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A25470 The Morning exercise [at] Cri[ppleg]ate, or, Several cases of conscience practically resolved by sundry ministers, September 1661. Annesley, Samuel, 1620?-1696. 1661 (1661) Wing A3232; ESTC R29591 639,601 676

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you would walk evenly in Gods path you must cut off your right foot 3. Observ That sin is properly and to all intents and purposes our own If thy right eye offend c. if thy right hand offend c. the Apostle writing to the Colossians Col. 3.5 speaks thus Mortifie therefore your members which are upon the earth fornication uncleanness inordinate affection c. these sins were their members the whole body of sin is ours and the members of that body are ours there is a great difference between our natural body and our sinful body our natural body is ours quoad usum with reference to our use but it is Gods quoad creationem with reference to its creation The body of man was originally and fundamentally created now there is a twofold Creation 1. When a being is made of nothing this is called by the learned creatio immediata an immediate creation 2. When a being is made of something but that something is materia inhabilis matter altogether indisposed for the producing of that effect and so is little if any thing more then nothing with reference unto that which is made materia est aliquid in se nihil tamen respectu opificii thus when God made the woman of a Rib when Christ turned water into wine when God made man of the dust of the earth it was a creation and this is called by the Learned creatio mediata a mediate creation and our natural body still in a way of generation is Gods creature but our sinful body is our creature hence the Apostle mortifie your members which are on the earth and our Saviour in the Text If thy right eye offend thee c. so that sin is properly and to all intents and purposes our own 4. Observ That although all sins are our own yet there are some sins that in a more especial manner may be called ours namely our right eye sins and our right hand sins or if you will Every man hath his proper particular iniquity his beloved sin If thy right eye offend thee pluck it out and cast it from thee If thy right hand offend thee cut it off and cast it from thee and the handling of this Doctrine will suit the Case that is my task this morning viz. How may beloved lusts be discover●d and mortified In the prosecution of this Observation I shall follow by Gods assistance this method 1. I shall enquire why sin is expressed sometimes in Scripture by the parts and members of our body as in this place by the right eye and the right hand 2. I shall shew you that our right eye sins and our right hand sins our beloved lusts may in a more especial manner be called ours or that every man hath his proper his particular iniquity 3. I shall enquire how this comes to pass that particular persons have their proper and particular sins 4. The Use and Application 1. I am to enquire why sin in Scripture is expressed by the parts and members of our body and particularly here by the right eye and the right hand 1. You must note that the whole mass of corruption in Scripture is called by the name of the old man and the body of sin Knowing this that our old man is crucifi'd with him that the body of sin might be destroyed Rom. 6.6 It is called the old man in every young man there is an old man and it is called the body of sin now if sin in the lump and bulk be a body then particular sins may fitly be termed the parts and members of this body 2. Sin may be thus expressed because as the natural body makes use of its several parts for the managing and carrying on of those works that are natural so corruption makes use of several lusts for the effecting and promoting of those works that are sinful 3. According to their notion that hold the soul by creation as I conceive sinne is conveyed into the soule at first by means of the body Certainly the soule of man is pure and undefiled as it comes out of the hand of God I do humbly propose to men of learning whither that rule corporeum non agit in incorporeū or that a body cannot defile a spirit is not further to be taken into consideration We find by experience that as the soule communicates its affections unto the body the body hath life and sense and motion from the soule that of it self is a liveless lump of clay So the body again hath a very great influence on the soul and can and doth communicate its distempers unto it For instance those that have sanguine bodies are enclined to lust those that are cholerick unto rashnesse and passion those that are melancholy unto suspition tenaciousness those that are phlegmatick unto dulness and cowardize So that sin may be in the body dispositivè before it be enlivened by the soule though not formaliter my meaning is the body may have a disposition to defile the soul before it is united unto the soul and if so no wonder if sin be expressed by the parts and members of our body 4 Corruption looks at and shews it selfe by the sinfull actions of the bodie and therefore may have its denomination by the parts of it Hence it is that the Apostle when he had concluded that the Jew and the Gentile were both under sin to make this manifest he tells the Romans how sin discovered it selfe in the outward man Rom. 3.13 c. 2 Cor. 7.1 Their throat is an open sepulchre with their tongues have they used deceit the poyson of aspes is under their lips c. We read in Scripture of the sins of the flesh as well as of the spirit Having therefore these promises dearly beloved let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit the sinnes of the spirit like so many plague-sores break out into the flesh Wicked men are all over bespotted and beleopar'd with sinne Lying is a spot in the tongue pride is a spot in the eye wrath a spot on the brow bribery a spot in the hand Idolatry a spot on the knee yea they are called spots and blemishes 2 Pet. 2.13 not spotted but spots sin it selfe is a spot and like fire it turns the subject it hath to deale with into its own nature One part of the body in Scripture is called a world of iniquity The tongue is a fire a world of iniquity How much iniquity is there in the world Jam. 3.6 when in this little member there is a world of iniquity Thus much shall suffice to have been spoken to the first thing propounded viz. why sin is expressed sometimes in Scripture by the parts and members of our body My second worke is to shew you that our right-eye sins and our right hand sins our beloved lusts may in a more especiall manner be called ours or that every man hath his proper his particular iniquity If
Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. By this his desire wee are to understand a marvellous strong intention of spirit H●sych and an earnest study and indeavour after accomplishment Hesychius expounds the term by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to will desire wish love and delight in the work Hee wills it not onely as a possible atchievement but as amiable hee endeavours to compass it by all good means because he proposes so desireable an end The sincerity of our desires in obtaining of possible designs is manifested by our diligent endeavours in the use of proper waies to effect them Aristot Rhet. l. 2. c. 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For the most part saies the Philosopher no man delights in or hankers after impossibilities No rational man certainly And therefore wee are to conceive that our Apostle doth here under his importunate desires couch and imply all holy means to accomplish his end Upon which account hee presently subjoyns 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his prayer to God for that purpose of which afterwards Onely at present observe from the connexion of his prayers to his hearty desires That lively are those prayers which flow from the heart Note Most harmonious in the ears of God are those groans that mount up to Heaven upon the wings of ardent emanations out of the depth of our hearts Suspiria è sulco pectoris ducta When the words of our petitions ascend warm and reeking out of our bowels when every expression is dipt in our heart blood 2. The persons that were the subject of his prayers and desires For Israel And here it is considerable in what relation Israel stood to the blessed Apostle Rom. 9.3 Rom. 11.1 Phil. 3.5 Act. 23.6 They were his Brethren his Kinsmen according to the Flesh For I also saith Paul am an Israelite of the seed of Abraham of the Tribe of Benjamin In another place hee acquaints us that hee was circumcised the eighth day of the stock of Israel of the Tribe of Benjamin an Hebrew of the Hebrews i. e. both by Father and Mother as touching the Law a Pharisee It appears thence 2 Cor. ●1 22 that the Israelites were his kindred his own dear and near relations remaining for the most part in a state of ignorance as to the Messiah and of alienation and estrangement from the Covenant of Grace and the mystery of the Promise through Faith in the blood of a Mediator For these it is that our Apostle groans for these hee is so ardent in prayer for these hee pours out such earnest petitions to the Father 3. The great scope and design of the Apostle for his kindred and relations according to the flesh in all his desires endeavours prayers was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That they might bee saved The earnest sollicitude of his Spirit the fervent petitions poured out into the Divine bosome did all combine in this that his natural might become spiritual relations that his kindred of the Tribe of Benjamin might through union to Christ be allied to him in the Tribe of Judah What is natural to animals and plants 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to thirst after an impression of their own likeness