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A51443 The preachers tripartite in three books. The first to raise devotion in divine meditations upon Psalm XXV : the second to administer comfort by conference with the soul, in particular cases of conscience : the third to establish truth and peace, in several sermons agianst the present heresies and schisms / by R. Mossom ... Mossom, Robert, d. 1679. 1657 (1657) Wing M2866; ESTC R32966 363,207 375

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have the conformity of the Universal Church and I know not what more can be required 1. As for the Apostles practice we can have no surer testimony then St. Pauls Argument 1 Cor. 7.14 Therefore are your children holy Holy in a known and common account of the Church which could be none other then that of Church Communion admitted thereunto by Baptism For observe This of the children being holy the Apostle makes a convincing argument That the unbelieving Parent is sanctified by the believing Wherefore this of the childrens holiness must be a known holiness otherwise the Apostles argument were no argument And whereby was the childrens holiness known but in order to Church Communion Into which Communion there is no known entrance and visible admission but by Baptism 2. Pass we from the Scriptures and consult we the very next ages after the Apostles Orig. l. 5. ad Rom. c. 6. in Luc. Hom. 8. For the usage of the Church And here Origen witnesseth That Traditionem ab Apostolis suscepit etiam parvulis dare Baptismum the Church received a Tradition from the Apostles to give Baptism even to children About the next age after Origen for later he could not be the Author of the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy attributed to Dionysius the Areopagite he pleads for Infants Baptism 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dionys Eccles Hier. c. 7. as being of those things which the divine Ministers the Apostles from the beginning had delivered down to the Church I might give you the testimony of those first Fathers and Doctors both of the Greek and Latin Churches Irenaeus Tertullian Nazianzen Basil and others but we will insist awhile upon two Testimonies most full and convincing the one of St. Cyprian the other of St. Augustine Cypr. Epist ad Fid. Presbyt That of St. Cyprian we have in his Epistle to Fidus the Presbyter who propounds the Question Whether Infants might be baptized before the Eighth day urging the Instance and Analogy of Circumcision Cyprian gives his own judgment and that of a Council of Sixty six Bishops for the resolution resolving That Baptism be not deferred any long time and yet not confined to any certain time and if necessity required That there be a present Administration Now St. Cyprian lived within few years more then a hundred of St. John so that he and a Council of Sixty six Bishops could not be ignorant of what was the Apostolical practise as to Infants Baptism seeing some of their Fathers and many of their Grandfathers in all probability yea without all doubt did live in the Apostles times and were baptized by some Apostolical hands Now as for the testimony of St. Augustine it is of the more credit and esteem being spoken against his profest Adversaries the Pelagians who wanted neither wit nor will to have retorted the Error if he had not delivered the truth when he sayes of them Aug. de pecc●t mer. rem l. 1. Parvulos Baptizandos esse concedunt qui contra authoritatem Universae Ecclesiae proeuldubio per Dominum Apostolos traditam venire non possunt They grant children ought to be baptized because they cannot go against the Authority of the Universal Church without all doubt delivered by Christ and his Apostles The Non-Baptism of Infants had been a strong argument for Pelagianism as their Baptism was an invincible argument against it so that either to defend themselves or offend the Orthodox certainly the Pelagians would have denied Infants Baptism had they not well known the practise of the Universal Church was warranted by the Authority of Christ and the Ministry of his holy Apostles I might yet further enlarge and give you infinite Testimonies for Infants Baptism as to the constant practise of the Universal Church for above these One thousand six hundred years that of the Prophet being perfectly fulfilled Isa 49.22 That God having lift up his hand to the Gentiles and set up a standard to the people they have brought unto the Church her sons in their arms she having few Members of her Communion but who were admitted in their Infant-Baptism So that certainly our Saviour was so far from excluding Infants that he chiefly intended them in the commission and instructions he gives his Apostles and in them all the Ministers of his Church saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye disciple all Nations baptising them c. Having given you the original and use of Baptism we proceed to the benefits and effects thereof all applicatory to Infants Know then the Sacraments are no empty and bare signs to signifie but they are sacred and moral Instruments to convey real and effectual Seals to confirm yea gracious and Evangelical pledges to assure For so we are catechised by the Church if we have not forgot our Church-Catechism in which we have this most clear most full definition of a Sacrament That it is an outward visible sign of an inward invisible grace which grace is given and which sign is ordained ordained by Christ himself as a means whereby we receive that grace and a pledge to assure us thereof So that in Baptism then where the subject and person baptized does not ponere obicem put a bar and hinderance as the School speaks from St. Augustine as of Infants we are assured they do not In their Baptism then as the Water gives the outward sign so the Spirit gives the inward grace and when the Minister pronounceth saying I baptize thee in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost then is the power and vertue of the Blessed Trinity present to justifie and to sanctifie to cleanse and renew the inward man as sure as the Sacramental Water is present to sprinkle and to wash to cleanse and to purifie the outward man And now that the Sacraments are thus effectual is not by any natural causality or physical operation in themselves but by vertue of the gracious promise and voluntary institution of Christ whose Spirit still accompanies his Word to the quickning sanctifying and saving of his Church and chosen Tert. de Bapt. c. 8. Very aptly then does Tertullian call the waters Pristinam sedem Spiritus Sancti the ancient Seat of the Holy Ghost by whose quickning power they become prolifical both in nature and in grace For that the renovation of the Church was typified in the Creation of the World as in the Creation The Spirit moved upon the waters Gen. 1.2 and by a quickning power did produce the living Creatures so now in the renovation the Spirit moves upon the waters still in that by a quickning power of the Holy Ghost Tit. 3.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we are renewed by Baptism that Laver of Regeneration to become an holy and heavenly Off-spring alive unto God in Christ Jesus St. Cyril of Jerusalem calls Baptism 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Antitype of Christs sufferings the Water indeed that represents the Image of Death receiving the
Body as Baptism is sometimes and in some places administred into its Bosom as into a Sepulchre Rom. 6.4 whereby we are said to be buried with Christ but raised from the Water the Grave gives up her dead and we are risen with Christ renewed again to life by the quickning power of the Spirit in the efficacy and operation of his grace Rom. 6.3 So that as we are Baptized into Christs death so are we baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so Theodoret into a participation of the Lords Resurrection Very fitly then is the Font of holy Baptism compared by Leo to the Womb of the Blessed Virgin in which the Holy Ghost is powerfully present for our Spiritual Conception 1 Pet. 1.3 In begetting us again unto God by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ For as of Christ risen Acts 13.33 so of the Infant Baptized does God seem to say This day have I begotten thee And to them who are thus begotten again hear St. Chrysostome reckon up the several Divine Benefits and Blessings Quasi tot Baptismatis largitates honores As so many acts of grace and titles of honor accompanying their Baptism They are become not onely Citizens but also Saints and not onely Saints but also sons and not onely sons but also heirs and not onely heirs of God but also brethren of Christ Rom. 8.17 and not onely brethren of Christ but also coheirs with Christ and not onely coheirs of his Kingdom but also members of his body and not onely members of his body but also temples of his presence and not onely temples of his presence but also organs of his Spirit Et hac de causa etiam Infantes Baptizamus And for this cause also we Baptize Infants that they may be sanctified that they may be justified and that they may be adopted Chrys Tom. 5. Hom. ad Neophyt recited by Aug. l. 1. cont Julian c. 6. Cassand de Bapt. Infant so St. Chrysostome as he is recited by St. Augustine Justification and Adoption being relactive acts the admitting them in Infants is no difficulty but concerning Sanctification as a real work by infusion of inherent holiness whether we shall allow that to Infants in Baptism is a great dispute Cassander from the Antients he makes the Baptismal Regeneration of Infants to consist in the remission of original sin which is Justification and in the acceptation to eternal life which is Adoption But now what the Sacramental Sanctification which accompanies this Justification and Adoption is St. Augustine resolves Difficile est dicere Aug. con● Donat. l. 4. c. 23. Episc Satisb Epist ad D. Ward It is hard to say yea he that shall undertake the cause as to quit it of all difficulties Ego me Auditorem libentissimè profiterer says our English Augustine I would most willingly profess my self an Auditor and yield the chair Even they who deny Grace inherent habits infused do yet acknowledge the presence and habitation of the Holy Ghost now sure we are the Holy Ghost dwells not but in an holy Temple yet how far the baptized Infant is sanctified to be this Temple and wherein expresly that Sanctification doth consist Explicet qui intelligit ego fateor me non intelligere saith that Learned Author Episc Satisb ibid. and Reverend Father much the honor of our Nation and Ornament of our Church Let him unfold it that understands it for my part I confess mine ignorance That Children are capable of real Sanctification we must needs grant believing them liable to original Pollution For that doubtless the grace of the second Adam is as effectual to make holy as the sin of the first Adam is to make corrupt Besides we say original Righteousness should have been inherent in children transmitted from their Parents by natural propagation if Adam had stood and if so sure children must needs be capable of receiving a superinduced principle of spiritual life from Christ now that Adam and we in him are fain To close then of this we may be assured Baptized Infants have their effectual manner and real measure of Sanctification by the Holy Ghost because pro conditione parvulorum according to the condition of their tender age they are stated in a present ordination to eternal life for that Without holiness no man shall see God Heb. 12.14 Having thus explained unto you with the original and use the benefits and effects of Baptism I shall seasonably resolve you these three Quares 1. What the Judgment of the Church is as to the state of those Infants which die baptized 2. As to the state of those children which die before Baptism being children of the Orthodox 3. As to the state of those children which die before Baptism being children of the Anabaptists Quest 1 First What the Judgment of the Church is as to the state of those Infants which die baptized Answ I answer Though there is some dispute among the Ancient Fathers a hot contest in the after Schoolmen and a more moderate debate in Modern Divines as to the nature and manner of Infants Regeneration the nature of its being and the manner of its causation yet all consent in this all Primitive Popish and Protestant Writers Fathers Schoolmen and others all consent in this judgment and determination from Grounds of Scripture and Divine Reason That Infants lawfully baptized are in such an estate of Justification Sanctification and Adoption as that so dying they are undoubtedly saved And herein our own Mother the Church of England In the Rubrick before the Catechism she is most clear and full Onely observe in those children that live what by Divine Ordination was sufficient to state them capable of Salvation whilst Infants does become insufficient when adult and come to the use of Reason for then is required their actual Faith and Repentance actual Conversion unto God and obedience unto the Gospel of Christ without which they cannot then be saved Quest 2 Secondly What the Judgment of the Church is as to the state of those children which die before Baptism being children of the Orthodox Answ I answer Herein the Judgment of the Church is not so generally one St. Augustine and some in his time and since most of the Roman Church resolve That such Infants so dying they are not saved they have paena damni though not paena sensus they have a punishment of loss though not of sense they enjoy not Gods blissful presence and yet are not cast into hellish flames they have a Limbus Infantum for them but it is of their own fancying not of Gods providing The truth is the Scripture hath not clearly revealed whereby this Quaere may be so convincingly determined And therefore when some sudden surprise of death doth nip those Buds snatch away our tender Babes our duty is to submit with humility to Gods dispensation resigning them up to his mercy and comforting our selves with this resolution of the Orthodox That as in the
it to dip and plunge in water be essential to Baptism for that some Countries have not water enough to drink and not a River or Brook within fifty no not an hundred miles compass But lastly as the Anabaptists have in this no strength of argument from the propriety of the word the signification of the ceremony the prescript of Christ so nor from any plain pattern or sure example in the Scriptures For the Baptisms we read of to have been in Rivers were as is most probable after this manner The person baptizing and the person baptized put off their sandals and without any further preparation went together up to the ankles or mid-leg into the water of which the Minister of Baptism taking up in his hand he poured out upon the head of the baptiz'd That this was the manner of John's baptism is to me plainly intimated Act. 1.5 when our Saviour gives in promise to his Apostles That whereas John baptized with water they should be baptized with the Holy Ghost Now how were the Apostles baptized with the Holy Ghost but by pouring out of the Spirit and so how did John baptize with water but by pouring out of that element No question but John when he baptiz'd all the Region round about Mat. 3.5 Act. 2 41. and Peter three thousand in one day they did preserve all good rules of modesty in so sacred a service of their Ministry they were not at all guilty of the impudence of some who baptize naked or the immodesty of others who baptize in a sleight covering of their nakedness neither sure did they plunge them in the rivers with their clothes on this had been a soaking rather then a washing If then S. John and S. Peter did baptize by plunging in the water the people were fitted with some covering for that service and that such multitudes in so short a time should be provided of necessaries for such a baptism seems to me altogether improbable And as for the Eunuch being on a journey Act. 8 27 28. he was sure very unfit for such a washing And that he is said to go down with Philip into the water it does not signifie the depth of the river but the descent of the hill for the Country being mountainous the rivers or rather brooks lay at the bottom Joh. 3.23 not deep enough for a plunging as the Anabaptists manner now is over head and ears even Aenon it self where John baptiz'd it is say Geographers a small brook shallow in depth and narrow in breadth fordable with the leg and passable at two or three steps yet it is said there was much water there in respect of that dry country where little water is But besides all this that of the Jailor's being baptized in the night and in his house yea Act. 16.33 that which Ecclesiastical history tels us of some secretly baptized in prisons Ep. 76. ad ●iagn and S. Cyprian reporting of one that brought a pitcher of water and was baptized by S. Laurence as he went to martyrdom These and the like instances sufficiently evidence what was the practice of the Primitive Church such as does not prove either plunging in the water or washing in a river to be essential or necessary to Baptism To close then Know we that moral conveyances require no large matter for their performance A bit of wax may seal me a Deed of many sheets a turf of earth may give me possession of a thousand acres one pepper-corn may testifie my homage for the greatest Manor And thus may a few drops of water by vertue of Christs institution signifie and seal convey and confirm me a right and interest in all the promises of the Gospel all the merits of Christs blood all the graces of the Spirit all the bliss of Heaven It is otherwise in the spiritual Laver then it is in the corporal Bath In this latter not to wash every part is to be unclean in some part but in that former to wash any whit is to be clean all over so that the sprinkling or pouring out of a few drops are as effectual to our spiritual washing as the dipping or plunging in an whole river It is then the use and application of the element which refers to the substance and essence of the Sacrament A washing there must be with water whether that washing be by immersion or aspersion or effusion And to the application of Water join we the application of the Word and then have we Baptism compleat as to its form of administration that of our Saviours prescription Go ye disciple all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. 2. From the application of the Water pass we to the application of the Word Therein observe S. Augustine's Maxim Accedat verbum ad Elementum fit Sacramentum Let the Word be added to the Element and it becomes a Sacrament even the word of institution which is accompanied with the word of precept and of promise the precept requiring and the promise encouraging our observance the precept commands the use the promise declares the benefit both oblige our obedience The precept is Go baptize the promise is Mar. 16.16 He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved All which our Church orderly recites in her form of ministration thereby testifying her obedience to Christs precept and begging the performance of his promise when she baptizeth according to his word of institution In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Here we have a Trinity of sacred Persons in the unity of the Divine Essence and in this faith runs not only the form of our Baptism but also the form of our Creed the form of our Doxology and the form of our Benediction Bas ep 78. cont Eunom l. 2. And that it was of old so receiv'd in the Church we have the full testimony of S. Basil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea adde we too 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We ought to be baptized as Christ hath instituted to believe as we are baptized to give glory as we do believe and to bless as we give glory Our form of Baptism it is in the name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost our form of Creed it is I believe in God the Father and in Jesus Christ his only Son and again I believe in the Holy Ghost our form of Doxology it is Glory to be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost and lastly our form of Benediction wherewith we dismiss the Congregation it is The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God the Father 2 Cor. 13.14 and the communion of the Holy Ghost be with you all Thus you see the faith of the Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity is the very life-blood of our Christianity it runs through the veins of
