominion as they desire to exclude all conflicts and troubles within and so as in respect of sanctification there is some grace under much corruption so there is also this certainty under many fears And if you say that it is a contradiction that a man should be assured and doubt also I answer No no more than that a man should be sanctified and yet have some corruption in him for they do not respect the same thing Certainty ariseth from the Promises of God set home by his spirit upon us ahd fears arise from the sence and feeling of our own weaknesses So that what the holy Apostle speaketh concerning the work of grace in him with the oppositian thereunto the good he would do he doth not and he findes evil present with him Thus it is here the sealing the assurance the comfort he would have he cannot obtain but the doubts and slavish fears which he hateth they carry him away captive Lastly Suppose a godly man hath not this sealing yet let him not limit God to the times and seasons he would but leave all to the merciful dispensation of a wise and righteous God Thou hast not assurance yet no more thou hast
not perfect grace yet thou hast not perfect holinesse yet but thou waitest upon the Lord till it be accomplished and so do here Oh but I am afraid I shall never have it I shall dye without it that is more than thou knowest how suddenly and graciously doth God use to rebuke these windes and waves when we little think of it yet know thy interest to heaven is not shaken Thou wilt indeed want much comfort but not thy title to heaven Thou art as sure to go to heaven as if thou wert assured of it And withall remember that the faith of dependance and recumbency upon Christ only is more noble than assurance in that thou givest God most glory In this thy own interest is satisfied And lastly know that heaven is coming to thee and thou going to it when not only sin but all fears shall be removed away Thou shalt then dispute thy condition no more thou shalt not then question thy graces or Gods grace to thee but shall put on the Crown of glory never to be molested and disquieted any more SERM. CXXXVIII Of Grace as it is the Earnest of Eternall Glory 2 COR. 1. 22. And given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts THis is the third and last similitude by which that gracious confirmation of beleevers in Gods promises is declared and if we consider them relatively to the discourse precedent we shall easily see what great reason there is that the promises should not be only yea and Amen in themselves but in bs also Seeing we have this special work of Gods spirit anointing sealing and giving us an earnest of the things that are promised Now as you heard though the same prividedge be meant under this threefold similitude yet every one hath its proper notion and therefore the earnest here spoken of may differ from sealing thus That the sealing of Gods Spirit doth assure of us that which is already wrought in us as seals confirm contracts that are already made though hereby also is implyed a certain continuance and perseverance in that state which is sealed but the earnest spoken of in the text doth principally relate to the future So that whereas the childe of God might object what if I be sealed and assured for the present of my good condition yet who knoweth what may fall out thereafter I may apostatize I may provoke God to leave me and so this seal be as it were defaced But though the word sealing doth also imply continuance for it is till the day of redemption yet the word earnest doth more properly speak to that Objection Thou hast the earnest given thee of that inheritance which shall be hereafter So that in the words we may take notice of the mercy it self the efficient cause of it and the subject receiving it The mercy it self is said to be an earnest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is used in two other places in the New Testament as is to be shewed It is properly an Hebrew word though from the Hebrews communicated to the Phenicians which being great Merchants brought it into Greece so that the Grecians adopted it for their ordinary wood yea some Latinists as Plautus and Terentius do use it as Grotius on the place affirmeth Varro speaketh of it lib. 4. de ling. latinà where he saith the same mony for divers respects may be called dos merces arrabo and corollarium and addeth the word arrabo is brought from the Grecians but Scaliger in his Notes upon the place correcteth him for that saying Ne graecum verbum quidem sed merum Syriacum The Hebrew root from whence it groweth is gnarub to mingle and so by a metaphor it signifieth to buy and sell to make contracts and to assure them by earnests because in this action the buyer and the seller are as it were mingled together Some have translated it pignus which the Grecians call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a pledge pignus It is so called either à pugno say some because the pledge is delivered by the hand or else as Martinius Lexi pignus from pago or pango because in such covenants and contracts there is an agreement established But Hierom of old and others of late do no waies approve of rendring it a pledge but an earnest for there is this difference in the civil law between arra and pignus an earnest and a pledge an earnest is part of the price that is to be paid down and so goeth to make it up but a pledge is given for security by the debtor to the creditor and taken away again when the debt is paid Now this metaphor doth no waies hold in this case for God is not a debtor to us when he giveth us his grace he doth not borrow of us neither when the promise is fullfilled is this grace taken away for in heaven grace