upon another Arist Pol. l. 1. c. 1. Is much more longed for by Saints that others might be holy and happy as well as themselves but especially such as are nearest to them by the bonds of nature Holy Paul doth not press after outward injoyments as health strength riches power or dominion in the world that Israel might have prosperity and plenty in their Streets and Pallaces or that the Kingdome should bee restored to them from the Romans Not the great things of the Earth but the greater of Heaven This his soul travels with that Christ might bee formed in them and dwell in their hearts by Faith that so Israel might bee saved 4. In these words wee may observe likewise the kind compellation wherewith our Apostle doth salute the saints at Rome to whom hee wrote this Epistle by the name of Brethren Now though hee wrote to the Gentiles yet hee lets them know that his bowels did yern over his poor kindred that they also might bee saved The Reason why in this letter to the Romans he doth so pathetically mention these his desires with such strong and vehement asseverations is because there were great numbers of the Jews at Rome and principally of he two Tribes that returned out of the Babylonian captivity who after the wars of Pompey and other Roman Generals and Captain in Judea were very many of them transplanted into Italy Which is not onely attested by Civil and Ecclesiastical Historians but also by Scripture it self declaring that there was a solemn Convocation of the Jews assembled by Paul at his arrival Act. 2● 17 c. To whom the Apostle did first preach the Gospel and related the story of his coming to that Imperial City by reason of his appeal to Caesar From all these parts laid down together there result this Doctrinal Conclusion Observ That to endeavour the conversion and salvation of our near relations is a most important duty The president and example of our holy Apostle compared with and confirmed by other Scriptures will notably evince the truth of this assertion 1 Cor. 12.7 The manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withall One great end why God bestows the graces of his Spirit upon us is that wee should spend the savour thereof upon others Our discourse must hee seasoned with the salt of grace Col. 4.6 Ephes 4.29 that it may minister edification to others Our speech should never overflow in abundance but like the waters of Nilus to render the neighbouring Plantations fruitful Grace is sometimes compared to Light by reason of its diffusive nature that our shining conversations night illustrate others in the paths of Truth and Holiness Cant. 1.12 Prov. 27.9 John 12.3 Sometimes Grace is likened to Spikenard to perfumed ointment which must not bee shut up in a box though of purest Alabaster but opened that the whole house may bee filled with the fragrant odour thereof Psal 133.2 To Oil to the costly sacred Oil that ran down not onely upon the beard of Aaron but to the skirts of his garments To Talents which must bee industriously traded with and not laid up in napkins To Dews Showers Waters because of their fructifying virtue 1 Thes 5.11 Rom. 14.19 Heb. 3.13 Col. 3.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ezek. 18.30 Heb. 10.24 To a generative Principle because of it's begetting power and influence Wee are therefore commanded exhorted directed to edifie one another to exhort one another to admonish one another to turn one another as that phrase in Ezekiel seems to import converti facite and make others to bee converted as well as our selves to provoke one another to love and to good works When converted wee are injoyned to strengthen our Brethren that wee may save
be departing and taking its leave of the body or at lest may be in danger so to do whereas the former being a man of an hayle and good constitution of body the soul may act inform enliven it many years 8. Get a respect to all Gods Commandments Psa 119.6 then shall I not be ashamed when I have respect unto all thy commandments The reason why men indulge any one lust is because they pick and cull their duties and so indeed serve not the will of God but their own choice Oh how many are there that answer the Lord with half obedience like the Eccho which makes not a perfect respondence of the voyce but of some part thereof Many make such a difference amongst the Tables as if onely one side or one part were of Gods writing Oh Sirs this will not do this will undo the man that like Agrippa doth but almost beleeve almost repent almost conform to the will of God that man shall be saved proportionably almost One sin unrepented of will cause you to miscarry to all eternity one crack in a bell may make it unserviceable untunable and till it be new cast it is good for nothing one wound may kill your bodies and so may one sin your souls Oh Christians what had become of you and I if Jesus Christ had satisfied the justice of God for all but one sin there is a text in Ezekiel Ezek. 18.27 that is usually taken for a place of the greatest mercy in the whole book of God When the wicked turneth away from his wickedness that he hath committed and doth that which is lawful and right he shall save his soul alive You have to the same purpose ver 21 22. of the same Chapter but pray mark what follows ver 28. Because he considereth and turneth away from all his transgression that he hath committed no mercy to be expected from this Scripture unless a man turn away from all his transgressions 2 Tim. 2.21 the vessel of honour is distinguished from the vessel of dishonour by this character that it is sanctified and prepared for every good work Luke 1.6 and this is the commendation of Zachary and Elizabeth they were both righteous before God walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless Halting in Religion is a troublesome deformed dangerous gesture and there is no cure for this like cutting off the right foot 9. Lay hold on Gods strength for the mortifying of thy beloved sin surely this is no easie work see how it is expressed in Scripture sometime it is called the mortification of our members is to mortifie a part of the body an easie work sometimes the circumcising of the foreskin of our hearts Deut. 10.16 did the Sichemites count circumcision an easie work by crucifying of the affections and lusts Gal. 5.24 was crucifixion an easie death and here in the text it is called a plucking out the right eye and cutting off the right hand the Apostle Paul in the forementioned place tells the Romans if ye through the Spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body you shall live He who is the fountain of spiritual life is also the principle of this spiritual death this is a work to be done by us but through the Spirit Hence in Scripture God is said to do this Rom. 8.13 Deut. 30.6 The Lord thy God will circumcise thy heart and the heart of thy seed and the Apostle expresses this by circumcision made without hands Col. 2.11 intimating that it is not a work of mans hands but Gods Q. If any aske me but how shall we lay hold on Gods strength R. By faith great things are attributed unto this grace because it lays hold on God and sets God at work 1 Joh. 5.4 This is the victory that overcometh the world even our faith it overcomes not onely the honours and riches and pleasures of the world but the lusts of the world of which you have mention 1 Job 2.16 saith is a self-emptying grace a poor beggarly hand rich only in receiving from another something like Davids sling and stone against Goliah lusts but in the name of the Lord of Hosts and by his strength even a babe in Christ through faith shall overcome the world I must tell you that Hannibal and Alexander and all the glorious Victors that we read of were but fresh water Souldiers in comparison of one that is born of God I shall only to what I have said add a few Motives to quicken you to your duty and so commend all to Gods blessing Motive 1. Right-eye sins and right-hand sins are the greatest hinderances of the souls closing with Christ When you flea any creature the skin comes off with ease till it comes to the head and there it sticks more then ordinary skill is required to get it thence Now I must tell you the sin that I am disswading you against is not only the eye sin and the hand sin but the head sin and here conversion sticks The sinner forbears many sins and performs many duties but when it comes to this Oh master saith flesh and blood pitty thy selfe beware what thou dost what be thine own Executioner plucke out thy right eye cut off thy right hand A mans sin is himself to deny ungodlinesse is to deny selfe this is a kind of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 self-murther No man ever yet hated his owne flesh Is there no getting to heaven unlesse a man leave himself behind this is durus sermo an hard saying As Naaman the Syrian 2 Reg. 5.18 When my master goeth into the house of Rimmon to worship there and he leaneth on my hand and I bow my selfe in the house of Rimmon the Lord pardon thy servant in this thing So the sinner the Lord pardon thy servant in this thing Mark 10.20 21. The young man in the Gospel tels Christ that he had kept all the commandements from his youth but when Christ said to him One thing thou lackest goe thy way sell whatsoever thou hast and give to the poor and thou shalt have treasures in heaven and come and take up thy crosse and follow me here he sticks verse 22. he was sad at that saying and went away grieved for he had great possessions or his great possessions had him Alass this poor young man little thought that notwithstanding his forwardnesse to keep the Commandements he was under the power of worldly lusts Oh sirs there is great strength in a river when it runs smoothly and without noise Motive 2. As these sins are the greatest hindrances of the souls closing with Christ so they prove the greatest trouble to the soul afterwards Your Eye-sin will prove your eye-sore yea and your heart-sore My meaning is your con●cience will suffer most upon the account of this sin all your dayes Thus Job cap. 13.26 Thou writest bitter things against me and makest me to possesse the iniquities of my youth When a mans conscience is