hell upon earth O God! who knows whither that man goes to his confusion who is once gone out of the Church by separation especially if it be that of Anabaptism It is the known observation of the Exorcists Sancta ecclesia uniformiter agit ut exertismis spiritus immundus abigatur Aug. de eccle dogmat c. 31. That whom Satan possesseth he first tempts them to renounce their Baptism in which they renounced him and till this be done he cannot have power to possess them Now that too many miserable wretches are possest with an Evil spirit is too unhappily apparent by their quakings and trances by their rantings and ravings their impudence and filthiness their diabolical blasphemies and hellish execrations Aquam ingressi renunciasse nos Diabolo Angelis ejus ore nostro co●testamur Tert. de spect c. 4. And how come they thus possest Why sure whereas they renounc'd the Devil in their Baptism in renouncing their Baptism they have too too much given way to the Devil and God by a just judgment given them up to his delusions But O God! thou who art more gracious then man is impious 2 Thess ● 9.10 11 12. O do thou yet restrain Satan and preserve their souls in the day of the Lord Jesus It being then too endless a task to encounter each Sect and Heresie of our times in particular I have thought it best to give you a soveraign Antidote and Preservative in the general and it is this even in discharge of duty to God the Church and your souls to fortifie your judgments and strengthen your faith in what concerns the nature and manner the duty and benefit of Infants Baptism hereby to keep open the door of the Church for entrance into her communion and yet shut it too against those who otherwise running out by Anabaptism would find themselves departed from Christ in departing from his Church and subjected by Satan to all horrid profaneness by their quitting subjection to Christ in his holy ordinance that ordinance for which he here gives commission and instruction to his Apostles in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye disciple all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. Having given you the former branch of our Saviours instruction to his Apostles the Institution of Baptism we proceed to the latter Explicat the manner and form of Baptisms administration viz. in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost And here we shall consider the administration of Baptism in a twofold respect 1. In what is necessary as to the essence of the Sacrament and 2. In what is requisite as to the solemnity of the Church 1. In what is necessary as to the essence of the Sacrament and this is the application of the Water and of the Word The application of the Water whether it be by immersion or aspersion or effusion The application of the Word that the immersion or dipping the aspersion or sprinkling the effusion or pouring out be in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost In the administration then of Baptism the first thing necessary as to the essence of the Sacrament is the application of the Water and this in an outward washing whether that washing be by a dipping in or a sprinkling on or a pouring out of the water All which forms of washing exprest in the one word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we have in S. Mark where we read concerning the Pharisees and others of the Jews Mar. 7.4 that when they come from the market they eat not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unless they be baptized that is except they wash as our English re●ds it Yea from the tradition of the Elders they are said to hold 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Baptisms so the Original the washings so our English the washings of cups and of pots brazen vessels and of tables or of beds From which baptisms or washings it is most certain and evident there can be no strength of argument from the propriety of the word to prove a necessity of dipping or plunging in the water seeing that baptism doth equally signifie a washing by sprinkling or pouring out the water And as there is no strength of argument from the propriety of the word so nor from the signification of the ceremony For that the sprinkling and pouring out of the water is aptly significative of the sprinkling of Christ blood and the pouring out of his Spirit the very inward grace and thing signified in Baptism whereby it is rightly called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tit. 3.5 1 Pet. 1.2 the laver of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost yea the sprinkling of the blood of Jesus And as it is in the Gospel Ezek 36.25 Joel 2.28 so it was in the Prophecy There says God unto his people I will sprinkle clean water upon you and I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh Object Ay but does not Baptism signifie the death and burial of Christ And if so what more proper then that the person baptized be received into the bosom of the water Answ as into his grave Ans Baptism may signifie the death of Christ without exposing the person baptized to the danger of death yea it may signifie Christs burial too without sending the baptized to his grave as in colder Countries we certainly know dipping and plunging in the waters do for so the experience of some more ignorantly zealous then religiously wise hath lately assured us Even in sprinkling and pouring out of the water then upon the Child which is under it there is signification enough of Christs death and burial this being the main thing intended in the sign to represent the actual efficacie of Christs blood and spirit to wash away our guilt and renew us again to righteousness thereby giving us an interest in the merits of his passion Rom. 6.3.4 and power of his resurrection But further yet as it is not from the propriety of the word nor from the signification of the ceremony so nor thirdly is it from the prescript of Christ that any strength of argument can be drawn to prove a necessity of dipping or of plunging in the water For examine the whole of what concerns our Saviours institution of Baptism and we shall find no more of positive command in this Sacrament for the measure of water or manner of washing then in that other for the quantity of bread or quality of wine This is infalilble Christs evangelical ordinance does in nothing oppose his moral command and therefore the ceremony of his Sacrament must not be made such as may hazard the life of the person celebrating that Sacrament and ceremony Besides Baptism is prescribed to all Nations and sure its manner of ministration being common to all must be possible to all Which yet it cannot be if as some Anabaptists would have
THE PREACHERS Tripartite IN THREE BOOKS THE FIRST To raise DEVOTION in Divine Meditations upon PSALM XXV THE SECOND To Administer COMFORT by Conference with the Soul in particular Cases of Conscience THE THIRD To establish TRUTH and PEACE in several Sermons Against the present Heresies and Schisms By R. Mossom Preacher of Gods Word late at St. Peters Pauls-wharf London Quondam è Col. S. P. C. S. Aug. Hom. 28. in Ezek. 3.19 Si me non audierîtis tamen ego non tacuero liberabo animam meam sed nolo salvus esse sine vobis LONDON Printed by Thomas Newcomb and are to be sold in St. Pauls Church-yard at the sign of the Bible on Ludgate-hill and in Fleet-street 1657. To the Right Honorable KATHERINE Countess of PEMBROKE c. Together with her truly Noble Sister THE LADY MARY SOANDES As dear in affection as near in blood The Ornament of their Sex and Name AND To the true Exemplars of Piety Honor and Faithfulness whether of Nobility Gentry Ministry or Citizens Late Auditors and Communicants at the preaching of the Word and ministration of the Eucharist At S. PETERS Robert Mossom Dedicates the ensuing MEDITATIONS which conceiv'd in the Closet have had their Birth from the Pulpit and being now grown up to the Press they take heart to travel the World under so just a Patronage and Protection AND The same holy Spirit of Truth which accompanied them to the ear and the heart of each reverent Auditor bless them also to the eye and the soul of every ingenuous Reader For a sustaining with grace in the present Warfare and a crowning with glory in the future Triumph of Christs holy Church Amen TO THE Ingenuous Readers BEcause just Promises are due Debts I acknowledge my self a Debtor to the Church by promise under mine hand for the Second Part of my Sions Prospect which if they who importune me by their desires assist me with their prayers I doubt not by Gods blessing to perfect notwithstanding the encumbrances to retard and difficulties to discourage Indeed did not my Ministerial service unexpected when I past my word engage what time of the Night I might spare from my necessary rest and my School-employment take up what time of the Day I could spare from my Family-charge I had not run into so great arrears in being so long behind-hand with so just a debt Yet now with that honest though necessitated person in the Parable I plead a Patientiam habete Have patience with me and I will pay you all and till I can pay the Principal accept the Interest These Treatises and Sermons a part of my Five years Service which by a good hand of Providence amidst all the variety of Secular changes I did continue in a plenary discharge of all Ministerial duties according to the legally established viz. Ab Ann 1650. ad Ann. 1652. and ever piously to be esteemed Order of the Churches Liturgy And when I was forc'd from any longer Ministry at S. Peters I may say with confidence a Congregation was dissolved which for reverence charity and devotion was not outvied if parallel'd by any in the World For their sakes especially that they may the better call to mind what they have heard and so the more fully practise what they have been taught I here publish to the eye those Instructions I once delivered to the ear And what many of mine Auditory have importuned me for in a Transcript I here present them with advantage by an Impression viz. Those Divine Meditations which once warm'd their hearts with a devout fervor when Communicants in the monthly ministration of the blessed Eucharist Also those Choice Cordials which refresht their Souls with a chearing vigor when Combatants in the Christian warfare of their Spiritual Conflicts Lastly See our Contests with Heresie and Schism in zeal not so much to confute the Adversary as to confirm the Orthodox confirm them even in Truth and Holiness In which Contests it is not the Bays but the Olive not victory but peace even the peace of Jerusalem which is the aim and end of my Preaching and God who is the Searcher of hearts will bear witness to the sincerity of this profession I know well what I publish in Print will find a Critical Comment and censorious Paraphrase from some but if I may benefit the souls of Gods suffering Saints I am not careful to stop the mouth or smooth the brow of a clamorous or supercilious censure I will not fear it worse nor expect it better in the whole Volume then in a large Vineyard that there be tàm uvae quàm labruscae some clusters of sound and sweet grapes which have their full blood and true spiritual vigor though withall some of lighter digestion not so happy in their soil or sun and therefore not ripened to so divine a maturity and sweetness Neither am I ignorant or unexperienc'd how much less the mind is affected with reading then with hearing even by how much a Preacher in the particular gift of utterance is the more master of his tongue then pen and so can speak much more piercingly to the eye as an Orator then as a Scribe But what my Pulpit-conceptions do lose by the Press as to their affecting heat I hope they will have repair'd them by their informing light the Judgment being more thorowly convinced by a frequent perusal then a single delivery Whatsoever then you meet with of a devout vigor and solid nourishment receive it as from the Store-house of Heaven and only ministred by my hand it is wholly God's and yours But whatsoever is flat or crude weak and indigested that 's all mine own it 's like my self and I shall not refuse though blush to father it Accept the former and excuse the latter And as in that I shall further your Piety so in this do you express your Charity the charity of a fair construction considering my busie and distracting charge of a School-Tuition in which I am still engag'd and I bless God I am so as well to get subsistence as employ my talent This troublesom Task may well plead a favorable interpretation Which yet is not all the kindness I crave your Prayers I sue for viz. That God will make me farther serviceable to his Church and you whose I am in the strictest bond of love and heartiest zeal of devotion From my House near Black-Friers over agrinst the Old-Wardrobe Pridiè Nonar Febr. 1657. Robert Mossom Divine Meditations UPON PSALM XXV THE INTRODUCTION § 1. WEll might David be called the sweet Singer of Israel ● Sam. 23.1 Non minus vivendi genere quàm canendi juavitate immorta●em Deo sui fudisse Cantilenam dicit S Ambr. lib. de offic c. 22. whose Heart was more divinely musical then his Harp and the harmony of whose devout Soul did outvie that of his composed Song His whole life what was it but a continued Antheme His several failings through the indulgent mercy of his