is not abolished but perfected Indeed Aquinas upon the place maketh this Observation That as a pledge must be saith he equivalently worth to the debt so it is here grace wrought in us especially the Spirit of God bestowed upon us is equivalent to glory But that is false that in our graces wrought by Gods Spirit there is an intrinsecall condignity and equality to everlasting glory It 's therefore more proper and suitable to call it an earnest which was commonly used two waies either in civill commerce or matrimoniall contracts called therefore in the latter subarrhatio The end and use of it was to secure the full payment of the debt or fullfilling of any promise made and in this sense it is true in the Text God knowing our pronenesse to doubt about his promises as also how uncertain and fearfull we are doth give us his grace here as a sure earnest of our eternal happinesse So that by this earnest we are not to understand extraordinary and miraculatous gifts of Gods Spirit for many had them who yet never could enter into glory but the special works of grace sanctifying These are fitly called an earnest though there be also some dissimilitudes as is to be shewed insomuch that he who findeth he hath grace here may certainly conclude he shall have glory hereafter for though there be some who hold that some may have true faith and yet totally fall off and that only the elected beleever shall persevere yet that is built upon a sandy foundation In the second place you have the efficient cause of this and that is the spirit of God Some indeed make this by way of apposition The earnest which is the spirit as if the spirit it self both in this and the other Text were the earnest which may be received provided that by the spirit we mean not only the person of the spirit but the gracious operations thereof for the people of God partake of both Eph. 1. 13. They are said to be sealed with that holy spirit of promise called so not because it is the spirit promised for that is too frigid though it be
confirmed As for God he doth it not to assure himself of us but that we may be assured of him Indeed by consequent this assureth us to God for having this earnest we are preserved from Apostacy but the chief end is to confirm our faith in God that we may be able with Paul to triumph because nothing shall separate us from the love of God in Christ It is then Gods gracious goodnesse to condescend to us he knoweth our temper and our temptations he seeth how one doubt ariseth up after another he taketh notice how apt we are to perplex our selves about the future and therefore he giveth us this earnest not for his own security but ours This is more than his meer promise therefore the Civilians define an earnest to be a reall security in opposition to that which is verball or conventionall only Gods promise is enough to secure us but because we walk much according to sense therefore he doth indulge thus farre as to work in us while in this valley of tears the beginnings of eternall glory hereafter In which respect we are already said to sit down with Christ in heavenly places Eph. 2. 6. and certainly if to a godly mans sence and experience the foretasting of heaven be so great and refreshing what is heaven it self If an earnest be so wonderfull a matter what is the possession and inheritance it self Secondly This heavenly earnest differeth from a worldly one because amongst men this is done in a commutative way of justice There is a strict equality between the payment to be made of which the earnest is part and the thing purchased thereby So that in humane contracts an earnest is given as part of that payment which is equivalent to the thing purchased thereby So that this whole way of commerce belongs to the common place of justice Thus those who write de Jure and justitia do under that treat De pignoribus hypothesis but alas in this earnest God giveth us here is no bargain here is no justice all is of free-grace God doth bestow both the earnest and the whole sum as it were hereafter upon us freely Both grace here and glory hereafter do alone proceed from the sole bounty and free-love of God Insomuch that the childe of God is both begotten nourished and perfected by free-grace alone Thirdly There is another dissimilitude flowing from the former for he who giveth an earnest intending thereby a full payment for something he would have doth thereby purpose to advantage himself He would not give an earnest but because he needeth the thing he buyeth and thereupon would profit himself but it is farre otherwise with God and us in this respect God giveth us not this earnest this grace no nor glory hereafter because he needeth us but it is only for our good and consolation It is true that Christ gave no lesse than his own blood as a price to purchase us for a people to himself But why was this Was this to advantage himself Was it such purchasings as when men buy houses and lands to inrich themselves and their posterity No but only to do us good thereby So that herein is the goodnesse of God exceedingly commended unto us that both the purchasing of us and giving us an earnest to secure us of future glory all is from his own munificence In all this we are unprofitable and uselesse as to him Lastly Here is this dissimilitude and that is a great one Amongst men when the earnest is given yet there is sometimes upon a just cause and more often upon unjust grounds a breaking of the bargain They will lose the earnest rather than pay the whole sum So that the Casuists dispute to whom the earnest in conscience belongs if the covenant be not made good Thus because man is a lyar and deceitfull an earnest is not such security that we may absolutely depend upon it Men are mutable and are apt to break their engagements but it is farre otherwise in this particular God that hath given the earnest is not as man to repent and to change his minde No this is given us on purpose to assure us that he will never alter and if it be said though God doth not alter yet we may We may abuse this earnest yea we may lose it all which the Arminians pleade It is more fully to be cleared that this earnest is to assure not only God to us but us to God whereby he will so preserve us that nothing shall deprive us of eternal glory SERM. CXXXIX What is implyed in Gods giving us the earnest of his Spirit 2 COR. 1. 