Tim. 1.15 Some have left their Love Rev. 2.3 Some left the Faith 1 Tim. 5.12 Some have turned after the world as Demas 2 Tim. 4 10. Some have turned aside after Satan 1 Tim. 5.15 And would to God there were no Example to be given in our age and observation it is that which the professors of a true Religion are more subject to then those of a false Jer. 21.1 Hath a nation chang●d their god which yet are no gods but my people have changed their glory for that which do●h not profit Now there are three falls to which men are subject 1. Some fall as wood or Cork into the water sink at first Mat. 14.31 Act. 27.20 and 44. but get up again being helped by the hand of divine grace as Peter or brought off by a miracle of mercy as Paul and his company after all hopes of safety were quite taken a way This the fall of the godly 2. Some fall as lead or stone into the bottom of hell as Pharaohs host into the bottom of the sea and never rise again Exod. 15. having neither promise of God nor seed of God to raise them up again 1 Tim. 1.19 but make a final shipwarck of faith and conscience and of their souls together This the fall of the wicked 3. There is a mixt fall common to both which is like the falling into an Epidemical Disease whereof many dye and as many recover of which in their order There are four kinds or degrees of falling which the people of God are subject to And four kinds or degrees to which the wicked are subject and each latter is worse then other in them both 1. The first and lightest fall of the godly 4. Falls of th● Godly is that in their daily combate between flesh and spirit set out Rom. 7. at large and Gal. 5.17 We cannot do what we would but fail or fall short after our best endeavours Our duties are imperfect graces defective our gold and silver drossy our wine mixt with water Sin deceiveth surprizeth captiveth slayeth yet reigneth not all this while It is not I but sin that dwels in me I consent to the Law I delight in the law of God even in my inner man c. These falls or slips are unavoydable involuntary there is no Saint but complains of them no duty but is stained with them In our clearest Sun-shine we see a world of such Moats which yet hinder not the light and comfort of our Justification and destroy not Sanctification True grace consists with these Velimus nolimus Irruunt in nos Egyptiorum muscae obstrepunt Ranae in Cubilibus Regiis Prov. 24.16 yea is not separated from the assaults and induelling of such motions Will we Nill we said Bernard We are pesterd with swarms of these Egyptian flyes and have these frogs in our inmost chambers We are none of us Supralapsarians in this sense but Sub-lapsarians all yea and Relapsarians too The just falleth seven times a day by this infirmity and riseth again and taketh no harm but is kept humble and depending thereby Every son and daughter of Abraham is kept bound under this spirit of infirmity to their dying day This first fall is but like the fall of a mist in a winter morning the Sun gets up and it is a fair day after This is the first fall The second is worse which is 2. An actual visible stumble as to offence of others yet occasioned by some surreptitious surprize of temptation for want of that due consideration which we should always have this Gal. 6.1 the Apostle calls a mans being overtaken with a fault who is to be restored with a spirit of meekness considering we also may be tempted such falls or slips rather all or most are subject to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jam. 3.2 In many things we offend all We sometimes trip or slip or misse our hold so the word signifies and so down we come but not out of choice Thus did Peter slip or halt Gal. 2.14 when he did Judaise out of too much complyance with the Jewes whom therefore Paul did rebuke and restore Thus the Disciples slipt when they in zeale to Christ would have fire fetcht down from heaven upon those that would not receive them Luk. 9.54 55. whom Christ set right with a spirit of meekness These slips or falls are like those of him whose foot is wrenched or out of joynt whence he halts till it be set right Thus Peter is said to halt Gal. 2.14 he did not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but when Paul had set his wrenched foot he went upright ever after Hence that word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 6.1 restore is a Chirurgeons word to set him right as a bone out of joynt He that shall be censorious and severe against these two first kind of falls incident to most let him as Constantine said to Acesius the Novatian Bishop Get himselfe a ladder Socr. l. 1. c. 7. and climbe up to heaven by himselfe he should have but a few come there else 3. The third fall is much worse a fall from the third lost whence like Eutichus they are taken up dead for the present but they come to themselves again These are falls into grosser and more scandalous sins which do Vastare conscientiam set the stacks or Corn-fields of Conscience on fire whereas the other two forenamed especially the former are such as Tertullian calls Quotidianae Incursionis these are very dangerous and befall not all Professors they had not need but now and then one falls into some scandalous sin but they not usually again into the same sin after sense and repentance of it Thus fell David and Peter into foul flagitiousness but not deliberately nor totally nor finally nor reiteratedly Sin raged indeed and seemed to reign for the present Moses hands grew weak and the hand of Amaleck prevailed for the present But a seed of God was in them 1 John 3.9 and they could not sin unto death but were renewed to repentance and their sins are blotted out This fall is like the fall of the Leafe in Autumn life remains safe a Spring in due time follows though many a cold blast first 4. There is yet one worse fall than these former incident to a child of God too to be of the decaying hand and to remit and lose his former fervour and livelinesse And it may be he never comes as the second Temple up to the former pitch and glory Ezra 3.12 1 King 11 4 9 10. Thus Solomons zeale and love was abated in his old age as his father Davids naturall heat was in his age that he needed an Abishag to lye in his bosome Incepit melius qu●m definit Vltima primit cedunt dissimilis h●c puer ille senex so was Solomons spirituall heat cooled by the many Abishags that lay in his bosome and
Archeus is busie in holy souls that mighty principle of life is counter-working the flesh and its lusts So that now the weapons of a Christians warfare are mighty thr ugh God for the pulling d●wn of strong holds and the captivating every imagination yea bringing every thought into the obedience of Chr st 2 Cor. 10 4 5 17. 3 Here are the terms and bounds of the Spirits conquests in this present life at which a Christians hopes and endeavours must take aim not the extirpating but subduing not the not having but the not fullfilling the lusts of the flesh the flesh will be lusting that accursed womb will be conceiving in the regenerate themselves But here is the Christians priviledge that while he walks in the Spirit those conceptions shall prove abortive 4. The words entirely and in sum present us with the method and way of conquering with the art of circumventing sin in the first avenues and approaches of it Walk in the Spirit c. this is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the great and Achillaean Stratagem against the powers of darkness the true and only course we are to take if we would strangle the brats of night and hell in their very birth and crush the Cockatrice's egge whilst it is hatching and before it excludes the Serpent So that in fine the Observation which resulteth is this The best expedient in the world not to fulfill the lusts of the fl●sh Doctr. is to walk in the Spirit which what it imports I come now to shew 1. Walk in the Spirit i. e. in obedience to Gods Commandments which are the Oracles of the Spirit that this is excellently preventive of fulfilling the motions to sin appeareth Psa 119 1 2 3. Blessed are the undefiled in the way who walk in the law of the Lord Blessed are they that keep his testimonies they also do no iniquity again a little lower ver 9. Wherewithall shall a young man cleanse his way by taking heed thereto according to thy word Aristotle that great Dictator in Philosophy despaired of atchieving so great an enterprise as the rendering a young man capable of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his grave and severe lectures of morality for that age is light and foolish yet b Cereus in vitium flecti monitoribus asper Hor. ar Poct head-strong and untractable Now take a young man all in the heat and boyling of his blood in the highest fermentation of his youthful lusts and at all these disadvantages let him enter that great School of the holy Sp●r●t the divine Scripture and permit himself to the conduct of those blessed Oracles and he shall effectually be convinced by his own experience of the incredible vertue the vast and mighty power of Gods word in the success it hath upon him and in his daily progressions advances in heavenly wisdom Let me invite you then this day in the Prophets words Isa 2 5. O house of Jacob come ye and let us walk in the light of the Lord and what that is David tels us Psa 119.105 Thy words are a light to my feet and a lamp to my paths and Hos 6.5 His judgements are as a light that goeth forth Order thy steps by his word and thou shalt not tread awry let the Law of thy God be in thine heart and sin which is the transgression of the Law shall not come nigh thee walk in this