God being made as so many stops of time to add more grace and sweetness to the musick § 2. This his Book of Psalms it is aptly called the Epitome of the whole Bible and the Anatomie of the Spiritual man yea we may rightly entitle it the Register of sacred History the Ephemeris of the Churches Prophecies the Library of Divine Doctrine the Store-house of Spiritual Comforts and the Treasury of holy Devotion And that Devotion either Penitentiary Invocatory or Eucharistical Penitenitary in deep contrition humble confession and passionate lamentation Invocatory in fervent supplication earnest deprecation and pious intercession Eucharistical in gratulatory thanksgivings laudatory oblations and triumphal songs David totus est in deprecanda venta peccatorum cujusdam sensim quod magnum multum dicit v. 11 hoc de illo cum Bethsabe commisso Kimhi intelligit Sim. de Muis in loc § 3. Here amidst so large a store choice is made of a Penetential Psalm though none of the seven commonly called the Penetentials fitted in its devotion to the sacred solemnity of the blessed Eucharist and could we attain Davids frame of spirit when he composed this Psalm of Penitence O how well how well would it become this holy Sacrament § 4. If any inquire a reason why choice is made of this present Psalm for the constant celebrations of the Lords Supper know I have observed a secret vigor of devotion to diffuse it self into the soul when exercised in prayer or meditation making use of Davids Psalms to draw heat from his flame and administer heavenly matter for so holy an exercise and upon this reason O ye humble suppliants I thought it an apt and profitable service to give at once a pattern whereby to frame your private devotions in your Closet and an help to compose your souls to an higher pitch of devotion in the publick solemnities of the holy Eucharist § 5. Besides the mystery and benefits of this blessed Sacrament they are so many and so various that no one single verse or small portion of Scripture may be a Text large enough for so copious a subject wherefore that many souls might receive something of instruction and devotion see here I have chosen an whole Psalm which divided into parts like those loaves in the Gospel broken into peeces it will so increase in the explication Mark 6.41 as those did in their distribution that whereas this Psalm like one of those loaves may seem in the whole to be but sufficient for one person yet shall it by a blessing of grace like as that by a miracle of power be in its divided parts sufficient for many fifties § 6. That this Psalm is of more then ordinary excellency and worth as penned by a more then ordinary diligence and zeal appears by the Alphabetical order of the Hebrew Letter Ad musicam an ad memoriam pertineat incertum est Ral b●ni nihil certi statuunt beginning each verse The Psalm it self is a mixture of various yet devout affections for that here the Psalmist moved with the sence of his sin and the violence of his Enemies he sues to God for the remission of the former and protection from the latter and at last salvation in respect of both even to himself and the Church of God this he does supported by faith and hope of which hope and faith he gives a sure testimony in the commemoration he makes of Gods abundant mercy and faithful promises And in the profession he declares of his sincere confidence in those promises and his firm expectation of that mercy § 7. The Analysis of the Psalm The whole Psalm consists of Four parts 1. The Preface vers 1. Unto thee O Lord do I lift up my soul 2. The Prayer 1. Deprecation vers 2. to 4. O my God I trust in thee let me not be ashamed c. 2. Petition vers 4. to v. 8. Shew me thy ways O Lord teach me thy paths c. 3. The Meditation 1. Laudatory vers 8. to v. 11. Good and upright is the Lord c. 2. Consolatory vers 12. to v. 6. What man is he that feareth the Lord c. 4. The Conclusion 1. Supplication vers 16. to v. 23. Turn thee unto me and have mercy upon me c. 2. Intercession vers 22. Redeem Israel O God out of all his troubles § 8. Now O ye devout souls that we may inlarge upon this of Davids Psalm with the inlargement of Davids spirit whilst I shall pass through the several parts in an explicatory application of the particular words and phrases let me revive and raise your sincere devotion as the Prophet did the Shunamites child 2 King 4.35 as the Prophet laid his mouth to the childs mouth his hands to the childs hands so let me lay Davids mouth to your mouth his hands to your hands that is I me●n make his prayers your prayers his meditations your meditations And having the same devotion with David we shall find a like acceptance with God whose ear is still open to our prayers whilst our hearts are laid open in his presence the Throne of grace being the only refuge of an humble penitence Vers 1. Vnto thee O Lord do I lift up my soul § 1. BUt O my Soul hast thou not been lift up against the Lord in thy sinful rebellion how then canst thou lift up thy self unto him in a sincere devotion True I have been long dead in sin long buried in the grave of customary iniquity yet I have heard the voice of the Son of God Joh. 5 25. in his Word in his Sacraments this a quickening a reviving voice And therefore unto him that calleth me unto him that quickeneth me unto my God unto my Jesus even unto thee O Lord do I lift up my soul § 2. And though heretofore in the state of darkness sin and death though then I have lift up my soul against thee in pride and profaneness the high-way to hell yet now let me lift up my soul unto thee in humility and devotion the high-way to heaven Pride and profaneness they cast me from thee then which what can be lower But humility and devotion they subject me to thee then which what can be higher Thus then raise me by humbling me lay me low in my self and this shall lift me up to thee § 3. Oh how does Sin and Sathan the flesh and the world even the whole Powers of darkness how do they with violence pursue after me Psal 55.6 Oh give me then the wings of a Dove that I may flee away and be at rest Haste haste O my Soul for thy escape hie thee to the holes of the rock to the wounds of thy Jesus and for this shelter and succor for this protection and safety Oh see unto thee O Lord do I lift up my soul Unto thee in the fulness of thy merits unto thee in the riches of thy grace unto thee in the
embraces of thy love and comforts of thy Spirit unto thee that thy thorns may be my crown thy blood my balsom thy curse my blessing thy death my life Coloss 3.3 thy cross my triumph Thus is my life hid with Christ in God and if so then where should be my soul but where is my life And therefore unto thee O Lord do I lift up my soul § 4. I lift up my soul unto thee at thy Table who hast been thy self lift up for me on thy Cross thou hast been lift up for me in a propitiatory sacrifice and therefore I here offer my self to thee in a gratulatory oblation Is● 53.10 thou madest thy soul an offering for sin and here I make my soul an offering of thankfulness In this Eucharist then accept my 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mine oblation of praise and thanksgiving in which O Lord it is that I lift up my soul unto thee § 5. Unto thee O Lord thy flesh thy blood not unto the outward elements the bread the wine unto thee and thy fulness as the inward grace not unto thee and their use as the outward sign My soul dwells not on those earthly symbols but by them as by a ladder it ascends and lifts up it self unto thy heavenly riches And thus whilst my body feeds on consecrated food oh let my soul be filled with thy consecrating fulness whilst my body tastes their wholsom sweetness let my soul be satisfied with thy saving goodness And to this end it is that unto thee O Lord I lift up my soul § 6. Unto thee O Lord Oh make good thy name of Lord unto me as Lord rebuke Satan and restrain all earthly and carnal affections that they do not once dare to whisper a temptation to my soul a distraction to my thoughts whilst I am in communion with thee in prayer at thine holy ordinance Do thou as Lord rule me by thy grace govern me by thy Spirit defend me by thy power and crown me with thy salvation Thou Lord the Preserver of heaven and earth thou openest thine hand Psal 145.16 and satisfiest the desire of every living thing Oh open now thine hand thy bosom thy bounty thy love and satisfie the desires of my longing soul which I here lift up unto thee § 7. Thou Lord givest bread to man from the earth thou gavest Manna to Israel from heaven give oh give thy self unto me in this Sacrament as the true bread the heavenly Manna the life-giving food of thy Church Thou Lord art now reigning in heaven oh do thou now also set up thy throne in my heart Thou art exalted in heavenly glory oh manifest thy self in thy gracious presence In thy heavenly glory thou art the joy of holy Angels and blessed Saints in thy gracious presence be thou now the reviving of devout souls and humble Penitents O my love my joy my Jesus my Lord be thou present with me in thy Sacrament present more then by inspiration and make me present with thee and that more then by meditation even lift up my soul unto thee in a spiritual real and eternal communion § 8. Oh how does this blessed Sacrament add wings to devout souls and wrap them up with S. Paul unto the third heaven 2 Cor. 1● 2 in an extasie of contemplation and love And what shall my soul now lie groveling on the earth hiding it self with Saul amongst the stuff 1 Sam. 10.22 clogg'd and deprest with worldly thoughts with earthly and carnal affections No it may not it must not Christ is risen Col. 3.1 and therefore sursum corda my heart my spirit that shall rise too and seek those things which are above even unto thee O Lord my Jesus do I lift up my soul § 9. My soul but how shall I call it mine seeing it is thine thine by purchase thine having bought it with thy blood yea is it not thy Spouse whom thou hast wedded to thy self by thy Spirit through faith And is not this holy Sacrament the Marriage-feast If so sure then my Jesus I was lost in my self till found in thee and therefore my soul is now and not till now truly mine in being wholly thine so that I can say with confidence I lift up my soul unto thee § 10. I lift up Oh the load of my sins the burden of my flesh so heavy that I cannot of my self lift up my head how shall I then lift up my soul Wherefore O my Savior do thou add thy strength to my weakness thy supporting grace to my fainting spirit and then I will run after thee and lift up not onely my hands but my heart not onely my eies but my soul unto thee § 11. My soul For it is not indeed the eye or the tongue or the hand or the knee but the soul which makes the acceptable service in prayer and praises unto God the devotion of the soul that is the very soul of devotion Wherefore that I may present my self a living sacrifice at Christs table Rom. 12.1 my best part shall be my first oblation and therefore in the very preparation and entrance of this sacred solemnity See O see unto thee O Lord do I lift up my soul Vers 2 3. O my God I trust in thee let me not be ashamed let not mine enemies triumph over me yea let none that wait on thee be ashamed let them be ashamed which transgress without cause § 1. O My God I trust in thee c. My prayer O Lord is founded upon faith my faith upon thy promises so that because thou art my God therefore I trust in thee yea because I trust in thee therefore thou art my God My God otherwise O Christ thou wert not my Jesus but O my Jesus who savest me by thy blood Gal. 3 1. in this thy Sacrament thou art set forth crucified and I behold thy wounds from whence by the hand of faith I pluck forth these comfortable words of life My Lord and my God Joh. 20 28. § 2. My God mine for thou hast partook of my humane nature 2 Pet. 1 4. and thou hast made me to partake of thy divine nature thou hast taken upon thee my flesh and thou hast communicated unto me of thy Spirit yea in this thy Sacrament thou communicates body and blood flesh and spirit thy whole Manhood yea thy very Godhead too thy whole self as Mediator therefore thou art my God and I trust in thee § 3. I trust in thee to make good my right to the Covenant of Grace to make good my claim to the heavenly inheritance yea even to make good my communion with thee in all thy fulness a communion so firm that the Bread and Wine I eat and drink is not more really my food then thou my Jesus in whom I beleeve and trust art my God And for this so great a blessing of thy love for this so great a benefit of thy grace it is
of wickedness and under the most signal judgments of thy displeasure men plead signal testimonies of thine acceptance even in what thy soul hates thy Word condemns and thy wrath pursues § 4. Whilst I see Covenants and Engagements entred with a seeming zeal but broken with open perjurie whilst I see Sacriledge possess yea demolish thy Temples and yet Hypocrisie pretend a propagating thy Gospel whilst I see injustice in the seat of Judgment Profaneness invade Devotion and Violence suppress what is sacred and religious sure these waies of the world are none other then the waies of deceit and lead into the chambers of death But thy waies Prov. 6 27. O Lord are waies of truth and lead in the paths of life wherefore shew me thy waies and teach me thy paths Psal 16.11 § 5. Do thou shew me and do thou teach me While others take upon them to shew me thy waies they teach me to throw off the sacred Order thou hast establishe in thy Church as wicked and antichristian they teach me to desert thy publick Worship as Popery and Superstition yea they teach me Heresie and pretend it is thy Word they teach me Blasphemie and pretend it is saving Doctrine they teach me Schism and pretend it is the Communion of Saints they teach me to prophane thine Ordinances Joh. 4 24. and pretend it is to worship thee in Spirit Wherefore do thou thou Lord shew me do thou teach me as shew me thy waies in thy Word so teach me thy paths by thy Spirit yea lead me in thy truth and teach me make me to learn by practising let the experiences thou givest me of thy sanctifying grace confirm my soul in the sincere profession of thy saving truth § 6. But O my Jesus behold me here another poor Bartimaeus so blind that to shew me thy waies thou must not only point them out but also give me eyes to see Yea I here present my self at thy Table as another impotent Cripple in the Temple Act 3 2● so that to lead ●e in thy truth thou must not onely go before me but give me feet also to run after thee And that thou my Jesus who art the same yesterday today and for ever wilt now by a miraculous power of thy grace and truth Heb. 13 8. even cure my spiritual lameness and ignorant blindness this is the ground of my hopes thy Promises this is my encouragement● thy Sacrament in which Sacrament and Promises thou art exhibited unto my soul as the God of my salvation In thy word thou hast given the promise and in thy Sacrament that promise is sealed that thou wilt save me from the pathes of death and lead me in the way of everlasting life and so faithful art thou who hast promised that safer it is for my soul to be as low as Hell with a promise Heb. 10.23 then to be as high as Heaven without it though as low as hell yet would hope bear me up and though as high as heaven yet would presumption throw me down Jer. 17.5 1 King 13.4 § 7. Thou O God who art my trust art my salvation my trust is not in the arm of flesh that like Jeroboams hand doth suddenly wither my trust is not in humane power or policie that I see by daily experiments Jon. 4 7. proves like Jonas Gourd when the Sun beats hottest when trouble and dis●●ess is the the greatest then doth it vanish and come to nothing what then is my trust Truly Lord my trust is even in thee Psa 146.5 6. who hast made heaven and earth whose Wisdom will find out the way and Power effect the means of my salvation notwithstanding all the present difficulties and seeming impossibilities of deliverance § 8. Yea thou O Lord my joy my Jesus thou art the God of my salvation Oh transcendent love Oh rich mercy Oh incomprehensible goodness the God of my salvation Blessed Saviour had the efficacie of thy merits extended no further to the race of mankind then mine own self yet wouldst thou glory and make me rejoyce in being the God of my salvation And Oh firm salvation which is founded upon the Grace Wisdom Power and Faithfulness of my God! in all which attributes my God my Jesus communicates himself unto me in this his Ordinance sealing me the salvation of my God and giving me a communion with the God of my salvation in this holy Sacrament § 9. O how willingly could my soul dwel upon this Mount and build Tabernacles for this contemplation of my Saviours love how do I behold him through faith communicating himself unto me in all his fulness Which fulness is in his Church and in his chosen as the soul is in the body and in the members whole in the whole and whole in every part So that though he gives salvation unto all yet does he communicate himself unto my soul in that fulness of his merits and grace as if I were saved alone And Oh that my soul could imitate my Savior Oh that my heart might return like love in giving my self my whole self unto my Jesus even in that fervor of affection and ravishment of spirit as if I alone were wholly to possess him joying in him and enjoyed by h m as the one and onely God of my salvation § 10. Seeing then thou art the God of my salvation on thee do I wait all the day so that If I find not present comfort in thy blessed Sacrament yet on thee will I wait the husbandman doth not sow his seed and reap his crop in a day wherefore if thou art pleased to defer thy salvation for the trial of my faith and love yet on thee will I wait in a constant use of those sacred means thou hast ordained and the continued practise of those holy duties thou hast enjoyned and though this be all my daies Oh let not my faith faint seeing I cannot wait too long for the grace I so much desire and which am assured I shall at last obtain Matth ●24 23. seeing he who indures to the end shall be saved § 11. On thee do I wait on thee whose hand of bountie whose bo om of love yea whose bowels of mercy are not onely opened but inlarged to all humble penitents on thee do I wait wait to hear the secret voice of thy Spirit speaking peace unto my conscience wait to feel the reviving v●gor of thy grace quickning mine obedience wait to see the subduing power of thy holy Spirit quelling my rebellious sin wait to feel the chearing vertue of thy heavenly comforts refreshing my fainting soul for all these thy blessings O thou God of my salvation on thee do I wait all the day All the day being never so satisfied with thy goodness as not more eagerly to long after thy heavenly fu●ness wherefore now refresh my faintings quench not my desires but the more freely thou gives let me the more eagerly covet the more