22. Who hath also given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts THe Spirit of God with the graces thereof as we have heard received and perceived by a beleever are a sure earnest of future glory In the handling of which hitherto we have only treated of the dissimilitude that is between this heavenly earnest and an earnest amongst men our work is now to shew positively wherein the resemblance doth consist or what is comprehended in this metaphorical expression And First Hereby is declared Gods will and infallible purpose to bring us unto eternal glory of which this grace received is an earnest For as you heard it is not grace as grace but grace as an earnest that doth deserve an accent as it were upon it The emphasis lieth in this So that by these beginnings of Gods Spirit upon me I may unquestionably conclude my future glory And this Chrysostome upon the place doth well observe He doth not saith he singly and barely call it the spirit but an earnest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that from this thou maist have boldnesse and confidence upon the whole for if he did not intend to give thee all saith he he would not have given thee this earnest in vain and so as to lose it Thus Macarius also an holy Writer from this similitude gathereth that such who have this earnest may rejoyce and be as confident as if they were already crowned with glory and reigning in heaven Homil. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 oh then the unspeakable happinesse of such who do finde this earnest in their hearts God would be found unfaithful and to break his promise if as he hath begun so he should not also finish this work of grace in thee So that the Arminian exception is very frivolous and absurd saying It is true this is an earnest but we may lose it We may fall into such sinnes as shall wholly cast us out of the favour of God for this earnest is given us on purpose to assure us that God will so preserve us and by his grace so guide us that we shall never fall out of this ark into the waters What comfort and encouragement were in this expression if it did denote no more then a conditional security No it is a positive and absolute security Therefore that learned Vossius was
under some temptation surely when he wrote that Pelagian History for in that he hath this passage where speaking of some Ancients who from the metaphor of an anchor and earnest conclude the certainty of eternal life glosseth after this manner Histor Pelag. lib. 6. Thes 13. Certos nos dicunt quamdiu habemus arrhabonem spiritus sancti sed arrhabonem hunc siquis abjiciat hinc certitudinem simul salutis amittere We are certain of eternal life as long as we have this anchor this earnest but if we lose it we lose our certainty also of salvation How inexcusable is this though some learned men great friends to that excellent Authour say that he promised to review that History of Pelagian heresie in time For therefore is this earnest given us to take away our fears about the future Whereas in their sense we must needs be as uncertain as before and besides this earnest would need another earnest and so in infinitum The Scripture then by calling it an earnest would hereby inform us of Gods will that he who hath given us the first-fruits will in time also give us the lump or harvest it self he will so preserve us that not only any thing without as the devil and the world but also any thing within us our own hearts our own lusts shall not betray us and become our destruction and certanily that reason of Chrysostowe which is also grounded upon the Scripture is among others very remarkable If God of his free-grace did while enemies convert us and bestow his spirit as an earnest upon us will he not much rather do it for us since he hath received us into his friendship To this purpose the Apostle also argueth very strongly Rom. 5. 9 10. While we were yet sinners Christ dyed for us much more then being now justified by his bloud shall we be saved from wrath through him for if when we were enemies we were reconciled by death of his Sonne much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his lise If then God hath done the greater will he not do the lesse when we wallowed in our lusts when we tumbled in our filth even then the grace of God did speak unto us to live even then it did put comelinesse and beauty upon us and shall he not much more do it since he hath made us his own So that the same grace of God which received us though unworthy will preserve us though unworthy and as our rebellious heart did not finally withstand converting grace but was overcome by it so will the grace of perseverance watch over us that this earnest shall not be totally lost For this end we have many glorious promises to encourage us in this particular we must not then look upon our own dead womb but the power and promise of God concluding by this Lord I know thy will is that I shall be saved by this I am perswaded that nothing no not I my self shall separate my self from thy love for thy grace will alwaies prevent my will Secondly In that it is called an earnest there is implyed that grace here and glory hereafter are of the same nature that they differ only gradually Even as in an earnest amongst men that is part of the full payment and of the same nature with it Thus grace is nothing but glory begun and glory grace perfected for which cause it is called glory 2 Cor. 3. 