broad day-light of the Sun of Righteousness shining in the Scriptures and thou shalt have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness This was the practise and experience too of the man after Gods own heart I have hid thy word in my heart that I might not sin against thee Psal 119.11 It is good writing after the copy of so great a Master Go thou and do likewise 2. Walk in the Spirit i. e. as becometh those in whom Gods Spirit dwells as if the Apostle had said the part which ye are now to act O ye Christian Galatians it is that of new creatures see that ye keep the Decorum Demean your selves like the children of God who are led of the Spirit of God Rom. 8.14 Be true to your part fill it up adorn it and then sure enough ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh for that were to act the part just contrary to what you sustain 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as he that is to represent upon the stage some generous and heroique person cannot do the least base and sordid thing but he breaks his part and digresseth into the garb and posture of a vile and abject person whilst he is true to his part he cannot possibly do any thing that is absurd and mis-beseeming Some of the Nethinim stood continually Porters at the door of the Temple to keep out whatsoever was unclean and hereunto the Apostle palpably alludeth 1 Cor. 3.16 17. Know ye not that ye are the temples of God and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you now if any man defile the Temple of God him will God destroy for the Temple of God is holy which Temple ye are So then that which the Rule amounts to by this interpretation is Walke in th sp rit * That a good mans soule is a Temple which God inhabits the Ph●losophers acknowledge and that the honour and worship rendred to him in a pur● and holy mind is incompa●ably more worthy and acceptable then all the cosiliest s●crifices offerings in Temples made with ha ds how magnificent soever 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hicrocl in ●ythag aur carn p. 28. i. e. Walke as becomes the Temples of the holy Ghost and ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh 8. Walke in the Spirit i. e. Fulfill the counsels and advices of the Spirit and you shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh Every renewed soul is the Scean and Stage wherein the two mightiest Contraries in the world the Spirit and the Flesh i. e. light and darknesse life and death heaven and hell good and evill Michael and his Angels and the Dragon with his are perpetually combating hand to hand And well is it for a Christian that the holy Spirit is lusting in him against the flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God takes thy part Christian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Arrian in Epictet l. 2. c. 17. the spirit of the Lord of Hosts is with thee if thou dost not sinne and grieve him away Follow but thy Leader be prompt and ready to start at the Divine signall when the holy Ghost displays his Ens●gns then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 March presently forth under those mighty and victorious banners and thou shalt become Invincib●e * When a Christian goeth out thus to warfare following the Almighty conduct of his God he must needs proceed conquering and to conquer My soul followeth hard after thee saith David thy right hand upholds me Psal 63.8 The Original is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My soul cleaves after thee As
but the drooping distressed Christian also questioneth all this because of the deceitfulness of the heart Alas the Scripture tells us that the heart of man is desperately wicked and deceitfull above all things o From Jer. 1.9 The Papists cavils the drooping Christian doubts who can know it and if the heart of man cannot bee known how can wee say wee beleeve or love God For this consider these four things 1. Another man cannot know it I cannot certainly and infallibly know whether another man be sincere or what his heart is for it is the prerogative and excellency of God to bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one that knows the hearts of all men Act. 1.24 2. A wicked mans heart is so wicked and there is such a depth of wickedness in his heart that hee cannot come to the bottome of it 3. If a man cannot know all the secret turnings and windings of his heart yet hee may know the general scope and frame of his heart 4. If hee could not do this of himself yet assisted by the spirit of God which all beleevers have received hee might know the frame bent scope inclination of his own heart Thus far the first proposition that a man may know that hee hath sincere faith in Christ and love to God Now wee proceed to the second 2 Proposition which shews the connexion between grace and glory Second Proposition is this that there is an infallible connexion between justifying faith unfeigned love and eternal glory The Apostle tells us of some things that may bee called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 6.9 things that accompany salvation Having or containing Salvation that are contiguous to salvation that the one toucheth the other this must bee proved for else though I know I do beleeve and love God sincerely to day I can have no infallible assurance of salvation because this may bee lost before to morrow or before I dye Now this I shall indeavour to prove by these three following particulars 1 From the verity of Gods promises 1. The undoubted verity of Gods promises proveth an inseperable connexion between sincere grace and eternal glory Faith is the eye of the soul with it through a promise as through a perspective-glass can the soul have a view of Heaven and glory What greater certainty or security can a man have than the infallible promise of that God who is truth it self who will not deny his Word but the same Love and free Grace that moved him to infuse Grace into thy heart and to make the Promise will move him also to give the thing promised Joh. 3.16 God so loved the world that hee gave his onely begotten Son that whosoever beleeveth on him should not perish but have everlasting life Joh. 5.24 Hee that beleeveth hath everlasting life Hee hath it in the Promise hee hath it in the first-fruits Rom. 8.23 But wee our selves also which have the first-fruits of the Spirit The Jews by offering their first fruits did testifie their thankfulness to God for what they had received and hopes of the full crop in due time Hee hath everlasting life then it must not end Mark 16.16 Hee that beleeveth and is baptized shall bee saved Hee that beleeveth not shall bee damned As certainly as the unbeleever shall be cast into outer darkness so certainly shall the beleever be partaker of the glorious Inheritance of the Saints in Light The Promise is as true as the Threatning Act. 16.30 31. There you see a poor convinced wounded sinner under the load of guilt that had a sight of his lost undone deplorable condition coming to the Apostles and speaking after this manner Yee men of God yee servants of the Lord if there bee any way for mee who have been so great a sinner that have done enough ten thousand times over to damn my own soul if there be any certain way to avoid damnation I beseech you tell mee if there be any means by which I might certainly be saved as you pitty my sinful soul my bleeding heart my wounded conscience tell mee what it is declare it to mee What is the Apostles answer Beleeve on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved The Apostles speak not doubtingly perhaps thou shalt be saved perhaps thou mayest be damned If thou get Faith it may be thou mayest get Heaven Alas what relief peace satisfaction would this have been to his wounded conscience But they speak peremptorily beleeve and thou shalt be saved So that prove thou that thou hast Faith and these Scriptures prove thou shalt have salvation The Connexion therefore will not be questioned if I beleeve I shall be saved this God hath promised but shall not a beleever lose his Faith in Christ and lose his Love to God for the Remonstrants grant that a beleever qua talis as a beleever cannot fall away not come short of glory but qui talis est Hee that is a beleever may fall away totally and finally and so cannot have assurance of salvation because hee hath no assurance that hee shall persevere in his beleeving and state of grace To this I oppose these places of Scripture 1 Thes 5.23 24. And the very God of Peace sanctifie you wholly and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body bee preserved blameless therefore preserved from Apostacy which is exceedingly blame-worthy till when till the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ is this a prayer and not a promise yea it is a prayer indited by the Spirit of God and hath a promise following it if you will read on Faithful is hee that calleth you who also will do it Here the Apostle that had the Spirit prayeth for perseverance and the Apostle that had the Spirit promiseth perseverance Certainty then of perseverance doth not make men careless in the use of means not prayers needless by praying a man obtains the thing promised and the certainty that hee hath by the promise of obtaining puts life into his prayers Phil. 1.6 Being confident of this very thing that hee which hath begun a good work in you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denoteth more safety than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will perform it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will finish it will perfect it until the day of Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.5 Kept garrisoned by the power of God through Faith unto Salvation Joh. 10.28 30. 1 Cor. 10.13 But will with the Temptation make a way to escape therefore they shall persevere for to enable the beleever to persevere in all tentations is to make a way to escape the destruction and hurt the tentation tendeth to God doth promise this absolutely Jer. 32.38 40. And they shall bee my people and I will bee their God and will make an everlasting Covenant with them that I will not turn away from them to do them good but I will put my fear into their hearts that they shall not depart from mee They shall not forsake God because God will not