sweet is thy mercy let be the more eager my longings that so my whole life on earth may be a continued breathing after that eternal fellowship and communion with thee in Heaven thus thus let me wait even all my life all the day Vers 6 7. Remember O Lord thy tender mercies and thy loving kindnesses for they have been ever of old Remember not the sins of my youth nor my transgressions according to thy mercy remember thou me for thy goodness sake O Lord. § 1. O My God thy former mercies are pledges to me of thy future grace Wherefore remember O Lord thy tender mercies and thy loving kindnesses which have been ever of old Psal 90.2 exhibited by thy Spirit in this Sacrament Are not thy mercies O Lord like thy self from everlasting to everlasting thy mercies they have been ever of old and sure the streams cannot fail where the fountain is inexhaustible and such is thy good goodness § 2. But how is it then that my soul dwels in darkness if thou be light how is that I remain disconsolate and miserable if thou Lord art so gracious and merciful thou lovest to be importuned in prayer Isa 43.26 and thereby as it were minded of thy mercy not that that thou art forgetful of thy love but that thou wouldst have us sensible of our wants Wherefore least thou shouldst do as my sins have deserved cast me out of thy thoughts let my humble suit mind thee of thy mercies Thy tender mercies for it is no ordinarie medicine that will cure my soar no mean mercy that will save my soul the sadness of my affl ctions requires the tenderness of thy compassions wherefore Remember O Lord thy tender mercies Psal 42.7 § 3. Mercies O how does one deep call upon another the depth of my multipli'd miseries calls loudly calls upon the depth of thy manifold mercies even that mercy whereby thou dost pardon my sin and help mine infirmities that mercy whereby thou dost sanctifie me by thy Grace and comfort me by thy Spirit that mercy whereby thou dost quicken me with life and preserve me from death that mercy whereby thou dost deliver me from Hell and possess me of Heaven Remember O Lord all those thy mercies thy tender mercies which as they have been of old unto thy Saints so now seal them unto thy servant in this blessed Sacrament § 4. And as thou seals me thy tender mercies so convey unto me thy loving kindnesses even those enligthning gifts those beautifiing graces those refreshing comforts those divine manifestations of thy presence those secret aspirings of the soul those devout raptures of the Spirit those divine meltings of the heart that peace of conscience that joy in the holy Ghost all these thy loving kindnesses let me in some proportion of measure taste if not in some measure of fulness enjoy in a blessed communion with thee my Jesus in this sacred solemnity § 5. Thy Saints of old how have they come from this thy Table satisfied with good things and like Giants refreshed with wine Psal 65.4 furnished to every good work and strong to resist the temptations of Satan having been made partakers of thy precious blood which thou shedest for them how have they been animated in the profession of faith to shed their dearest blood for thee Yea remember those thy former mercies to mine own soul when I have come with sorrow and returned with joy come trembling in fear and returned exulting through faith come fainting and weak returned strengthened and confirmed And what Lord hath thy Table been so sweet a refreshing and shall it not be so still to my soul if I come the oftner shall I return the sadder and by how much I am the more eager in my desires wilt thou be the further off in thy fulness § 6. This indeed my sins have deserved but thy mercies they are tender and will not deal with me according to my deserts wherefore remember then thy old mercies not my old sins thy tender compassions not my present transgrssions call not to mind the sins of my youth to visit them upon the years of my riper age wean me from my youthful sins and give me not over by a just judgement upon their provocation to more manly more stubborn impieties Just it were that the sins of my greener years should deprive me of thy blessing in my riper age but whilst my sins move thee to wrath let thy compassions move thee to mercy that so my former unworthiness with-hold not from me the blessing and grace of thy present Ordinance remember thou me in this according to thy mercy for thy goodness sake O Lord. § 7. According to thy mercy not mine for I have forsaken those mercies thou madest mine own in being cruel to my self by my sin Jon. 2 8. Psal 59.10 17 through distrust of thy promise upon presumptions in thy mercy yea let it be for thy goodness sake not mine for in me Rom 7.18 that is in my flesh dwelleth no manner of thing that is good let thy goodness then be the motive thy mercy the rule of all that grace and of all those blessings thou vouchsafest unto my soul Vers 8 9 10. Good and upright is the Lord therefore will he teach sinners in the way The meek will he guide in judgement and the meek will he teach his way All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth unto such as keep his Covenant and his Testimonies § 1. GOod and upright is the Lord therefore will he teach sinners in the way The true knowledge then O God of thy will is the gracious manifestation of thy goodness Good is the Lord in the graciousness of his promises upright is the Lord in the tru●h of his performances and this grace and truth which is the habitation of his Throne is the refuge of the sinner the sanctuary of the penitent whom he teacheth in the way even the way of truth the way of holiness the way of life § 2. The Lord is good And where Oh my soul canst thou better tast the goodness of the Lord then in this blessed Eucharist Psal 34 8. the sacred feast of the Lords goodness and as his goodness doth invite thee so let his uprightness encourage thee for that faithful is he who hath p omised faithful to give according to his promise healing for thy wounds strengthning for thy weakness comfort for thy sorrow yea give that which is the compendium of all spiritual good things Rom 5.1 2 Peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost § 3. Why art thou so heavy O my soul and why art thou so cast down within me Psal 42.11 Is it because thou hast broken the Covenant of thy God even the Covenant of reconciliation sealed thee by the Sacrament and that thus by thy sin thou art become at enmitie with thy maker Be it so yet will not the Lord who is good be as gracious
the ministration of the Sacraments Now to spoil us of the treasure to rob us of the comfort of this salvation is Satans grand design in his temptations unto sin and his suggestions of distrust for by these he labors to withdraw us from our God and deprive us of communion with Christ who is our love and our life But when the bird is mounted on the wing it is safe from the Fowlers net and the soul raised in communion with Christ is preserved from Satans snare And if through infirmity the soul flag and fall to the earth and so become intangled in carnal and worldly affections yet keeping the eye fixt upon Christ looking to him in his Ordinances to rece ve the quickening power of his grace though corrupt affections may intangle Rom. 8 2. Rom. 6.14 yet shall they not inthral the soul which becomes restored by the power of Christs Spirit a Spirit of life and liberty a Spirit of Grace and holiness delivering from the power of Satan and from the dominion of sin § 2. And this this is Davids practise and experience registred here by the Holy Ghost for our pattern and comfort when to the meditation of Gods promise and the manifestations of his love he joyns this profession of faith saying Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord c. In which profession of Davids faith we have two particulars 1. It s firm affiance 2. It s comfortable assurance 1. It s firm affiance Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord. 2. It s comfortable assurance For he shall pluck my feet out of the net § 3. First The firm affiance of Davids faith Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord. Mine eyes so general and sovereign an influence hath faith into the actual exercise of the divine graces that it does supply the office of the choycest members in the spiritual man therefore is Faith the legs that support the hand that receives the arms that imbrace the pallate that tastes the eye that beholds yea it is the heart of the inward man the seat of spiritual life for so says the Apostle the just shall live by faith and again I live Rom. 1 17. Gal. 2.20 yet not I but Christ that liveth in me and the life that I now live I live by the faith of the Son of God And very apt is this metaphor of faith that it is the eye of the soul whereby it discerns those things which are invisible invisible to the eye of sence and the eye of reason 2 Cor 4.18 yet made evident and visible by an enlightning power of the Spirit to the eye of faith and therefore is faith called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 11.1 a sacred evidence and divine demonstration of the truth of those things which neither sence nor reason can apprehend § 4. Many indeed there are eminent in Caldean learning and Mathematical science who in the height of their knowledge and with the eye of reason pierce the clouds discern the coelest●al motions of the heavenly bodies the inclining not necessitating influence of the Stars and Constellations yet how far short is all this of that Philo calls fides oculata an illuminated Faith the eye of the sanctified soul whereby it pierceth within the vail Heb. 6 19. looks into the holy of holies the most sacred and secret mysteries of grace and glory This is that Eagles eye which can receive the Rays of the Sun of righteousness being ever towards the Lord in the sweetness of his love and the riches of his fulness By this piercing eye of faith it is that Abraham through a bleeding sword and a sacrificed son does see a posterity numerous as the stars in heaven by this piercing eye of faith it is that Israel through a red Sea and a barren Wilderness does see a land of promise a Canaan of rest By this piercing eye of faith it is that David through a despised Crown and a broken Scepter does see a glorious Throne and famous Government yea by this peircing eye of faith it is that Jerusalem a type of the Church through a night of distress and a grave of capcaptivity does see a resurrection of peace and a full Noon of glory § 5. An enlightned faith is not discouraged with difficulties 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nazian in Cyp. nor dampt with dangers knowing well that God oftentimes so orders the administrations of his Providence as that he works his own ends even by contrary means So that man is at a stand to determine whether is greater the wonder or the mercy of his Churches deliverance Now where lies the strength of faith why know not in the habit but in the object even in the Lord the creatures the Word the Sacraments they are good mediums but no full objects we must look thorow them as thorow a glass by which we behold God and Christ as the full and final object whereon to fix the the eye of faith and wherewith to terminate the sight of the soul § 6. Yea the blessings of providence and the graces of the spirit they are but the streams the Lord the Lord he is the fountain so that when all outward hopes fail and all inward comforts faint when there is a perfect vacuum in the creatures a seeming emptiness in the Ordinances even then the poor soul and afflicted Saint doth find rest and comfort in the Lord. Psal 116.7 In him faith sees an Almighty power and an omniscient wisdom an infinite grace and an all-sufficient merit yea an all-compassionating mercy So that were there indeed no life in the Ordinances no comfort in the Promises yet would faith by Christs assistance fetch both life and comfort from this fountain of the Lords fulness § 7. Who art thou then O thou afflicted soul who in thy spiritual desertions walkest in darkness clouded with sorrows Oh in thy greatest dejections lift up thine eyes unto the Lord Psal 123.1 that when the rising Sun appears thou mayst see his refreshing light and however now by reason of thy present anguish thou canst not serve God in alacrity of performance yet do it in sincerity of obedience and this this will be a cranny to convey some beams of light even in the lowest dungeon of thy spiritual distress Wait upon the Lord having thy eye of faith still towards him Psal 27.14 and so shall comforts be redoubled in a life recovered and thy difficulties of obtaining shall the more sweeten thy delights of injoying even of injoying God and Christ in the refreshing comforts of the Spirit conveyed and confirmed in his blessed Sacrament In which blessed Sacrament especially let thine eyes be still towards the Lord in his merits in his grace in his benefits in his love let him have thy fixed heart and thine intent eye yea let him have thy whole man for to this end it is that he here gives thee his whole self § 8. And Oh the sweet converses of the devout
soul when the divine presence of Christ shall fill its Tabernacle possess the heart and so the eye of faith become fixt upon the Lord in devout contemplations of his grace and love So fixt that with holy David When we awake we are still with him yea VVe set the Lord always before our face Psal 139 18. Psal 16.8 he the continual object of our eye as being the onely object of our love of our joy of our delight Indeed where should be our hearts but where is our joy where our eye but where our love and whilst our eyes are on the Lord the Lords eyes will be on us so that lifting up our eyes to him above we shall not fear the snares of our feet beneath but in all our affairs of life in all our conditions of being in all the publick calamities of the Church in all the various changes of the World our firm affiance may have its comfortable assurance that our eyes being ever towards the Lord he shall pluck our feet out of the net § 9. Secondly The comfortable assurance of Davids faith he shall pluck my feet out of the Net that is he shall deliver me from the sinful temptations of Satan the world and the flesh which are as a net to intangle and insnare the soul First such is Satans malice to the sanctified soul that not being able by his temptations to deprive of grace he will not cease his suggestions to rob of comfort so that as Hercules in his cradle so the faithful in his infancy of the new man he does incounter the winding serpent whom he overcomes by the blood of the Lamb through faith in the Lord Jesus § 10. And when Satan thus repulst and beat off departs from him it is but as he did from our Saviour for a while yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for a season even till a fitter opportunity to return Luk. 4.13 so that again and again does Satan encounter the humble penitent renewing his terrors to destroy his comforts and if possible to overthrow his faith Oh how does he by subtle insinuations make the soul to argue against it self in many needless scruples and groundless doubtings intermixt with distrustful fears But such is the wisedom and mercy of his God that Satans Wiles they are repelled by Christs truth whose gracious promises do silence his doubtful cavellings and a renewed vigor of grace damp his suggestions of fear so that the soul rests in peace receiving some testimonies of divine love by the Spirit obtained in fervent prayer § 11. And as thus we have seen something of the combate the faithful have with Satan so see Secondly something of the encounter he has with the world in which there is a secret antipathy against the spiritual man as it is observed by our Saviour when he tells his Disciples that if they were of the world the world would love them Joh. 15.19 even as the Mother loves her own Children but because he had called them out of the world therefore did the world hate them Thus then the faithful man in the world and from the world he meets with hatred yea that hatred sharpened with contempt derision and slanders ay mens malice doth increase with his goodness their fury with his piety so that he meets with loss of liberty spoil of goods yea the threatnings if not execution of death and that made more dreadful and formidable through cruelty and tortures § 12. Sometimes again the world turns her violence into allurements her threathings and fury into fawnings and flattery she presents profit proffers pleasure tenders honor and all to allure and deceive and the faithful mans danger is greater from the plausible fairness of the worlds allurements then from the apparent fierce●ess of her threatnings But such is the power of divine grace that Christ plucks his feet out of the net 1 Joh. 5.4 making him by faith to overcome the world a sincere faith in the apprehension of Gods love and the assurance of Christs Kingdom will powerfully yea victoriously repulse the world in all her incounters of feat or of favour § 13. As we have seen something of the spiritual conflict which the faithful man has with Satan and the World So thirdly see now something of that he hath with the Flesh which though it be an enemy less violent yet is it more dangerous whose insinuations being secret they are the more hurtful because the less discernable in this conflict with the flesh the sanctified person he feels the bent of nature strugling against the dictates of the Spirit corrupt dispositions against gracious inclinations carnal lusts against spiritual desires earthly affections against heavenly motions thus he feels the spirit lusting against the flesh Gal. 5 17. and the flesh lusting against the spirit in which domestick War he receives many secret blows and some deeply wounding making him to cry out with St. Paul Oh wretched man that I am Rom. 7.24 who shall deliver me from this body of death This body of death in which the inward man is divided against the outward man the old man against the new man that is the same man against himself § 14. And yet O happy soul which is truly sensible of this spiritual war it shall assuredly rest in an eternal peace These several Combates then and conflicts which the faithful have against Satan the World and the Flesh though they often discourage yet do they not quite destroy their holy resolutions though they do for a while damp and discomfort yet do they afterwards much quicken and further their godly conversation Did not indeed the powerful assistance of Christs Spirit give strength to their fainting souls those many assaults of their spiritual enemies would assuredly beat them back from their holy course but being by the same spirit strengthned by which they are sanctified notwithstanding all the oppositions of the World or the Flesh they go forwards in holiness And no●withstanding all the suggestions of Satan they resolve and will endeavour to live godly in Christ Jesus being ready in firm affiance and a comfortable assurance to subscribe this profession of Davids faith Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord for he shall pluck my feet out of the net § 15. But now how may we best fortifie our souls against the sinful temptations of the World and Satan Answer By mortifying the corrupt affections of the flesh For that most certain it is Satan holds intelligence with our lusts and by their treachery does surprize the Cittadel of the heart Satan may tempt but he cannot force the will So that it is not his tempting but our consenting which brings guilt upon the soul Jam. 1.14 properly then indeed every man is tempted when he is drawn away with his own lust and enticed Satan he subtly proportions his sinful temptations to our corrupt dispositions and therefore where he sees the heart set upon covetousness he tempts Balaam with the