18. We are changed into the same image from glory to glory that is from grace to grace till we come to inhabit glory For which cause also the Apostle compareth our state of grace here to the state of a childe and that of glory hereafter to a virile estate 1 Cor. 13. Now as a childe differeth from himself when made a man but gradually he is the same individuall person still Thus it is here thy grace will not be abolished thou hast here but perfected We do but think and understand in heavenly things as children only comparatively to what shall be done in heaven Even as these individual bodies shall put on immortality and incorruptibility They shall not be new bodies but changed bodies It is true there are some graces which suppose an imperfection in the subject while he is here in the way at least in their actings and so farre as there is imperfection it shall be abolished as 1 Cor 13. Thus saith as it justifieth as it is opposed to vision and hope as opposed to enjoying repentance likewise as it is sorrow for sin and patience which supposeth afflictions These things cannot be put forth in heaven but probably the habits of these graces may continue there as being an ornament and perfection of the soul it being extrinsecal only and by accident that the occasion of the exercise of those graces is removed Hence some say but not probably that the Spirit of God is a pledge in respect of faith and hope because they shall cease but an earnest in respect of charity which abideth for ever Salmeron in loc No wonder then if grace be an earnest of glory seeing they are the same thing in nature and differ only as perfect and imperfect yet when we say that grace is only glory begun that must be understood in a sound sense for some of the Papists make an inward condignity between grace and glory we are not then to think that grace of it self would in a naturall and necessary way spring up into glory as an Acorn would in a physicall manner breed up into an Oak being seminally and causally contained in it No but in a moral sense by the gracious appointment and order of God grace is glory begun otherwise such is the imperfection and drosse that is in our graces while in this life that when we have arrived to the highest pitch we might justly be deprived of glory Grace in the Apostate Angels formerly was not glory seminally and radically for then they had not missed it But if we do now regard the covenant of Gods grace he hath so appointed it that whosoever hath grace here that shall be preserved and kept so faithfully that it shall be perfected into glory hereafter And thus the earnest is of the same nature with the full payment it self Thirdly and lastly This similitude doth not only declare Gods purpose and effectuall will concerning us but it is also to assure and perswade us of heaven as if we were already in it and this is indeed one of the main ends of this similitude God will by this inform us of the transcendant excellency of the covenant of grace above that of works which he made with Adam Thus our Saviour saith Joh. 5. 24. He that beleeveth is passed from death to life he is already and therefore is sure of everlasting happinesse so that in this similitude there is not only the perseverance of the Saints denoted but also their assurance and certain perswasion of it And the truth is great is the
it is wholsome Therefore do not thou cry out against such men that have the Law hell and damnation so much in their mouths for this is the way to polish and prepare thee for comfort we do not forget the Gospel while we preach so neither are we to be accounted as legall Preachers and not such as preach Christ for hereby we levell the mountain for Christ to come hereby we streighten the camels back that it may go through the eye of the needle yea all those spirituall censures inflicted upon offenders are for comfort if thou art reproved and that sharply and zealously it is for thy comfort yea if thou art for thy scandalous and impenitent waies cast out from Church-communion and denied the seals of comfort yet all this is medicinall and maketh a way for comfort The incestuous person is by Paul cast into spirituall sorrow that so he may partake of spirituall joy and consolation of which blessed effect more in ●●s time when we come God willing to the next Chapter In the next place let us consider the grounds why Ministers are to promote the comfort of such who are fit subjects for it And first Because they are Ministers of the Gospel and what is that but the glad tidings of pardon of sin of reconciliation and of everlasting happinesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is noted to signifie not only glad tidings but the reward also given unto the messengers thereof What then is more suitable to the Ministers of comfort but to bring comfort that we may say as David of Ahimaaz he is a good man and bringeth good tidings If a Minister be a Boanerges a son of thunder it is that he may be a son of consolation It is not contrary to their commission to preach of sinne and of the day of judgement for so Paul did to Felix which made him tremble only we are not to stay here we must not keep you allwaies under this Schoolmaster but bring you at last to Christ Insomuch that all our duties tend to this even to advance the Gospel in the