The Goliah and Holophernes who being once slain the Philistims and Assyrians will soon be routed Throw the head of this Shebah over the wall and the enemy will retreat shamefully 4. Never enter the field without thy Second Fight under the Shield as well as under the Banner of thy General In other fights the General flyes to the Battel upon the wings of his Army but here the Army flyes upon the wings of their General This is done by Faith and Prayer Thus David conque●ed Goliah 1 Sam. 17.45 and the Philistims 2 Sam. 5.19 23. Fight alwayes upon thy knees Let Moses be praying while Josuah is fighting Exod. 17.11 M●y not Christ take it ill if thou carry thy self as if thou meanest to steal a victory before he know of it 5. Put on keep on stand in and exercise thy Spiritual Arms Ephes 6. v. 10. 18. That only is Armour of Proof never any girds it on but may boast before the Victory Allude to 1 Kings 20.11 never any fought prosperously without it It 's our mettal as well as our weapon Neither Earth nor Hell can stand against this Artilery of Heaven Let not Satan find thee disarmed lest he leave thee dispoyled There is no fighting with carnal weapons against a spiritual Enemy You may as well beat the Devil with a sword or spear as conquer sin by the power of Free-will or with moral and worldly Arguments They are but paper bullets and paper walls the scorn not the Terrour of Hell though useful in some cases Remember withal there are no Arms for thy Back-parts 6. With some Lusts fight like the Parthians flying 1 Cor. 6.18 and 2 Tim. 2.22 This is but an honourable retreat and warlike stratagem Jos 8.15 Judg. 20.32 Youthful Lusts are like the Basilisk or like a Burning-glasse in the Sun that may not be looked on 2 Sam. 11.2 with other Lusts fight like the Romans charging home 7. Entertain no Parley with thy Enemy This cost all mankind dear at first Gen. 3. vers 1. 4. It 's d●ssloyal looks like a confederacy and is very dangerous Come not into Jaels tent sleep not in Dalilah's lap talk not with Joab lest he smite thee under the fifth Rib. Sin and Satan are too cunning Sophisters for us to dispute withal He in a manner gives up his Cause that will plead it with the Devil The best Answer to Satan's Suit is a round and churlish denyal Zach. 3.2 Matth. 4.10 Jude vers 9. Parleying is a kind of faint denyal and draws on this impudent Suiter 8. Take advantage by every thing that befalls thee in this Spiritual Warfare Eye thy reserves The Captain of thy Salvation is both thy Vanguard and thy Rereward and will be thy Reward Thou gainest thy Husband as David did his wife by conquering these Philistims and while thou art fighting for him he is weaving thy Crown 2 Tim. 4.7 8. Eye thy Fellow-souldiers those Worthyes of the Heavenly David that are both Militant and Triumphant Heb. 12.1 Example is very forcible Yea take advantage by thy very Foy●s to be more humble charitable dependent watchful and cour●gious Let not the Enemy gain the field after Conquest by a back-blow of Pride This Antiochus gains often more by flattery then by force Dan. 11.21 22. It 's honourable for Christ to say well done c. but dangerous for Satan to say well done and safe for thee to say poorly done when thou hast done thy best Despise thy self when others admire thee and be assured that self-admiration is the most dangereus Devil in the World Especially improve Advantages prudently when thou hast thy Enemy on the hip yea on the ground fall with all thy weight upon him give him no Quarter lest thou meet with the doom of Ahab 1 Kings 20.42 and of the Israelites Numb 33.55 56. Here as one notes well Learn Wisdom of the Serpents-Brood who never thought they had Christ sure enough though they had him in the Grave Matth. 27.64 Remember it 's thy highest Wisdom first to discern next to improve the Spiritual Contrarieties that act in thy own bosome He is the wisest man that knows himself and he the strongest man that conquers himself This alone is the true Israelite who by conquering himself doth in a pious sense overcome both Heaven Earth and Hell Gen. 32.28 What Faith is that which except we have in Prayer we must not think to obtain any thing of God James 1.6 But let him aske in Faith FOr the Connexion of these words with the former since they will not give much light to the Question I am to handle and the time will hardly permit things more necessary to be spoken I shall wholly wave or very briefly speak to The Subject I am to speak to is to show what is meant here by asking in Faith or what Faith that is which who so hath not must not or hath no reason to expect to receive any thing from God God may bestow his mercies where and on whom he pleaseth but is no way engaged by promise to bestow any mercy on such an one that asketh not in Faith It is not said that such an one should not expect any great matters from God but not any thing at all the least mercy is greater then he hath any reason to think he shall receive not only he shall not receive Wisdom spoken of vers 5. but not any thing Wisdom he may get as Achitophel did and many other things without praying in Faith or praying at all but for Divine Wisdom or for any blessing from God he may think what he will but if the Apostle may be thought worthy to advise him he would not have him think to receive any thing except he ask and ask in Faith Therefore it much concerns us to know what is meant by asking in Faith since the want of it makes our Prayers of none effect if we pray without it we may pray but you cannot justly expect any return of your Prayers except it be as of an arrow shot up to Heaven upon your own head to your wounding Of this Question I shall speak very plainly as the Lord shall enable me in the evidence and demonstration of the Spirit Comparing Spiritual thing● with Spiritual things Some may make it to imply more to ask in Faith then to ask with Faith or that it is more to be in Faith then for Faith to be in us To be in Love is more then to love and when it is said Revel 1.10 that the Apostle was in the Spirit it showes that not only he had the Spirit and was filled with it but there were great overflowings and a superabundance of the Spirit This the Apostle seems to call James 5.15 the Prayer of Faith as if their Faith rather prayed then they as St. Paul speaks It is not I but the Grace of God in me when Faith rather may be said to act us then we to act Faith But I suppose those high degrees of
of him Mat. 11.28 Great then is the mistake of those that think Zeal and Moderation which were thus eminently concentred in Christ should be inconsistent No lovelier match than of this blessed couple in our souls nor of more universal use to us throughout the course of our lives if rightly ordered the one for God the other for the World that giving life and intenseness in our duties towards him this restraining us in our personal concernments that edging and quickening us in desires motions and endeavours for heaven and this stopping us and retarding the wheels when we drive too furiously after our own interests that according to knowledge supplying us with resolution for and fervor in the great Duties of Religion this according to charity duly qualifying them in the less that our love to God and one another may walk hand in hand heaven-ward and neither leave the other behind Positively It must then be in matters of opinion and Christian Liberty and Indifferency as they all referre to practice And here let none expect I should determine what things are only matters of Opinion Liberty and Indifferency which so much trouble the World what not For every one herein must according to the Scriptures be in some respect judge for himself and his own practice 1 Cor. 10.29 Rom. 14.4.12 Upon which I shall proceed and shew our moderation in Principles Passions Speeches and Practices 1. We must moderate our Principles or Judgments concerning these by forming them according to the nature of truths and duties This is necessary not only in regard of our selves for as the Judgment such is the practice but others also for the moderating our prejudices towards them We must therefore carefully distinguish between matters of faith and necessary duty and matters of opinion and conditional practice For though every ray of truth be excellent in it self and absolutely there be no minimum in religione Val. Max. as the Heathen said yet comparatively there is great difference in truths some differing from others as one star from another in glory Nor have all the like clearness of revelation nor shine forth with that lustre as others nor all a like consequence Some are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 great in themselves clear to us and weighty in their consequence Mat. 23.23 These we must hold fast practice carefully contend for earnestly 1 Tim. 1.19 2 Tim. 1.13 Jude 3. Others are such as salva religione we may and do differ in both in judgment and practice without the endangering our happiness For the Kingdom of God is not meat and drink but righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14.17 i. e. in the opinion or practice of those the false Apostles would have obtruded as necessary In these things our Principles should give us leave to meet one another in our Practice keeping the Unity of the Spirit in the former and the bond of Peace by the latter as the Apostle enjoyns Ephes 4.3 2. We must moderate our passions in these our heat and fervor for them our anger against those that differ from us