wages of iniquity 2 Pet. 2.15 to curse Israel he tempts Judas with horrid treason to betray his Master Luk. 22.2 3. he tempts Annanias Act. 5.3 4. with cursed sacriledge to alineate to his own use what he had dedicated to Gods service Thus also when he sees the heart set upon ambition Numb 16.1 he tempts Corah with desperate rebellion he tempts Absolon with unnatural treason 2 Sam. 15.10 he tempts Arrius with blasphemous Heresie he tempts Julian with horrid Apostacy § 16. But now on the contrary as an Arrow shot against a Rock may be broken but cannot enter thus temptation to the soul it shall be repell'd where no lust is within to give admittance Wherefore though Satan tempt our Saviour yet are the darts of his temptations shot in vain He finds nothing in him Joh. 14.30 nothing in Christ of carnal or earthly affection whereon his temptation might fasten it self In us then it is the treacherous correspondencie of the flesh with Satan and the World which betrays our souls to their assaults So that to fortifie the soul against their sinful temptations the surest means is to mortifie the flesh in its corrupt affections Rom. 8.13 § 17. Now when the solemnity of the holy Eucharist is celebrated Job 1.6 it is a day when the sons of God come to present themselves before the Lord and we may be sure Satan will also come among them not only to accuse every unworthy Receiver but even to tempt the worthiest that receives tempt him with wandring and worldly thoughts with flat and dull affections yea it may be with spiritual pride with formal hypocrisie or impure imaginations Wherefore it will be a second Case seasonably proposed How we may best attend this sacred solemnity that we be not entangled in Satans net Answer By having our eyes ever towards the Lord our souls fixt and intent upon Christ in the sufferings of his Passion the power of his Resurrection the glory of his Ascension and the benefit of his Intercession And this with the enlargements of contrition of faith of love of prayer and of praises § 18. This a fit exercise for the whole solemnity of Administring but especially in the very act of receiving when the Minister comes towards thee O thou devoted soul with the Sacramental pledges of Christs body and blood raise thy self in this or the like ejaculation of fervent prayer O my Jesus thou boundless mercy and glorious purity by thy Spirit pierce into every faculty of my soul cleanse out every corner of my heart and so sanctifie and enlarge me that I may become a fit temple an holy habitation for thee the Lord of life and Prince of glory This done when the sacred bread is administred to thee with a Take eat the body of our Lord Jesus Christ then in thy silent meditations by a commemoration of faith behold Christ in the garden Luk. 22.44 and see him in his anguish of soul and agony of blood prest under the weight of mans sin and Gods wrath This being over behold him betrayed by Judas apprehended by the Jews and dragged away to the High-Priests palace where Mat. 26 67. in thy commemorations of faith behold him spit upon blindfolded and buffeted and after that hurried away to Pilate's Judgment-hall where being falsely accused see him unjustly condemned and after he is scourged with whips Mat. 27.2.11 crown'd with thorns and sceptred with a reed mock'd and despightfully used behold him in thy meditations bearing his cross till he faints under it § 19. At last coming to Mount Calvary see his limbs stretcht and violently distorted his hands and feet digg'd and bor'd and at length his precious body nail'd to his Cross where fix thy meditations of faith in an exercise of contrition and love that as S. Paul thou mayest become crucified with Christ Gal. 2.20 and with good Ignatius in a Pathos of devotion cry out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Oh my love and therein my life my joy my Jesus he is crucified And in this melting extasie of contrition and love continue till the Cup be presented thee with a Drink this the blood of our Lord Lord Jesus Christ which thou receiving as from Christ in an awful and devout reverence in a renewed contrition of heart and devotion of love renew thy meditations of faith and in them whilst thou beholdest thy Saviour hanging upon his Cross seeing thou canst not conceive his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his unknown sufferings as the Greek Church calls them seeing thou canst not conceive the Sea of sorrows which overwhelmed his soul see oh see those Rivers of blood which overflowed his body And life flowing out with the blood see him seal a Consummatum est to his Passion and our Redemption with a giving up the ghost § 20. And here say within thy self Who is it in a challenge to the Law and Sin and Satan who is it that condemns seeing it is Christ that dyed Rom. 8.34 my Surety my Saviour who thus offers up himself a sacrifice for my sins And therefore presenting thy self in the presence of thy God and his holy Angels raise thy soul in this apprehension of faith That whatsoever is the guilt of Sin the accusation of Satan or the curse of the Law all is taken away cancelled and abolish'd by the merit of Christs passion And therefore in thy meditation of holy faith send forth this ejaculation of fervent prayer Look down oh look down heavenly Father from thy celestial sanctuary and behold the sacred Hoast the death the passion of my crucified Saviour whose blood of sprinkling speaks better things then that of Abel's even things of grace and mercy of pardon and peace Eph. 4 8. Col. 2.15 § 21. And here from the Passion of thy Saviour proceed in thy meditations of faith to his Ressurection and behold him leading Captivity captive triumphing gloriously over sin and Satan death and hell From his Resurrection follow him to his Ascension and raised by faith Heb. 7.25 behold him at the right hand of the Father in glory where He ever lives to make intercession for us And therefore presenting thy self before the Throne of grace powre out thy soul in prayer in the mediation of Christ Jesus that God would make good to thee the institution of this holy Sacrament as the seal of his Covenant of grace giving thee a communion with the Lord Jesus in all his benefits that so the pardon of thy sins being sealed a supply of grace exhibited and the earnest of glory confirmed thy whole man may be further sanctified and eternally blessed And now let the close of all be lauds and praises even Halleluiah salvation be unto our God and unto the Lamb for ever Rev. 7.10 Vers 16 17. Turn thee unto me and have mercy upon me for I am desolate and afflicted The troubles of my heart are enlarged O bring thou me out of
Soul as the Jews did with Christ first blindfold it and then buffet it his first aim still is to abuse the Judgment for he knows well he must first make blind before he can lead into the ditch Mat. 15.14 he must first deceive before he can destroy Wherefore in our Spiritual Conflicts they are the carnal reasonings of our own hearts rais'd by the secret suggestions of Satans malice which rend the deepest wounds and fret the forest galls of Conscience even to a griping anguish and an amazing horror perswading too too often perswading us that Gods hiding his face is a casting off the soul Lam. 3.7 8. Ps 77.8 9. his withdrawing his presence a rejecting our prayer and his temporary displeasure the earnest of an eternal vengeance whereby our perplexed souls become so full of troubles that our life draweth nigh unto the grave we are as those that go down into the pit Ps 88.15 16. and whilst we suffer these bitter terrors we are distracted Now seeing the womb of all this Impatience is that of Diffidence and the mother of this Diffidence is that of Ignorance ignorance in the mysteries of grace Ps 73.21 22. and promises of life in the ways of God and the works of his providence seeing it is so to whom shall we apply our selves in our Spiritual conflicts to receive Spiritual counsel but to the Priests of the Lord Mal. 2.7 2 Cor. 5.20 the Ministers of the Word as the Messengers of God and Ambassadors of Christ whose lips are not only made to preserve knowledge but also to dispense peace Many there are 2 Chr. 16.12 alas too too many who in their distemper of soul are like unto Asa in his disease of body as he sought unto the Physitian and not to God so they seek unto the World and not to Christ they betake themselves to sports and pastimes to merry company and frollick entertainments And thus in stead of salving the wound they rend it wider Cant. 5.7 in stead of pacifying their Conscience they either stupifie or enrage it Again others there are who under the pressure of temptations being indispos'd to holy duties their hearts heavy their minds perplext their thoughts wandring their spirits wounded they then in a froward discontent and sad dejection cease their Religious performances by this means yielding that advantage Satan seeks whose main drift and aim is Job 15.4 to discourage from holy exercises that the power of Grace being weakened Jam. 4 7. the force of his temptations may the more easily prevail And among all the duties of Holiness none is more eagerly opposed by Satan then that of Prayer Luk. 18.1 therefore doth he make it the master-piece of his subtilty and malice in all our afflictions of soul to damp our devotion of heart knowing well that there is no readier way to quench his fiery darts Eph. 6.16.18 then by our sorrowful sighs and mournful tears powred forth unto God and Christ in fervent prayers In Spiritual Conflicts then the soul through ignorance and error like a man in the dark fights against it self emb●ttering its sorrows and widening its wounds by impatience and distrust Is● 50.10 and the succor which Gods word doth afford it either does not discern or cannot imploy And seeing it is thus of how great a concernment is it that they who languish in dejections and labour under the weight of Spiritual troubles do betake themselves to some holy Confessor some faithful Minister of Christ to whom is committed the word of reconciliation 2 Cor. 5 19. that consulting him in their grief he may be an Helper of their joy and knowing their secret trouble 2 Cor. 1.24 he may administer them saving comfort And seeing our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ the chief Shepherd of the Flock hath set his Ministers in excubiis Heb. 13 17. to stand upon their Watch for the good of Souls strange it is that so many should conceal their distress and thereby languish in their distrust hide their disease and thereby perish for want of remedy Wherefore O ye distressed and dejected Souls that we may the better administer you spiritual comforts do you acquaint us with your spiritual griefs That we may the better impart to you spiritual councels do you discover to us your spiritual conflicts Ipse sibi denegat curam qui suam medico non publicat causam ● Ang. ep 188. Knowing that of S. Augustine to be an experienc'd truth in ghostly as well as bodily distempers that He denies to himself the cure who declares not to his Physitian the cause of his disease Further for this reason that it is the subtilty of Satans malice to cast such a cloud and darkness upon the soul that when he cannot h●nder he may then hide the Saving work of Grace in the Heart whereby many dear Children of God through the violence of Satans temptations are not able to read their own Evidences without help discover their own right in the Promises and title to the Heavenly inheritance without Councel and advice Even for this reason know O ye blessed Souls who have given up your names unto Christ ye who believe as an Article of your Creed the Communion of Saints ought to preserve as a duty of your obedience 1 Joh. 1.3 7. the fellowship of B eth●en which is not only in the midst of temporal distress●s to conve se cheerfully one with another as Friends but also in the midst of spiritual afflictions to confe● g aciously one with another as Christians whereby it shall appear Ps 45.2 E h. 4 29. ●sa 61.3 Rev 22 2. that the very leaves of a Tree of Righteousness the very words of a sanctified person they have a Curing and a Comforting vertue in them Yea such is the Sympathy of Grace as is shadowed out to us in that of Nature L. Verulam's Nat. Hist the Harmony of devout Souls being like that of musical Instruments the string that is struck in one Lute aff●cting with a trembling concent the string of that which is neighboring to it And thus do the devout affections of one pious soul strike impressions upon the heart of another Luk 24 32. And indeed those communications are most kindly and cordial which are from the experience of our own bosoms administring to others of those comforts wherewith we our selves have been comforted of God 2 Cor. 1.4 And because Precedents in all Courts are of much use and benefit for the deciding particular Cases therefore observe here the more usual Conflicts set forth in the Souls complaints and these reduc'd to several Heads as so many Cases in the Court of Conscience the resolving and determining whereof may happily by a blessing of Gods Spirit and grace administer comfort and in●●ruction to the afflicted such as the Experience of many can already witness to have been sound and saving to their souls The several Heads are these
in our mind and this will conduce much to the composing our souls when their Words of Complaint are answered with Grounds of Comfort and Rules of Direction CHAP. I. The Souls Conflict from the importunate Crowd of Vain Thoughts OUr secret Thoughts are commonly the immediate issue of our inward Principles vile affections still begetting vain imaginations and holy desires administring matter for divine thoughts Wherefore when our Lord Jesus Christ sets up his Throne in the Heart he there governs by the golden Scepter of his Grace which Grace it is that casts down every high imagination and brings into captivity every vain thought to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which vain thoughts however they may seem small sins yet their strength of evil like that of the Egyptian caterpillars it is in their number Ps 10 5.34 35. whereby they prevail oftentimes to eat up every green thing in the land every good motion in the heart And this importunate crowd of vain Thoughts is not the least of Satans temptations in which he is right Beelzebub the God of Flyes Mat. 12.24 for as busie Flyes were to the Altars sacrifices so are vain thoughts to our holy services their continual buzzing disturbs the Mind and distracts its devotion This Cogitationum tumultus this tumult and crowd of vain Thoughts was once S. Bernards trouble of which he complains Bern. de inter Dem. that introeunt exeunt they pass and repass come in and go out and will not be controll'd Amovere volo nec valeo I would fain saith he remove them but cannot either as slie Thieves they creep in undiscern'd or as bold Guests they force admittance though they find no welcome Now because nothing is more dreadful to the godly man then sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so says S. Chrysostom that to him is death that to him is hell Even therefore though no exorbitancie of life be discerned by man yet is he afflicted deeply afflicted for the very risings and rebellions of his Thoughts which being in the secret closet of the Heart can only appear unto God And in this his affliction hear we his Complaint The Words of Complaint Oh the perplexing trouble of my distracting thoughts How do they by their slie insinuations and secret importunities continually disturb the quiet of my mind and make my holy duties become a weariness to my soul They cool the heat they damp the vigor they dead the comfort of all my devotions Even when I pray God to forgive my sins I then sin whilst I am praying for forgiveness yea whether it be in the Church or in the Closet so frequently and so violently do these vain Thoughts withdraw mine heart from Gods service that I cannot have confidence he hears my suit because I know by experience I do not hear my self and therefore sure needs must God be far off from my prayer whilst my Heart is so far out of his presence hurried away with a crowd of vain Imaginations The Grounds of Comfort 1. These vain Thoughts O thou afflicted soul being indeed thy burden they shall not be thy ruine and though they do take from the sweetness yet they shall not take from the sincerity of thy devotions Yea 2 King 10.16.31 Ps 26.2 3. hereby thy sincerity is approv'd for that some external interest of temporal relations may make us guard our words our actions but it must be some internal Principle of holy fear which makes us to watch our thoughts our desires If then thy devotions were not sincere thy heart would not be troubled for to be taken off from a work we regard not Ps 119 115. is no disquet to the mind but it is an argument we set a value and esteem upon the work in hand when we are loth to be disturbed in the doing Ps 7.9 139.2 Jer. 11.20 2. It is no little glory which we give to God in the acknowledgment of his omnipresence and omniscience that we own him present in the Closet of our Hearts and privy to the first risings of our most inward thoughts And as it is the excellencie of Gods law that it reacheth our thoughts to discern and judge them Heb. 4.12 Luk. 2.35 so it is the riches of Gods mercy that it goes beyond the number of our thoughts to remit and pardon them Were it not indeed for the multitude of Gods compassions Ps 51.1 Gen. 6.5 dangerous yea desperate were our condition in the multitude of our sinful imaginations Which Imaginations being in number infinite are not to he forgiven but by those Mercies which are infinite and numberless Ps 145 8 9. This oh this is the sure foundation of firm comfort to the soul the tender mercies of its God! 3. It is much the experience of Gods children even the devoutest Saints that their thoughts of God and of Christ of heaven and of holiness are very unsteady and fleeting Like the sight of a Star through an Optick glass when held by a Palsey-hand such is our view of Divine objects we are long in finding them and soon lose them our thoughts wavering through our minds weakness Besides when we are most intent and our eye fixt then is Satan ready to strike us on the elbow Ps 57.7 Ps 31.21 22. and by some suggestion to shake us from our steadiness and disturb our devotions Indeed as Satan so the World and the Flesh they are most importunate suitors and let our communication with God and with Christ in fervent Prayer or any other holy service be ne'r so earnest and secret yet will they thrust in upon the soul for reception and audience Yea though we observe our Lords command and watch unto prayer Mar. 13.33 yet in our strictest Watch how do these enemies slip by our Guards If we stop and turn back some vain Thoughts yet even then whilst we are busied in that watchful care how are we surprised with some other as vain imaginations notwithstanding all our care and watchfulness Think not then O distressed soul think not 1 Cor. 10 13 in the common condition of Gods children that thou art cast out of Gods favor 4. Know thou hast the gracious mediation of an alsufficient Saviour to supply thy defects and procure an acceptance of thy sincere though imperfect Devotions In thy Saviours mediation Heb. 2.17 Joh. 6.27 Luk. 4.18 Rom. 8.34 Heb. 7 25. behold him a merciful and a faithful High Priest seal'd of the Father and annointed by the Spirit to this very office that being entred the Holy of Holies and set down at the right hand of the Majesty on high he should ever live to make intercession for us so that he he it is who compassionately toucht with a feeling of our infirmities Heb. 4 15. presents the sincere desires of our souls and holy purposes of our hearts as the firstlings of our flock made acceptable unto God through