hearts of hearers yea every doctrine of Christ as it is a doctrine after godlinesse so it is also after consolation And therefore if any opinion do properly make against godlinesse we may reject it and so if any do truly make against solid comfort we may refuse that as not being of Christ It is true many hereticall and erroneous persons may pretend to great comforts and ravishments They usually say they never had so much comfort as since they engaged in such waies but then you must remember that the devil may be transformed into an angel of light and as there is a counterfeit pie y so there is also a counterfeit comfort It is not enough then to have comfort but it is to be judged and tried by Gods word Neither may we say this is a comfortable doctrine therefore I will embrace it but first see it be a true Scripture-doctrine and then receive it for such to be sure will also be comfortable 2. We are to help forward the godly mans comfort because the heart of man awakened for sinne is very much indisposed to receive it and the devil he is a vehement opposer of it That the heart of man wounded for sin doth difficultly receive consolation is plain because joy is the fruit of Gods spirit and the spirit of God is given not only to sanctifie us but to vouchsafe consolation also so that as a man hath a dead womb in respect of grace he is not able to have one good thought without Gods spirit so he hath also a dead womb in respect of comfort he is not able to have one comfortable thought unlesse God who is called the God of all consolation infuse it into him and then the devil is a daily opposer of our comforts as well as our graces as he is a tempter to sinne so to unbeleef and discouragements he loveth to keep us as he did the lunatick person about the tombs in thoughts of our hypocrisie and damnation that God doth not love us that he hath cast us off Is it not then necessary to endeavour the comfort of a godly man when it is so greatly gainsaid both within and without 3. Our duty is to perswade to comfort because hereby the heart is more enlarged and quickned unto all godlinesse The joy of the Lord is our strength as Nehemiah said Nehem. 8. 10. It is like oyl to the wheels With what delight and gladnesse doth a joyfull beleever exercise himself in all holihesse with what courage and confidence doth he discharge all the duties required of him The spirit of God did come upon the Prophet when he played upon the harp The more chearfull the more prepared to receive power from God as the drier the paper is the fitter to receive characters whereas upon wet paper none can write As it doth thus enable us to do no lesse also doth it fortifie us to suffer We see with what readinesse and undaunted courage the Martyrs endured the most exquisite torments and why so but because they were filled with unspeakable joy insomuch that their condition was sar better than the most prosperous and flourishing estate of any wicked men They were infeliciter felices and these were feliciter infelices as Austin said So that in promoting holy joy we advance grace and godlinesse also Use first of instruction to the Ministers of the Gospel to answer the main end of their office which is to be comforters not to be Marahs but Naomies Spiritual consolation is the proper fruit of the spirit of Adoption and therefore a pearl highly to be esteemed and that they may do this they must attend to their doctrine and their practise Their doctrine and thus in Popery in stead of building up they destroy comfort the doctrine of uncertainty and doubting about the state of grace the doctrine of satisfaction and merits these are uncomfortable doctrines Indeed some adversaries say the doctrine of absolute predestination and that Christ died but for some only and not all is an uncomfortable doctrine Hence their saying is spiritus Calvinianus est spiritus Melancholicus The Antinomians they also say to preach the Law and repentance thereby as in a way to obtain remission of sins is a method of preaching that destroyeth all comfort but these might easily be confuted if it were our businesse It is a Ministers duty to see the doctrine he preacheth doth not in its own genius and as a proper effect work despair or discouragement And then for their practise they must be carefull that all reproofs admonitions and spiritual censures be so managed that though for the while they may seem bitter yet at the last they will bring much comfort and that though they be in pain for a while yet they shall at last rejoyce to see a manchilde born 2. Use of Exhortation to be such a prepared people as that comfort may
be applyed to you how can ye have comfort if ye live in the waies of sinne doe not any thing that may chase away this comfort if we preach never such comfortable truths if thou by thy negligence and unmortified walking dost deprive thy self of consolation then know the blame lieth in thy self and not in the Ministery Thou criest give me a word of comfort how can we comfort him whom God would not have comforted SERM. CXLVII God only the Lord of our Christian Faith 2 COR. 1. 