in them In these things wherein the way to heaven is broad enough there may be difference without division and let any take heed how they s●raighten it taking upon them to be wiser than Christ who well knowing humane frailty so chalked it out to us telling us He that doth the will of his Father not that is for or against these things is his brother sister and mother and consequently should be brethren and sisters amongst themselves It is strange to consider how upon principles and prejudice once suckt in Passion blinds men in th●ir own opinions and practices and what woful divisions hath in all Ages arisen thence That the Eastern and Western Churches wherein were so many Grave Holy Learned and Wise men should so fall out as to make a separation every one would be ready to think and say surely it was some great matter that occasioned it would you know Nothing but about the time of the observation of Easter Though Irenaeus and others were mighty Advocates for Peace yet nothing would serve Victor Bishop of Rome but exact Uniformity in these indifferencies and thence arose about two hundred years after Christ that great breach of Unity betwixt those two great and famous Churches How doth all the zeal and fervor we should bestow upon the great things of Religion run out at this time amongst us about these things May not I say quorsum haec perditio Wherefore do ye spend your money for that which is not bread and your labour for that which satisfieth not Why do we stand thus busily hewing good Timber into Chips and leaving out the Figures spend our time in the bare Cyphers How many on both sides at this day make it their Religion to be for or against those things that they account indifferent in themselves So true is the Moralists observation that the devil alwaies labours That mankind may either wholly neglect a Deity or be wholly taken up in the Externals of Worship Quite contrary to Scripture that teacheth us to mind every thing as of consequence in its place to do the great and weighty things and not to leave the other undone My beloved the wrath of man workeeh not the righteousness of God When Elijah that good Prophet was discontented 1 Kin. 19. and passionately requests he may die Ver. 4. and professeth his zeal for the great things of Religion Ver. 10. God passeth by him but in the great and strong wind or in the Earthquake or in the fire the Lord was not but in the still small voice Ver. 11 12. shewing him and us thereby that he is not in our Passions and if not for the great how much less for these things of Religion wherein the Apostle's rule for peace and edification Rom. 14.19 should be observed God never suspended his Churches peace upon these for if I should not love others till I knew they were of all my opinions and my practice in these I might perhaps never love any 3. We must moderate our speeches in our discourses of debates and contests for or against these Some speeches we are too apt to we must wholly forbear others we must moderate 1. We must beware of judging and censuring others for these We may in apparent transgressions of Gods Law censure upon occasion the offenders though not rashly or for hypocrites reprobates or the like but for these we must not at all Rom. 14.4 c. For in these through anothers knowledge that may not be a sin in him which would to thee and thou judgest sinful therefore in others for want of charity How much malice and how little candor do we use in this How do we almost make it the characteristical note of Christianity to be of such or such a way which none account essential to Religion We are apt as those in Africa in Tertullians time to account it enough that we
praise to God for all or any of his benefits promised or bestowed and that with our hearts Filliucius out of Aquin We praise God for all his perfections we thank God for his benefits lips and lives Some affirm that much of Religion is seen in piety to parents observance to our betters and thankfulnesse to our benefactors God is indeed all these to us Yet the proper notion of our thankfulnesse refers to God as our benefactor every benefit from God makes the receiver a debtor thankfulnesse is rather the confessing of our debt then the paiment of it and for as much as we are bound alwaies to be thankfull it doth acknowledge we are alwaies beholden to God and allwaies insolvent Now a child of God is bound to be thankfull to God above all men because 1. He is more competent then any other 2. He is more concerned then any other I. More competent by acts of reason and grace too All that the Scripture speaks as to the duty of thankfulnesse may be referred to these Heads 1. To know and acknowledge the Lords mercies 2. To remember them i. e. to record and commemorate them 3. To value and admire them 4. To blaze and proclaim them In all which a gracious soul is much more competent then a meer natural man though indued with quick understanding strong memory and great eloquence For the Spirit of God hath inlightened his soul and taught him this lesson he is principled for it he is a well tuned instrument his heart boyleth with good matter and his tongue is as the pen of a ready writer Psal 45.1 as David speaks on this occasion when he spake of the praises of the King in his Song of Loves This Spirit of God in a thankfull soul is as the breath of the Organ without which the pipes make no sound yea as the breath of the Trumpetter by which the Trumpet gives a certain and melodious sound This is it that makes that noble Evangelical spirit yea that heavenly Angelical spirit in Christians See a place for it Eph. 5.18 19 20. Be not drunk with wine wherein is excesse but be filled with the spirit speaking to your selves in Psalms and Hymns c. giving thanks alwaies for all things unto God and the Father in the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ shewing that what wine doth in Poets and good fellows it makes them sing and roar out Catches by which they make musick to the devil so the Spirit of God in Saints is the principle of all true thankfulnesse and holy joy towards God and indeed there was a very gracious frame of spirit this way in Primitive Christians II. More concerned as h●●ing received more then others to whomsoever much is given of them much is required Luke 12.48 a proportion of duty according to the degree of every portion of mercy whether you consider what is given or what is forgiven you There are two things which every gracious soul will acknowledge No man saith he in the world hath deserved less of God than I and none hath received more of God than I how much then am I concerned to be thankful I have read of a holy man that was seen once standing still with tears in his eyes and looking up to heaven and being asked by one that passed by why he did so said I admire the Lords mercy to me that did not make me a Toade that Vermine being then casually at his feet The least common mercy affects a gracious soul that knows his desert nothing but misery 2 Sam. 9 8. Mephibosheth bowed himself and said What is thy servant that thou shouldst look upon such a dead dog as I am When David had told him he should have his Lands and eat bread at his Table When the Lord spares our lives and gives us common mercies we must admire and adore his goodness And this leads me to the second general Question Quere 2 Why and upon what grounds Christians are bound to give thanks in every thing Answ 1 It is the will of God in Christ Jesus The will of God in Christ Jesus is the clearest Rule and the highest Obligation to any soul for the performance of any duty O that men would now adaies study more act by and hold fast to this rule And ask conscience in the performance of every duty is this the will of God in Christ Jesus It was meet that this duty of thankfulness should be prest and practised under the Gospel because it argue a spiritual and noble frame of Soul the highest pitch of grace which is a true Gospel frame David under the Old Testament had a New Testament heart in this particular his Psalms which were all penn'd upon emergent occasions are all Tehillah and Tephillah Prayer and Praise his Heart and Harp were so tuned to the Praises of God to Psalms of Degrees to Hallelujahs that some have thought the Lord is praised with those Psalms in Heaven Zach. 12.8 Greg. Hom. 20. in Ezek. Yet is it promised under the Gospel that he that is feeble shall be as David which some understand as to Praise and Thanksgivings upon the account of Gospel grace More punctually this is the will of God in Christ Jesus i. e. Jesus Christ shews us the duty of thankfulness both by Pattern and by Precept for he was not only usherd into the World with Songs of Thanksgiving by Angels Luk. 1.46 68. Luk. 2.13 14 20 29. by Zachary by Mary by Simeon by the Shepherds c. but the Lord Jesus himself was a great Pattern and President of Thankfulness all his life long and in this also was a true Son of David He thanked God frequently and fervently I thank thee O Father Lord of heaven and earth because thou hast hid these things from the Wise and Prudent Matth. 11.25 and hast revealed them unto babes when his Disciples preached and cast out devils Thus also when he raised Lazarus Father Joh. 11.41 I thank thee that thou hast heard me When he was to eat common bread Mark 8.6 Luk. 22.19 he blessed it with giving of thanks Much more consecrated bread Thus was he a Pattern of thankfulness he did in every thing give thanks In like manner we find him reproving the nine Lepers for their unthankfulness which shews that he held out thankfulness as a duty Luk. 17.16 17. personally he gave a Pattern and Precept for it Now though this were enough to shew it the will of God in Christ Jesus yet these words reach further namely to shew that is the strain of the Gospel in the Apostles Doctrine and Practice for they through their Commission and the great measure of Gods Spirit in them declared the will of God in Christ Jesus They worshipped Luke 24. ult and returned to Jerusalem with great joy and were continually in the Temple praising and blessing God Amen What the Apostle Pauls spirit was in this by whom so