the incense of his merits offered up before the Mercy-seat Rev. 8.3 the Throne of Grace And indeed our fervor being that of faith not of vision we may not expect the fire of our sacrifice to burn so clear as to have no smoke upon the Altar no Judg. 13.20 it is purely Angelical to ascend in a flame to heaven Whilst we are here Pilgrims and Sojourners dwelling in the earthly Tabernacles of our bodies 2 Cor. 5 1. vain Thoughts will still attend if not accompany our divinest services and devoutest supplications and when our supplications are most devout it is not the raised affection of the heart or fixt attention of the mind but the blessed mediation of our holy Jesus which makes the enlarged Suppliant to be accepted Let this then quiet thy soul amidst all the distractions of thy disturbing thoughts thou hast the mediation of Christ 1 Tim. 2.5 to make the secret desires of thine heart accepted of thy God 5. As thou hast the gracious Mediation of an alsufficient Saviour to supply thy defects so hast thou the strengthening power of his holy Spirit to help thine infirmities Rom. 8.26 2 Cor. 12.9 which strength is made perfect in weakness And when thou art emptied it shall fill thee when thou art stumbled it shall raise thee when thou art lost in thy self it shall by a secret evidence of divine love discover thee to be found in Christ who treading Satan under thy feet Rom. 16.20 Rom. 8.37 Phil. 3.10 shall make thee more then conqueror by fellowship with him in his death and in his victory The experience of Gods Saints will tell thee that they have many moneths ay some many years languished under this cross of vain thoughts and earthly distractions yet after long conflict have obtained a joyful conquest Ezek 7.16 Isa 40 31. and their mourning as Doves hath been changed into mounting up as Eagles in sweet enlargements yea ravishments of spirit by the grace of supplication and in their raised communions wiah God through Christ in the sacred duties of his holy Worship Know then O thou afflicted soul know assuredly that bearing thy Cross with patience waiting upon God in hope and relying upon Christ by faith thy vain thoughts resisted with diligence and bewail'd with sorrow shall neither deprive thee of Gods blessing nor declare thee void of his grace The Rules of Direction 1. In the duties of Gods worship affect thy soul with a rais'd apprehension of Gods sacred presence and an awful fear of his divine Majesty so mighty in power so excellent in purity his perfections infinite his presence glorious For this this is the main reason why the elect Angels and blessed Saints are so fixt in their thoughts so intent in their service Rev. 7.15 not liable to any the least wanderings even because their thoughts their hearts their whole selves are concentred in an heavenly contemplation of the majesty purity and holiness of Gods infinite essence Mat. 18 10. Rev 4 8. Ay and amongst men who is it that will play with a feather whilst he is speaking with a King This know then assuredly by how much the soul doth receive the deeper impressions of an awful reverence Heb. 12.28 by so much it shall find the less prevailings of worldly distractions 2. Keep thy faith fixt upon Christs mediation especially in the close of thy devotions Rev. 8.3 beholding his incense when thou offers thy sacrifice and though distractions have drawn thee from thy self yet let not distrust drive thee from thy Jesus But remember when vain Thoughts have taken off thy minds attention in Gods service then to breath forth some secret sighs and send them up to God as the winged messengers of thy Souls desires which shall certainly have their audience and acceptance at the Throne of Grace when their access is from the hand of Christ Eph. 2.18 It may be God suffers thy Thoughts to be loose that thy faith may be fixt Wherefore by how much Satan is the more busie to distract thy thoughts by so much be thou the more zealous to quicken thy devotions not being discouraged by any difficulties from the sincere though weak performance of thy holy duties especially closing still with an eye of faith Heb. 7.25 fixt upon Christ in his intercession And when Satan sees his suggestions help to increase the flame not put out the fire of thy devout zeal he will then in policie withdraw the temptation which in malice he hath continued to withdraw thee from thy God thy Jesus and thy devotion 3. Get an increase of saving knowledge as a sure means of sanctified thoughts The mysteries of Grace and sacred truths of the Gospel Mat 12.35 Luk. 6 45. they enrich the mind and become a good treasure which laid up in the heart doth still furnish the soul with sacred matter for divine meditation The Mind is a Mint continually going and whatsoever metal is cast in receives its stamp is form'd and fashion'd into thoughts of good or evil Mat 15.19 according to the matter which is administred Hereby then we give weight and worth to our thoughts by fixing them upon heavenly objects which heavenly objects are presented to the mind according to the knowledg of God and of Christ laid up in the Heart which when we are awake Deut. 6.7 Pro. 6.22 is said to talk with us For there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a Soliloquy of Thoughts as well as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a Conference of the Tongue yea by those we talk with God and with Christ So David When thou saidst Seek ye my face my heart said unto thee Thy face Lord will I seek Ps 27.8 As the best communion is that of the Spirit so the best communication is that of the Thoughts which are spiritual 4. Mortifie vile affections and inordinate passions as availing much to the restraining evil thoughts and vain imaginations For as wet wood when stirr'd so are our passions when mov'd Mat. 9.4 Luk. 11.17 Jer. 4.14 they send forth an whole crowd of thoughts which rise like thick vapors and fumes to cloud and oppress the mind The better then to subdue our passions we must strongly guard our senses for that a rebellion of affections within is oftentimes from an invasion of objects without Thus David he sees and then lusts and Job that he might not lust 2 Sam. 11.2.3 Job 31.1 he would not see And here O man whilst thou guardest thy senses and restrainest thine affections as to external objects beware oh beware of acting over that sin in inward speculation which thou hast formerly committed in outward action This speculative wickedness is the most polluting filth and most provoking guilt To have the outward enjoyments of sin is a committing fornication with the creature but to beget imaginations of sin and then pollute our selves with the brats of our own bosoms the children of
in its filthiness is the mother Answ Jer. 4.14 Answ True if we find the mother hug and kiss the child the Heart I mean embrace and indulge the thought then indeed though the foul suggestion be only an egg laid in our nest yet because we brood it with our own warmth it becomes the issue of our own corruption and lays a black stain and guilt upon the soul Wherefore seeing as naturally tender children affect the womb so do corrupt thoughts the heart that bears them Know O thou afflicted soul if thy foul thoughts be of thine own begetting or begotten of thee thou shalt find a secret disposition of liking and of loving to them and an inward softness will be ready to foster and to cherish them Ps 119.113 But if they are the objects of thy hate which startle and affright thy soul and thou findest a secret antipathy against them and an inward abhorring of them then they are certainly altogether from without and so I have our Saviours warrant to assert and thou his word to believe that they defile not the man Mat. 15.18 19. But what is it that thy troubled soul still objects Thou sayest Obj. 2 Never any of Gods children were in this condition and sure it is some strange corruption discern'd by Satan which makes him thus tempt and it is some heavy displeasure conceiv'd by God which makes him thus permit the temptation Answ Thus to be afflicted is no new thing Answ 2 Cor. 2.11 and that with Gods Saints even I the least of those who minister to the Flock of Christ can witness to thee that in the service of my Ministry amongst other afflicted Consciences I have met with more then two or three even very many who had been thus buffeted by Satan and with such violence of fury for length of time even for some years that they have pin'd away and languished in their Convulsion-fits of secret tortures brought down to the very gates of death yea of hell too concealing their temptations because asham'd to utter them And these have been persons of no mean piety who observ'd Satans assaults to have been most violent when their devotions had been most enflam'd Yea their first conflict with these foul temptations was some time after their thorow-conversions when having given up their names unto Christ they had been exercised in solemn humiliations and graciously enlarg'd yea ravish'd with the sweet delights of holiness in their communions with God and with Christ in prayer and in praises Good souls thus brought to Mount Tabor they thought of building Tabernacles but alas Mat 17.4 they were presently made to come down and bearing their Cross Luk. ● 23 follow Christ to Mount Calvary yea to the grave and to hell that the glory of their victory and triumph might be the greater And blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.3 who in the power of his Spirit and grace was pleased to make these very Grounds of Comfort and Rules of Direction to become effectual to their restoring 3. It appears then that these faedae tentationes as Casuists call them these foul and filthy temptations even of Infidelity Blasphemy Atheism and the like they are Satans scare-crows when his baits fail when he cannot allure and win the soul by carnal pleasures and worldly delights then he seeks to fright and deter it from duties of holiness by secret horrors and dreadful suggestions Which dreadful suggestions rightly considered Job 30.15 Ps 88.16 they bring more of terror then of guilt to the soul being so contrary to the light of Nature and the dictate of Reason not rais'd by man but cast in by Satan And being thus cast in they have their passage thorow not their dwelling in the heart they make their entrance as bold Intruders but find not entertainment as welcom Guests Wherefore as many good Thoughts which only come into the mind by sudden motion and like sparks die as soon as brought forth as those do not argue a regenerate estate so many evil Thoughts which thrust into the heart by a sudden irruption and are opposed as soon as discern'd they do not prove a state unregenerate The Rules of Direction 1. Rightly inform thy judgment by making it a part of thy spiritual understanding to discern aright between the temptation Phil. 19.10 Heb. 5.14 and the evil of the temptation Which evil of temptation lies in the consent of the Will which Satan may perswade but cannot enforce So that if the temptation be consented to it brings guilt upon the soul but if repulst it returns upon Satan 2. Strictly examine thy Conscience for the discovery of what transgressions may have occasion'd these temptations For sometimes they are the punishment of sin though themselves not a sin to be punisht they are a just affliction when they are not a condemning guilt If ●inah gad abroad her chastity suffers a Rape Gen. 34.1 as the punishment of her curiosity and to wander in our thoughts from God is oftentimes punish'd with meeting a Bug-bear in our way Thoughts of Blasphemy or the like to fright us back and drive us neerer to him Yea when we become disobedient to Gods will not laid low in our humble submissions he suffers Satan to buffet us even against our wills sore vext with his foul suggestions and thus our grieving his Spirit Eph. 4.30 is by a Lex tali●nis justly chastised with a grieving ours Again observe that when we have had our Eagles flight soaring aloft in spiritual ravishments and then been pufft up with spiritual pride 2 Cor. 12 7. Luk. 10.10 God as once to chastise this sin and subdue this lust he justly suffers Satan who for his pride fell from heaven like lightening 2 Cor. 12.8 to buffet and afflict the soul with these affrighting terrors which like lightening amaze with horror though they do not wound with guilt Further yet as thou examinest thy self to find out what sins have occasioned these temptations so examine what sins have been caused or occasion'd by them as what deadness of heart what impatiencie of spirit what neglect of Gods service what weariness in holy duties what froward discontent what repining distrust and the like 3. Now having rightly inform'd thy Judgement as to the quality and nature of these temptations and strictly examined thy Conscience as to the cause or occasion of them the best way to free thy self from their violence and vexation is this 1 Do thou prostrate thy self in Gods presence and in a deep humiliation of soul with fasting and prayer Mat. 17 21. do thou supplicate the Throne of Grace to obtain the mercy of thy God through the merits of thy Saviour for the free and full pardon of whatsoever sin hath occasioned these temptations or hath been it self caused by them 2 When thou hast made this humble supplication with all earnest contrition then cite Satan
quicken our zeal of hungring desires and oft-times suffers the assaults of some sensual lust to pull down or prevent the haughtiness of spiritual pride So that our growth in grace is then real when it is not apparent it is always true though not always equal there being no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the members of Christs body Eph. 4 16. Col. 2.19 but still an effectual working of his Spirit and grace in each part of the New man 2. When God and Christ have the greatest measure the highest degree of thy will love and desire though thine heart is not so enlarg'd thy spirit not so chearful thy duties not so pleasant yet are thy graces saving and sincere Saving and sincere making God in Christ thine end on whom thou dost fix thine intentions aims and affections for the attainment and enjoyment of him And this is a sure sign God is thine end that thou art so disquieted in his seeming absence from thy soul For what we most highly prize Ps 7● 25.25 Ps 2● 1 Ps 143 7. we are most careful to keep most joyous to possess most grieved to lose and most troubled to want 3. There is less danger and more hope of a languishing afflicted and mournful then of a rais'd ravish'd and transported Soul Humility and holy fear shall preserve the former whilst pride and presumption destroys the latter For whilst proud conceits fanatick dreams and false joys fill the sails how many how very many do run themselves upon the rocks even the rocks of presumption and spiritual pride Rev. 3 17. ●am 4.6 whereas God giveth grace unto the humble 4. When the soul by mortification struggles with the motions by prayer contests with the suggestions and by vows contends with the sollicitations of sin then the corruptions of heart do not so much argue a decay as the oppositions of soul do prove an increase of grace which increase if it be not in that growth which is upward in the sprouting of the branches yet is it in that which is downward in the spreading of the root Col. 2.7 Mat. 11.29 Mat. 5.3 Rom. 5.1 2. and by how much grace is the more firmly rooted in humility and poverty of spirit by so much shall it the more abundantly flourish in peace and joy in the Holy Ghost The Rules of Direction 1. Go not about to judge of thy Spiritual estate in an unseasonable time or by uncertain signs 1. Not in an unseasonable time as is that of temptation when the Mind is clouded the Conscience afflicted and the Spirit wounded Ps ●7 10 what were this but to take a Prospect in a Mist or to view a Country in a Storm 2. Not by uncertain signs Many signs beget much perplexities Confident I am the formality of multiplying marks and signs hath more puzled then pacified more entangled then resolved doubting and troubled Consciences For among ten or twelve or more Signs of Grace which some give as if they would make up with number what is wanting in weight the soul that questions but one often shall be more dejected and afflicted with that one then rais'd and comforted with all the other nine True it is Formae nos latent the essential forms are hid from us is true in natural much more in spiritual things and therefore in Divinity our Demonstrations are still a posteriori discovering the cause by the effect Wherefore we must observe that the effects we set up as signs be such as are most proper and immediate to the cause and then I am sure they cannot be many and those that are Isa 57.18 19. they will be full convincing the Judgment and comforting the tender Conscience Thus we discover the fire by its heat the sun by its light whereas to discover the sun by its heat or the fire by its light may prove erroneous though we know light is in the fire and heat is in the sun yet not so immediately but that there may be light where there is no heat and there may be heat where there is no light Thus to discover sanctifying and saving grace by this sign of joy and delight in holy duties is by an effect more remote from the cause and the cause may really be without this effect For how many gracious hearts and sanctified souls even such as we are now conversing with do languish in trouble and are opprest with grief So that if joy and delight in holy duties must be the evidence of their saving graces Psal ●7 and Psal 88. there is no remedy but they must lie down in sorrow and it is not any present ministration shall afford them comfort till Gods mercy make good the sign which mans imprudence hath prescribed Know then one proper sign rightly apprehended and truly applied is a Rule of trial which concludes in it all that can be given And amongst other signs of saving grace Poverty of spirit with an hungring and thirsting after righteousness is as immediate and infallible as any can be nam'd Wherefore 2. Lay hold on the Promise in its sweetness of divine truth so suitable to the condition of thine afflicted estate Hear thy Saviours words Blessed are the poor in spirit Matth. 