24. For by faith ye stand THis last clause saith Calvin other Interpreters either take no notice of or else do not clearly instruct about it for whereas it is plain by the causall particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is brought in as an argument of something preceding it is very difficult to finde out the reason Those Interpreters that take notice of it are divided Some do make it a reason of the words immediatly foregoing Paul was a helper of their joy because they stood firmly in the faith for although there were some who denied the resurrection yet that was not the doctrine of the Chuch in general nor was it puhlikely professed by them It is true many abuses there were in practice both civill and religious yet because they did firmly retain the true faith therefore it was that he would not wholly cast them off as no Church Their true doctrine which they professed made him the more hopeful of them and certainly the pure sound faith professed by a Church though otherwise greatly corrupted maketh it to have the essence and life of a Church and withall suggesteth hope that God in time will make them an holy practical Church as well as a sound Orthodox one Hence Paul in his first Epistle to the Thessalonians c. 3. v. 5 6 7. doth much rejoyce in their faith that they stood stedfast therein When I could no longer forbear I sent to know your faith As also Timotheus brought him glad tidings of their faith And again we were comforted in our affliction by your faith and this interpretation is very probable and not to be wholly rejected But then a second is more probable and that maketh it a reason of the former part of the verse We have not dominion over your faith for by faith ye stand stedfast Insomuch that if I Paul or an Angel from heaven should preach unto you another doctrine yet you beleeve in the truth as Gods truth and not mans truth So that God alone hath the dominion over your hearts in beleeving Thus it is a very fit and proper reason Hence Heinsius thinketh there is a transposition of the words which is usuall with Paul and that they should be inserted before the later clause thus Not that we have dominion over your faith for by faith you stand Whether we reade it objectively you stand in the faith or instrumentally by faith you stand it is not much materiall Neither are we to render it in the past signification you have stood because it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek as if the Apostle did imply they formerly had indeed stood in the faith though lately they grew wavering for it is usuall to use the preterperfect for the present especially when a continuance or perseverance is intended as Matth. 20 Why stand ye here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idle all the day long Both these interpretations may be conjoyned but because the latter is the most considerable Therefore I shall insist on that and observe That the Christian faith is of that nature that it doth respect and relate unto God only We believe not in men but in God Whether we speak of dogmatical or fiducial faith they cannot have any other bottome to stand upon but the authority of God himself Thus saith the Lord Thus it is written is the ground of all true Christian faith which truth deserve●h explication in some particular Propositions As First There is an humane and there is a divine faith which onely deserveth the name of Christian faith and to which onely the promises of God doe belong An humane faith I call that when men doe beleeve principles of Religion meerly upon humane motives that is the ultimate reason and motive into which their faith is resolved These humane motives are manifold as the Authority of the Church the Authority of Ministers and Pastors our education by parents custome and universality as also the Laws and Edicts of a Magistrate commanding such a Religion to be received and no other Now whosoever maketh this the chief reason of the profession of his faith is upon no better ground than the Turkes is for their Mahumetan the Papists for their Popish faith Insomuch that many Protestants Turkes and Papists though they exceedingly differ in the materials of Religion yet agree in the formali motivo they believe so and so because brought up in it because commanded by their Civil Magistrates It is that which the Papists upbraid us with that our Religion is but a Parliament-Religion or a Queen Elizabeths-Religion because when they established it the Land generally received it Now to this we say That no doubt the generality of people except such as are enlightned by Gods Spirit doe receive even the Christian or true Religion but upon civil and humane respects and therefore when Emperours have been Arrians the people have been Arrians when the Kings of Israel were Idolaters the inhabitants became Idolaters And thus when the Kings of the Earth have been Papists the people have been Papists also So that they cannot object any thing more against the Protestant Religion than we may against the Papist Onely we adde a further position which introduceth a divir●e faith which they overthrow and so by consequence teach no more than an Lumane faith For we hold That every private believer is bound to have an explicite faith of the things necessary to salvation and this faith we say is knowledge the ground whereof is the Authority and Testimony of God in the Scripture So that we doe not believe in Magistrates nor in Ministers nor in the Church trusting our faith and salvation upon them but the word of God onely whereas the Papists do expresly affirm That a private Christians faith is enough to salvation if he content himself with this That he believeth as the Church believeth never troubling himself in reading of books or searching of the Scripture As Valentia's known instance of a Merchant brought in by him disputing What Religion he should be of doth evidently declare So then a Papist as a Papist cannot reach any higher than to an humane faith For though they will not yeeld the Authority of the Church to be an humane Authority yet both reason and experience doth fully convince that But let us come to our own people and sadly bewail the ignorance and stupidity of Protestants in general who are not moved by any divine motives or Scripture-respects to imbrace