17. If we suffer with him we shall be glorified together Luke 24.26 Christus prius ipse bibit potionem quam suis paravit Bern. parv Serm. Luth. in Exod. cap. 15. This way Christ entr'd into glory Ought not Jesus to have suffered these things and so to have entred into glory now if we will enter with him we must follow after him how by taking up his Cross Christ like a good Physitian first tasted the medicine that he gave his Patient The Cross of Christ sweetens our sufferings in the bitterness of them as that piece of wood sweetned the waters of Marah being cast into them Therefore John wrote to the Saints as partakers together of a great priviledge Rev. 1.9 vers 3. when he said Companion in tribulation and in the Kingdo● and patience of Jesus Christ Then never hope to go another way than the Captain of our salvation hath led us for if we baulk his track we are lost Aug. in Psa 52. must we not then give thanks for affliction that conforms us to our head VIII The Crosse is a Christians banner his honour and the special favour of the Lord towards him therefore be thankful for it Let not this seem a riddle or paradox Phil. 1. ● I have you saith the Apostle in my heart for as much as in my bonds and in the defence of the Gospel ye are all partakers of my grace where by grace many understand a special act of Gods favour to him and them wherewith they were to account themselves highly graced Hence he saith again a little after vers 29. Utrumque ostendit dei donum quia utrumque dicit esse donatum Aug. Velasquez in locum Phil. 2. 1 Pet. 4.14 to you it 's given in the behalf of Christ not only to believe but also to suffer for his sake This he accounts a peculiar gift of God to them whereof but few in comparison do partake Hence saith one upon that place it is a most noble yea and almost divine thing to suffer for the Lord Jesus For the Lord gave Christ himself on this very account a name above every name Mark what the Apostle Peter saith If ye be reproached for the name of Christ happy are you for the Spirit of God and of glory resteth on you Which words must be understood emphatically the highest manifestation and operation of the Spirit of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Spirit per He emphaticum Gods Spirit manifesteth it self variously in several subjects but in sufferers for Christ the very Spirit and quintessence of glory seems to be extracted and poured on thee Upon all these accounts and many more such we are to thank God for crosses and corrections because the good of them doth flow from Gods goodnesse not from their nature When the Horseleech by the Physicians direction sucks our blood and thereby performs a cure the Horseleech is not to be thanked but the Physician for his application So the Lord can make the bloody persecutors of his people to be instruments of good to his people no thanks to them but to him for it How shall a Christian bring his heart to this holy and heavenly Quere 5 frame so as in every thing to give thanks Hearken to these few directions and lay them up in your hearts Ans and draw them out in your constant practise I. Pray earnestly for the Spirit of God Canticum novum vetus homo male concordant Aug. without that Spirit thou canst never pray or praise God duely because not spiritually none can sanctifie the Lord God in his heart which is the first Principle of this work but he whose heart the Lord God hath sanctified The Holy Spirit breathing in a man makes him a living Organ tuned to and sounding out his praise Psal 33.1 Praise is comely for the upright but as uncomely in a carnal mouth as a Jewel in a swine snowt Non musica cordul● sed cór Non clamans sed amans cantat in aure dei 1 Cor. 14.15 I will sing with the Spirit The pompous dresses and melodious quires of magnificats without the Spirit of God breathing among them is but as a sounding brass and a tinckli●g cymbal For indeed without the Spirit of God in men they neither can not will remember the Lords mercyes nor consider them nor value them nor be affected with them nor blaze the praise of them The dead saith David do not praise thee dead hearts produce dead works it is the Spirit that quickens II. Labour to get a continual quick sight and sense of sin this will make thee sensib●e of every mercy and thankful for it So the provocation and merit of sin is nothing but curses death and wrath being due to it that yet thou shouldest be so tenderly spared and instead of miseries shouldest enjoy blessings how shouldest thou be affected with this Gen. 32.10 per Psalmos 1 Tim. 1.12 ad 17. Invitat ad magna qui gratantè● accipit modica Cassiod Anima immersa sanguini Christi aurea reddi●ur ut manus in aurum liquefactum injecta deauratur Chrysost Psal 111.9 as Mephibosheth was with David's kindnesse to him an humble broken heart is the most thankful heart this was most eminent in the most eminent Saints 1 Jacob 2 David 3 Paul c. He that knows he hath forfeited all knows he deserves nothing but the reward of that forfeiture which is wrath and he that deserves nothing thanks God for every thing even for the least drop and crumb III. Behold every mercy coming to thee in the stream of Christs blood and through the Covenant of Grace this gives the mercy both an estimate and a relish this doth both sanctifie it and sweeten it and sublimate it a crust of brown bread coming thus is better then a purse full of gold another way as that Kings kisse to one friend was said to be better gold than a cup of gold which he gave another friend He sent redemption to his people he remembred his Covenant for ever holy and reverend is his name The deliverance there was in David's account and that truly the more thank worthy as being upon a covenant account for thus every mercy is a token of the Lords favour to his favourite it is that which makes common mercies to become special mercies Non tam beneficium sed ratio beneficii attend●n●a est Carnal men so they enjoy mercies they mind not which way they come in so they can but have them but a child of God knows that every thing that comes through Christs hands is the better for it and tastes the sweeter by far IV. Look on thy mercies as answers to thy Prayers and bless the Lord for them on that account for that 's double mercy 1. That God hath inclined and directed thine heart to beg such a mercy for this is a special act of the Spirit of adoption Rom. 8.26 27. 2. That he
understand it or 2. For an expression of the prolonging of his sojourning for so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to draw forth or to prolong and thus the Septuagint renders this place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whom the Arabick Syriack and vulgar Latine versions follow with some others and the next verse seems to favour this sense ver 6. My soul hath long dwelt c. but either way gives us the same ground of complaint only the first sense doubles the ground of the Psalmists trouble and the other suggests the circumstance of the long continuance of his sojourning By Kedar is understood part of Arabia the inhabitants whereof are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bochart ut sup or dwellers in tents because they had no fixed and setled habitation but were robbers and lived upon the prey Now we are not to suppose that David did really sojourn and dwell among these barbarous people but he speaks this of his wandring about from place to place without any setled habitation and to set forth the cruelty and inhumanity of those among whom he dwelt he doth expresse it thus Woe is me that I dwell c. as if one living among professed Christians who deal with him more like savages than Christians should say Woe is me that I sojourn among Turks and Saracens And thus you see Davids present condition which he bewails is his absence from Jerusalem and the Tabernacle or place of Gods solemn worship and his converse with wicked and ungodly men and then these two truths lye plain before us in the words It is oftentimes the lot and portion of good men to be deprived of the Doct. 1 society of the godly and of opportunities of publick serving God and to dwell among and converse with wicked and ungodly persons It is a real ground of trouble and sorrow to a good man to be thus deprived Doct. 2 c. 