5 3. vers 4. vers 6. for theirs is the kingdom of heaven And again Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted Yea Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness for they shall be filled Lay up these Promises in thine heart as thy sure delight prize them as thy treasure feed on them as thy Manna given of God to refresh thy soul in the Wilderness of this afflicting world Build thou thy peace upon this pillar suck the sweet comforts of the Spirit from these breasts of consolation Isa 66.12 Apply these healing medicines to thy wounded Conscience by a discursive meditation awaken thy heart and incite thy will to close with God and with Christ in the mercy and truth of the promise saying in Davids self-expostulation Why art thou cast down O my soul Psal 42.11 and why art thou disquieted within me Hope thou in God for I shall yet praise him who is the health of my countenance and my God Or as the devout Psalmist again Return unto thy rest O my soul Psal 116 7. for the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee Thus as chasing the benumb'd limbs with hot oils will recover their former warmth and life so plying the sadded heart with quickening thoughts will restore its former peace and comfort And when thou feelest a secret heat of divine grace keep the fire burning ply it with zealous affections those zealous affections rais'd in devout meditations those devout meditations fixt upon the promises those promises founded upon Christ as Mediator and upon God in him as Fountain of all grace and love 3. Keep an open passage betwixt God and thy soul hold fast an humble converse and heavenly communion with him Eph. 1.3 as in
of faith in sincere desires after Christ which are the breathings of the Spirit have a good hope thou art regenerated and as the mother waits for an assurance of her quickening in the childs stronger motions so do thou wait for an assurance of thy regenerating in Faiths stronger enlargements The strongest Believer 2 Pet. 1.1 and the weakest of the Faithful have all obtain'd like precious faith like precious in quality of nature though not in degree of perfection Wherefore in thy doubts and fears let thy fears diminish thy doubts For know Satan doth not winnow where there is no corn he doth not perplex with doubtings but where he knows there is some faith And let this be thy comfort Phil. 1.6 He who hath begun a good work in thee will perfect the same unto the day of the Lord Jesus He who recovered the Apostles from their fall shall restore thee from thy dejections healing thy broken heart Ps 147.3 and binding up thy wounds dispelling thy cloud of temptations with the light of his countenance yea sealing thee with his holy Spirit of promise Eph. 1.13 14 and giving thee the sure earnest of the heavenly inheritance even peace of conscience and joy in the Holy Ghost The Rules of Direction 1. Cleer thy judgment from that too common error which asserts Faith of assurance that our sins are pardoned to be the only justifying and saving faith For this error consented to in the judgment hath this ill effect upon the soul that thereby it still languisheth in fears and is affrighted with terrors labouring under the horror of this apprehension that there is no remission of sins because no faith in Christ and no faith i● Christ because no assurance of being in him accepted of God to justification To clear this error O thou afflicted soul know Faith hath a threefold act of Assent of Reliance and of Assurance of Assent which is before Justification of Reliance which is in Justification and of Assurance which is after Justification As thus Joh. 3.16 Rom. 3.25 Luk. 24.47 Thou readest in Scripture God promiseth to all remission of sins through faith in the blood of Christ Now thou first assentest to this as a certain and sacred truth acknowledging it the free promise and wise dispensation of the all gracious and holy God Jam. 2.19 This thou mayst do and yet not be justified But when further to this assent of Faith thou dost add the act of Reliance even a casting thy self and resting thy soul upon the love and mercy of thy God for the remission of sins according to the truth of his promise by the blood of Jesus Christ Act. 5.31 this accompanied with repentance can never be without justification But now after this upon some gracious experiences it is of Gods love in Christ in the sweet communions and comforts of his Spirit that thou comest to find a third act of holy Faith even this humble assurance that God according to his word of promise Eph. 1 13. 1 Thess 1.5 hath graciously pardoned thy sin and accepted thee in thy Jesus Observe then many millions of Gods Saints there may be yea doubtless are justified through faith who yet have not an assurance that their sins are pardon'd I say yet have not for that an assurance of Gods love accepting them in Christ is not the real essence but rather the sweet effect not the proper being Rom. 5.1 but rather the happy consequent of a justifying faith which is seldom vouchsafed of God even to his dearest children but upon frequent experiences of spiritual communions So that in times of temptation to deny our faith because we feel not our assurance is an error much like his who in time of winter cuts down his tree because he finds not its fruit whereas the root being firm the tree is safe So our reliance being fixt our faith is sound and as a firm root as a sound faith Col. ● 7 Gal. 5.22 it shall in due time bring forth its sweet fruits of righteousness peace joy c. 2. Understand aright how to discern that thou hast faith which is done by an experimental act of adherence unto Christ when thou canst cordially say with S. Peter that there is none other name under heaven given among men whereby they may be saved Act. 4.12 but the name of the Lord Jesus And therefore relying upon him in his mercy and in his merits in his passion and in his intercession thou seeks and sues for life and salvation in and by him alone Thus Faith is like the Light which discovers not only other things but it self too wherefore as by the light thou dost discern the object and by the eye withal discover the light so by faith thou dost apprehend Christ to be thy Saviour and withal 2 Cor. 13.5 1 Joh. 4.12 by the understanding mayst apprehend that faith whereby thou art saved But here thou wilt object Obj. That sure we cannot by any reflect act or inward experience certainly discern we have faith For that how many do we know daily deceived and what more common amongst men then to think yea to be confident they have faith when they have it not and amongst the most profanely wicked who will not say I believe To this I answer Shall we therefore conclude the Godly man is deceiv'd because the Hypocrite is Answ shall we say the faithful man cannot truly discern because the carnal man does not The sleeping man indeed oftentimes dreams he is awake and what shall we therefore have the waking man distrust himself and fear he is asleep who would not condemn this conceit of folly Wherefore as the waking man does discern he is awake so may the Believer discern he does believe and this by an experimental act of secret desire after Christ and a sincere reliance upon him of which no man can be Judge but his own Conscience So that as when we are awake our senses being perfect we discern we are awake and do not dream so when we believe our understanding being clear we discern we do believe and do not presume But now if any man awake shall strongly conceit he is in a dream we may not conclude it is because he hath no sense but because he hath an over-mastering passion of Melancholy And thus if any Believer shall strongly perswade himself he doth not believe we may not say it is because he hath no faith but because he hath an overpowering Temptation of Satan As therefore in the former we use Physical remedies to cure the passion so in the latter we must use Spiritual helps to overcome the temptation 3. Endeavour to prove the sincerity and strengthen the weakness of thy faith by devoutly meditating upon the mysteries of Godliness and humbly applying the promises of life 1. Devoutly meditating upon the mysteries of Godliness the large series of which mysteries linkt together in the long chain of mans redemption
from an impulse of love as a delight I make mine Obedience a legal debt not a free-will offering a necessitated service aw'd with fear not an Eucharistical sacrifice mov'd with love Yea I am not what I was in stead of improving my Talent of Grace I have forsaken my first love I am not at all ready and cheerful willing and constant in holy duties as formerly so that I fear I have received the grace of God in vain Time was when with David I made Gods Word my portion and heritage gold and silver not so precious liberty and life not so dear mine heart seem'd then to be fill'd with God and with Christ holy services were so sweet to my soul that I counted my very work wages But oh now my delightful Paradise is turn'd into a barren Wilderness holy duties and religious performances they are as the ways of thorns and briars even wearisom and unpleasant paths and oh how can I then believe God accepts my person in Christ when I feel no quickenings of his Spirit in an holy life The Grounds of Comfort 1. It is the wise dispensation of our gracious God sometimes to suffer our devotion to decay and our corruptions to prevail on purpose to advance the dignity and discover the necessity of his grace Joh. 15.5 that so knowing our dependance we may become the more sincere in our obedience and being humbled in the sense of our own emptiness and vanity we may be the more intent upon the fulness of his Alsufficiencie The goodliest fabrick of an holy life Phil. 4.13 Jud. 24 25. if God withdraw the props and pillars of his supporting and strengthening grace how will it soon shake and sink and fall to ruine If David then be continually with God it is because God holds him by his right hand Ps 73.23 As it was grace which wrought effectually to our conversion and regeneration so it is grace that worketh still in the like efficacie to our further sanctification and final perseverance And therefore it is Davids prayer unto God saying Hold up my goings in thy paths Ps 17.5 1 Pet. 1.5 that my footsteps slip not And that we are kept it is by the power of God through faith to salvation So that as fuel to the fire as food to the body as showers to the corn such is Grace to devotion and an holy life without which it faints it dies it withers away 2. That there is a less active vigor in our holy life and religious conversation may proceed from weakness of nature not of grace The soul follows much the temperature of the body if that be sickly and weak the soul cannot act its gracious operations with that vigor and zeal as when healthful and strong A decay of spirits in the body will certainly make an abatement of vigor in the soul the unaptness of the Instrument takes much from the art and excellencie of the Workman and the body that 's the souls instrument whereby it acts its motions and therefore if the body be more dull the soul must needs be less vigorous and so the duties of devotion the less active and lively Rev. 2.4 3. Whereas many complain as thou dost that they are fallen from their first love because not so affected with the enlargements of devotion and therein not so quickened with the life of grace as at their first conversion when they first gave up their names unto Christ they may haply find if rightly examined those enlargements and delights of their first conversion did proceed as much from the novelty as the piety of their estate Their love and in that their delights more sensible but not more solid more passionate but not more sincere right like the love and delight of first Espousals Jer. 2.2 Cant. 3 11. whereas we question not but that a long married Couple are as dear in their love though not so frequent in their embraces Yea it may be an excess of love which begets this affliction of soul for true love is so enlarg'd in dispositions and resolutions of doing more service to God and Christ that all it does seems still too little And therefore many complain their present duties are short of former services and their present vigor less then former zeal which yet is not so indeed but in appearance Before small love thought little to be much and now great love thinks much to be but little To close then Whereas it is ordinary with God to deal with the penitent Convert as the Father did with his prodigal Son even entertain him with feasting and mirth receive him with much of spiritual solace and delight Luk. 15.23 And this he does the better to encourage him in the way of holiness yea and to fortifie him against the days of trial and temptation which shall after come upon him in which days of temptation and trial he may not think but that though his former joys and delights do cease yet the sincerity and strength too of grace may continue yea and be increased The Rules of Direction 1. Breathe forth thy complaints unto Christ in prayer for the life thou hast is from the quickening power of his grace and therefore he who died that thou mightest live will preserve the life which he hath given But then thou must beg it by prayer And at once to quicken thy prayer and strengthen thy faith hear his promise and own his love Mat. 5 6. Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness for they shall be filled What parent is it who hearing his child hungry and fainting cry out for bread Luk. 11.11.13 that can restrain his bowels from pitty or his hand from relief And far more compassionate is thy Saviour far more tender is his love He is indeed love it self 1 Joh. 4.16 He the fountain as of life so of love The love thou bearest to him proceeds from him and certainly he would not make thee to love him if thou wert not first belov'd of him Wherefore take heart in thy dejections convert his promise into prayer plead with thy God in the right of his own bond and his Sons blood urge the grace of his own promise the Law of his own Covenant say with David Make good O Lord thy word unto thy servant Ps 119 4● upon which thou hast caused me to hope Yea let me bespeak thee as the Prophet does Zion Let tears run down like a river Lam 2 18. not in the impatience of distrust but the importunity of devotion In this Ne taceat pupilla oculi tui let not the apple of thine eye keep silence Ps 6.8 every tear every sigh hath a voice to implore mercy and to importune grace Yea seeing thou canst not follow Agnum immaculatum sine macula the spotless Lamb without thy spots of sin Joh. 1.29 thy daily tears shall obtain the blood of the Lamb to cleanse thy guilt And doubt