'T was that which here made David proclaim himself in a state of woe and misery 'T was that which the Apostle tells us did vexe the righteous soul of Lot 2 Pet. 2.7 and which made the holy Prophet Elijah even weary of his life 1 King 19.4 You may easily imagine what a sad heart a poor lamb might well have if it be driven from the green pastures and still waters and forced to lodge among Wolves and Foxes where it must feed upon Carrion or starve and be continually in danger of being lodged in the bellies of its cruel and bloody companions unless lome secret over-ruling hand do restrain their rage and feed it with wholesome food and truly such is the condition of those that follow the Lamb of God in holy Lamb-like qualities when deprived of green pastures and still waters of Gospel Ordinances and forc'd to converse with wicked and ungodly men In handling of this Point I shall first lay before you the grounds of it and then adjoyn such practical application as may be usefull and profitable The grounds of this Truth do partly refer to God partly to wicked men and partly to the godly themselves if in such a condition a beleeving soul either look upwards or outwards or inwards he will see much cause of grief and trouble 1. With reference unto God and that upon a double account 1. It is a real ground of sorrow to a beleeving soul to be deprived of occasions of solemn blessing and praysing God the soul that is full of the sense of the goodness of God that knows how many thousand wayes the Lord is continually obliging it to love and bless him cannot but be afflicted in spirit to be kept from making its publick acknowledgements of divine goodness The Psalmist tell us Psal 65 1. that Praise waiteth for God in Sion that is in the publick Assemblies of the Church and truly 't is a grief to a believing soul not to wait there with his thank-offerings not to pay his vows unto the Lord in the presence of all his people Psal 116.17 Psal 66.18 in the Courts of the Lords house c. not to declare to all that fear God what he hath done for their souls 2. It is a real ground of sorrow to live among those that are continually reproaching and blaspeming the Name of God to see sinners despise the goodness of God and trample upon his grace and mercy and scorn his love and kindness and kick at his bowels and spit in his face and stab at his heart who is our God our Father our Friend our good and gracious Lord and King This must needs make the beleeving soul cry out Woe is me that I live among such Let us suppose a person that hath been hugely obliged by a Prince to love him and that indeed loves him as his life if this Prince should be driven from his Throne and an usurper get into his place would it not be great affliction and sadning to the spirit of such a person to live among those who every day revile reproach scorn and abuse his gracious Prince Why Sirs if you and I be true beleevers we know that the Lord is our Soveraign King Prince such a one who hath infinitely more obliged us to love him than 't is possible for any Prince to oblige a subject we do love the Lord as our lives nay better than our lives or else we love him not at all must it not then be matter of grief to hear ungodly sinners who have driven God away from their hearts souls where his Throne should be set up and who have let that grand usurper the Devil set up his throne within them and among them and who daily say unto God as those wicked ones Job 21.14 Depart from us for we desire not the knowledge of thy wayes to hear such curse and swear and blaspheme God and in their lives by wicked ungodly courses do him all the despight dishonor that they can bring his Name to the Tavern to the Stews upon the stage and there foot and defile the great and glorious Name of God with the worst of polutions Certainly Sirs he cannot account God his Friend his Father his good and gracious Prince whose eye doth not run down with Rivers of tears to see men so far from keeping Gods Law 2. It is a trouble to good men to sojourn c. with reference to those wicked ungodly persons among whom they live it grieves their souls to see sinners run into all excess of riot eagerly pursuing hell and damnation greedily guzling down full draughts of the venome of Asps and the poyson of Dragons it pities them to see sinners stab themselves to the heart and laughing at their own plague sores jeasting away God and heaven and eternal happiness If any of us should see a company of men so far besotted and distracted as that one should rend and burn the Evidences of a great Inheritance which others labour to deprive him of another should cast inestimable pearls
would have the influence of the Ordinances to be lasting these we shall comprize in four particulars First Take heed you perform not holy duties negligently a heartlesse formal negligent attendance on the Ordinances will be so farre from procuring a durable blessing that it will fix a curse upon you Jer. 48.10 Cursed be he that doth the work of tht Lord negligently see Mal. 1.8 14. If you invert the Apostles advice 1 Cor. 7. and deal with the things of God as you should do with those of the world If you pray as though you prayed not and hear as though you heard not and use the Ordinances as though you did not use them they will be no otherwise effectual than if there were no efficacy in them it will continue on you as though it continued not like that of the Sun in a Winter day which thaws the earth a little at noon but so as it is harder frozen up the next night Therefore let your hearts be ingaged in every holy duty Jer. 30.21 Who is this that ingaged his heart to approach unto me You must hear as for life Deut. 32.46 47. Set your hearts unto all the words which I testifie among you this day c. For it is not a vain thing for you because it is your life c. you must wrestle in prayer your hearts in this duty should be as it were in a conflict in an agony 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the Apostles word Rom. 15.13 Now I beseech you brethren for the Lord Jesus Christs sake and for the love of the Spirit that ye strive together with me in your prayers to God for me Your prayers should be such as the other Apostle describes James 5.16 The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much the word rendred effectual fervent is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is one possessed with a spirit and acted by it If the word here used look that way then suitable to the matter to which it is applied it imports a possession in a good sense And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will be a prayer full of the holy Ghost wherein that blessed Spirit is operative exerting its force and energy Such a prayer as shews the soul to be possessed of the holy Spirit and acted by it so as all the powers of that soul are set a work and put upon motion towards God effectually Such a prayer availes much procures great advantages and of long continuance Generally in all holy Ordinances your souls should stretch out themselves to reach the Lord they should spring up to him in acts of love and desire and claspe about him with delight and complacence and lay hold on him with a humble and filial confidence and stir up themselves to lay hold on him We do all fade as a leafe saith the Church Isa 64.6 both their persons and their righteousnesse did so and the reason thereof follows ver 7. There is none that stirreth up himself to take hold on thee Secondly Beware of the world meddle not with it more than needs must and when it is needfull ingage not therein but with fear caution and vigilance Carry your selves amongst worldly objects and employments as though you were amongst cheats and thieves they have the art to pick your heart slily and to rob them of that which is more precious than Gold when you little think of it Let not your minds and hearts plunge themselves in the world nothing sooner nothing oftner extinguisheth divine influences than this puddle The cares and delights and employments of the world when they are immoderate or unseasonable they choak the Word Matth. 13.22 they stifle the issue of holy Ordinances so as it becomes like the untimely birth of a woman When your hearts are warmed in holy duties you should be as cautious and wary how you venture into the world as you are of going into the frosty aire when you are all in a sweat What is kindled by the Word or Prayer c. how quickly is it puft out by the world when you rush into it unwarily it requires as much care to keep it in as to keep a Candle in when you would carry it through the open aire in a rainy blustring night The further you are above the world the longer may you retain any spirituall impressions Geographers write of some Mountains whose tops are above the middle Region of the Air and there lines and figures being drawn in the dust have been found say they in the same form and order untouched undefaced a long time after and the reason is because they are above those winds and showres and storms which soon wear out and efface any such draughts in this lower Region The lower your minds and hearts and conversations are the more in the hurry of this boysterous world the lesse will any thing that is heavenly and spiritual abide upon them Let the soul be brought into never so good order by the help of holy duties yet a little unwary ingaging in earthly businesse will ruffle disturb and quite discompose it When your souls are by the power of the Ordinance set on motion towards Christ and Heaven if you would hold on in a continued course you must beware of worldlinesse and keep free as much as may be from earthly incumbrances and intanglements Let us lay aside every weight and the sinne which doth so easily beset us and let us run with patience the race that is set before us Heb. 12.1 Let us persevere and hold out in that gracious and heavenly course which the Gospel hath put us on but that this may be done one great impediment must be removed The sin that doth so easily beset us must be shaken off Now that sin as some Expositors conceive is worldlinesse and it is probable for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being a circumstance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if we render it literally is the sin that hath goodly circumstances And no sin sets off it self with more goodly circumstances than worldlinesse no sinne hath more specious pleas and pretences to excuse vindicate and justifie it self No sin hath more fig leaves to cover its nakednesse and to shrowd it from discovery and conviction than worldlinesse This must be shaken off it is the great defacer of heavenly impressions the chief interrupter of holy motions if you would hold on when the impetus which is imprest on you by any Ordinance hath set you a going beware of the world beware of worldlinesse Thirdly Take heed of any inordinacy in affection inclination or design Such inordinacies give the heart a strong bias holy duties check it but a little give it but as it were a small rub when this is once past over it will hold on in that course to which it is most sweyed The Mnistery of John Baptist had some influence upon Herod He heard John gladly and did many things Mark 6.20 but sensuality being predominant those better inclinations