with Gods displeasure Thus how often is it that God prepares man to become some excellent structure even when he seems to be turning him into a ruinous heap As men intending to repair seem to demolish the building they take away some beams but it is to put in stronger they stop up some lights but it is to make larger Thus is it with the faithful who are Gods building 1 Cor. 3 9. He removes their props of sense to fix the pillars of faith He darkens the light of their spiritual joys but it is to enlarge their fuller comforts The Rules of Direction 1. Search what root of bitterness it is that hath taken away the taste of all heavenly sweetness what guilt of sin that hath depriv'd thee of the comforts of the Spirit Enter the Court of thy Conscience where God hath set up his tribunal and hear what charge is there laid against thee Is it not some stubbornness of spirit some unrepented disobedience which God chastiseth with those rebukes of conscience and terrors of soul For commonly God deals with his backsliding Saints as a King with his rebellious Subjects when neither the proffers of grace nor the promises of pardon when neither the edicts of command nor the threatenings of wrath when neither gracious counsel nor a bearing patience can prevail then does God arm himself to the battel letting flie the arrows of his indignation into their soul Job 6.4 as Job complains The arrows of the Almighty are within me the poison whereof drinketh up my spirit the terrors of God do set themselvs in array against me This is certain upon all known experience that disobedience and impenitence they are the bitter springs of much spiritual distress And truly God need not go far for a rod to chastise our disobedience if he withdraw his comforting Spirit we shall soon find and feel our own will become an afflicting Spirit our own dreadful thoughts will be our sorest scourges 2. Is it not some spiritual lethargy of remisness and sloth that hath seised thine inward man If so no wonder if the Physitian of thy soul prescribe thee so sharp a medicine administer thee so strong a potion all being little enough to rouse thy drowsie spirits and quicken thy dead heart Holy performances whether in the Closet or in the Church they are not only debts we pay to Gods justice but also oblations we owe to Gods mercy Ps ●1 18 19. and therefore either wholly to omit them or slightly to slubber them over is not only unfaithfulness but also unthankfulness both the majesty and the mercy of God being despised and where his majesty and mercy is despised no wonder if his favor and presence be withheld 3. Is it not the want of reverence and godly fear And therefore by the rebukes of his Spirit God severely tutors thee to what he requires of thee to serve him acceptably with reverence and godly fear Heb 12.23 Heb. ● 16 God likes well that we come with boldness to the throne of grace yet a boldness of humble confidence not of a careless irreverence The awe of Majesty is much preserv'd by avoiding too much familiarity and therefore some Monarchs have withdrawn themselves from vulgar eyes to keep up the more sacred esteem and awe of their Soveraignty Thus God he deals with his Saints when much indulg'd they become wanton proud and irreverent God intermixeth Majesty with Mercy and tempers their favours with frowns he withholds his comfortable presence and awes their souls with secret rebukes that they may learn to put in practice what the Church gives in pattern even to walk in the fear of the Lord Act. 9 31. Phil. 2.12 and comfort of the Holy Ghost yea work out their salvation with fear and trembling This is indeed a sure Maxim that he who bears his spiritual afflictions with a distrustful impatience it is more then probable that he stains his devout enlargements with spiritual pride and pride and irreverence go together 4. Is it not thy heart playing false with thy God leaning in its affections too much to the world For that then God usually comes with bitterness to wean the soul when we are upon making the world our Home which should be our Inne when we are upon taking our rest in these earthly things then God brings on an evil day of temptation and trial upon us to discover how vain Earth is when Heaven is clouded how insufficient to sanctifie which cannot comfort When the soul will prove disloyal J●m 4.4 and enter an adulterous league with the World then comes God with his Bill of Divorce that she may know what is the vanity and folly the guilt and curse of her falling off to such wretched beggerly and worthless lovers for that in a day of terrors the soul will know that there is none but Christ none but he that can bring comfort peace and safety Thus then search whether it be not some stubbornness and disobedience some lethargie of sloth some wantonness irreverence or spiritual pride some love of the world Search whether they are not these or some other enormous iniquities which have separated betwixt thee and thy God Isa 59.2 whether they are not these or some such hainous sins which have hid his face from thee and if so no wonder if he who does the works of the Devil find an Hell in his Conscience And to still the clamor and quench the flashes of this Hell observe the second Rule of Direction which follows 2. Confess and bewail thy sin in the deepest of humiliations The reason indeed oftentimes why God puts the soul to the rack it is because it will not confess it is so loth to leave that it is unwilling to acknowledg its sin But as there is no full discovery of sin without examination Prov. 28.13 so nor is there any full pardon of sin without confession Wherefore set thy sins in order before thee and if thy Conscience pleads guilty to none other impiety yet thine ignorance diffidence passion and impatience in thy trial of spiritual afflictions do bring guilt enough for the deepest of humiliations Job 40.4 Thus it was with Job he confesseth unto God saying I am vile what shall I answer I will lay my hand upon my mouth And humbly submitting to the justice of Gods plea Job 42.36 and the reproof of his conviction in the sense of his impatience and pride he abhors himself and repents in dust and ashes And after God gives testimony of his love in accepting a sacrifice from his hands Thus then having set thy sins in order before thee let their guilt affect thine heart with sorrow that sorrow affect thine eyes with tears and then in the anguish of thy soul do thou crouch and crawl to the Throne of Grace solliciting earnestly with strong cries the mercies of thy God through the merits of thy Saviour for the pardon of thy sin the peace
of thy soul and the comforts of his Spirit which pardon obtain'd peace restor'd comforts recover'd are all strengthened confirm'd and seal'd by servent prayer devout meditation and a worthy receiving the blessed Eucharist These these holy duties are the oil which keeps the lamp burning the sacred means ordain'd of God and Christ for the quickening of our graces and the enlarging of our comforts The Objections answered Obj. 1 Obj. 1. These Rules I have according to my best endevours observ'd and yet notwithstanding all Gospel-ministrations my wound ah my deep wound is not healed mine anguish my secret anguish is not abated Oh! sure my hope is perished from the Lord He hath cut me off Oh that I had never been born or that I had never liv'd to behold my wretchedness Answ Wo is me what shall I do Answ Do what thou sayest thou hast already done still endeavour that thy spiritual comforts may take their rise from thy penitential sorrows enquire still after God in Christ in the means of grace press near to him in his ordinances let no discouragements beat thee back Joh 6. ●7 Hear the promise of thy Jesus He that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out O the stay of faith and staff of the soul O divine word of grace O gracious promise of love He receives us into his bosom when we cast our selves into his arms He will sustain and hold fast He will in no wise cast off and forsake Heb. 13.5 Wherefore O thou afflicted soul though thou art forsaken of comfort yet do not lie down in despair nor sleep in sloth but let faith hold up thy hope and hope keep up thine obedience and do not rest quiet till finding thy God in Christ thou obtain a quiet rest And how shalt thou find God in Christ but in the application of the Gospels promises and in the exercise of holy duties Obj. 2. What tell you me of holy duties As Absalom said of Obj. 2 David so I say of Christ What are all these to me if I cannot see the Kings face What are the Ordinances and the Promises 2 Sam. 14.32 what are holy duties and religious performances These have no sweetness but when I can taste Christ in them they have no beauty but when I can behold Christ in them by his presence all my troubles would soon be dispersed and by his absence all comforts they are embitter'd Answ Christ is present with thee in all his ordinances Answ though thou seest him not He purposely hides his face to try thy love and permits thee to be tempted that thou mayst be approved approved as one of those who truly fear God obeying his voice Isa 50.10 though they walk in darkness and have no light It is no great matter to see the Child express much love when pleas'd with the Fathers smiles and chear'd with his embraces but if when the Father seems with frowns to put the Child from him and it then cling close to him it is a sure argument of dutiful affection Thus when the mind is raised the heart enlarg'd the soul ravish'd with the sweet delights of holiness and the divine manifestations of Gods love what great matter is it to be pious and faithful in his service But here 's the trial of grace here 's the proof of our faith our love our obedience if when God withdraws the light of his countenance we then seek him if when Christ seems to depart from us we then lay hold on him and not let him go but resolve though he kill us to trust in him though he chide us Joh 13.15 to call upon him and though he seem to reject us yet faithfully to serve and obey him But besides O thou afflicted soul in the holy Sacrament thou canst not miss of what thy soul longs after Christ and Christ in all his fulness Mat. 26.27 28. For hear how our Saviour in the ministration of this sacred ordinance he saith of the bread broken Eat this is my body and of the wine poured out Drink this is my blood whereby we are to believe in a firm assent of faith that our blessed Lord and Saviour hath appointed and ordain'd this holy Sacrament to be a most effectual means to convey and most sure seal to confirm the actual efficacie and merit of his body crucified and his blood shed So that the bread and wine do not only sacramentally represent but also really exhibit to each faithful though languishing soul whole Christ with all his benefits then which what can be more effectual to the repairing thy peace of conscience and the renewing thy comforts of the Spirit Obj. Obj. 3. I know not how nor what to do For besides my trouble of conscience and terror of soul I find such a stupifying dulness and amazed deadness upon my spirits that I cannot apply my self to any holy duties with a fixed Answ much less an enlarged heart Answ Apply thy self to some faithful Minister or some other experienc'd Saint of God For seeing the Mind under spiritual afflictions is as a bone out of joint Gal. 6 1. who is it that shall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 joint it again but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the spiritual man he who is acquainted with the motions methods and actings of the Spirit Yea seeing the afflicting of the soul is a breaking of the bones so with David Make me to hear of joy and goodness Ps 51.8 that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoice We stand in need to be careful to make use of some skilful in Soul-chyrurgerie who may so help so heal the wound set right the bones that no splinters be left to fret the Patient no scruple to vex the Conscience Yea sure I am there is not so much danger to the body in the ill setting of a bone as there is to the soul in the unsound resolving of Conscience But further Let the faithful Minister or other experienc'd Saint that shall have to do with his clouded and dull as well as afflicted and troubled soul let him see well to it whether Melancholy hath not penn'd up the soul in its darksom cell whose adust humors are aptly call'd Balneum Diaboli the Devils Bath Melancholy distempers beget afflicting thoughts and afflicting thoughts beget melancholy distempers and thus is the poor soul whirl'd about in a circle and maze of disquiets and distractions which disquiets and distractions are the more increased by Satans malice and subtlety in that as some men do deceive others in a dark shop with false colours so does Satan deceive the soul in a dark body with false imaginations Act 4.36 Now here an Hippocrates is as proper as a Barnabas a Physitian as a Minister for that say what we can it will be with the soul in a melancholy body as with a candle in a dark lantern its light still dim and dismal and oh what terrors of strange imaginations and strong
are fastned unto Pillars so the Word of Truth the Gospel of Christ is committed to the Church to be held forth to the veiw and proposed to the faith of all 1 John 4.6 Wherefore St. John he gives this infallible note of true Doctrine that it holds fast a conformity to and a communion with the Church of Christ Hereby says the Apostle hereby know we the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error the spirit of error that seeks a separation from and the Spirit of truth that holds a communion with the holy men of God in the several parts of the World and the several ages of the Church both as to the practise of Holiness and Doctrines of Faith To establish us then against those Impostures which withdrawing us from the Church Seduce us into Heresie To establish us I say against those impostures observe we the Apostles seasonable admonition That we be not soon shaken in minde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Thes ● 2 not removed from our judgement and faith in the Scriptures to which we have been directed in which we have been instructed by the Church of Christ not thus removed by Spirit or Word however pretended to be Apostolical and Holy yea however asserted to be Angelical and Divine 2 Cor. 11.14 for that Satan the Prince of Darkness is oftentimes transformed in the Hypocritical pretences of truth and holiness into an Angel of light But O Beloved that which heightens the sin and shall heighten the condemnation of our days Apostates is this That they joyn themselves to those works and workers of darkness which have not so much as the appearance and shew of light For that now wicked men they have fronted themselves with Judah s impudence They declare their sin as Sodom they hide it not Isa 3.9 And though Heresie and Schism with their so inseparable concomitants Sacriledge and Prophaneness though they have put of their mask of truth and holiness yet are not men affrighted with their ugliness but as if the Hellish deformity were some heavenly beauty they are woed and won to an embracing those Doctrines and a pursuing those practises which even startle and amaze the souls and mindes of the truly religious Rev. 12.4 But blessed be God the Dragons Tail is not so long as to sweep away all the Stars of Heaven amidst the thickest of Heresies and Schisms God does and will preserve himself a remnant John 4 24. to worship him in spirit and in truth a remnant approved in the faith and manifest by their works For so says our Apostle There must be also Heresies among you but by the wisdom of Gods providence ordered to this end That they which are approved may be made manifest among you 2. General part the Premunition Explic. and therein of the first particular the Apostles fore-arming them with constancy in the Faith that they be approved Mercy and Justice they are the two Pillars of Gods Throne of Majesty whereon he sits as King in the Supremacy of his will to govern by the wisdom and power of his providence all things in Heaven and in Earth So that of all humane actions God he is no bare spectator but an All-powerful and an All-wise disposer what is good he working it by his grace rewards it with his bounty and what is evil he permitting it with patience he revengeth it by his justice but whether good or evil as he sways all by his power so he disposeth all by his wisdom ordering it to these sacred ends his peoples spiritual advantage and his own eternal glory Wherefore that Heresies permitted of God do spring up spread themselvs in the Church Chrysost in Act. Apost Hom 33 Aug E●chirid c. 61 de Cor. Grat. c. 10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the language of St Chrysostome it comes to pass by Providential dispensation The wisdom of God having determined it more suitable to the glory of his providence ex malis hona elicere quam nulla esse permittere as St. Augustine more suitable to the glory of his providence to bring good out of evil then not to suffer evil at all to be And therefore the Schools in their Tracts of Gods providence tell us aright That if God did not suffer some evil we should want much good Aquin. 1. q. 21. art 2. Non enim esset vita Leonis si non esset occisio animalium If there were no slaughter of Beasts there would be no life of the Lyon and so were there no persecution of Tyrants there would be no patience of Martyrs were there no opposition of Heresie there would be no honor or reward in the approbation of the truth Now as Persecution doth exercise the Patience so does Heresie try the Faith of Gods chosen and to this end doth God order this That Faith having its tentation and tryal Vt fides habendo tentationem haberet etiam probationem Tert. de Praescript Aug Serm. 98. de temp may have its approbation and reward Yea as St. Augustine speaks God suffers the Catholick Faith to be impugned and opposed by Heretical Doctrine Ut fides nostra non otio Torpescat sed multis exercitationibus Elimetur That our Faith may not grow sluggish and rusty with ease but become more quickened and polished by exercise And hereby indeed are exercised all the edifying gifts and sanctifying graces of the Orthodox their edifying gifts of knowledge of prophecy of tongues c. Their sanctifying graces of humility meekness charity c. All which as they are opposed so are they exercised and as they are exercised so are they improved by the subtleties hypocrisies and pertinacies of the Heretical As for the Doctrine of Faith Chrysost in Act. Apost hom 33. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Trees shaken with the winds more firmly fix their Roots in the Earth so the doctrines of Faith discussed by the oppositions of Heresie more deeply fix their truth in the Church But what is it not a seeming Paradox that the doctrines of Faith should be the more clean for the foul hands of Heresie Why for this know it is as Brass Inscriptions appear the better by foul feet not from the dirt but from the rubbing Thus the doctrines of Faith become the more dilucide and clear not from the Error but from the examinations of Heresie For whilst the subtlety and pertinacy of Hereticks do stir up the wisdom and industry of the Orthodox Theological Verities and Gospel Mysteries Aug. de Civi● Dei l. 16. c. ● Et considerantur diligentius intelliguntur clariùs They are more strictly examined and more clearly understood And therefore does St. Augustine the Hammerer of Hereticks whose Pen was of all the Fathers the most imployed against Heresies and Schisms even he professeth himself to be of the number of those Qui proficiendo scribunt scribendo proficiunt Aug. ep 7. ad Marcel who in improving their
Popery God hath preserv'd us entire in the faith and made us live to see them to bring their children to be without the character of Christianity Now whilst I behold these so horrid violations of Schism and Heresie of Sacrilege and Profaneness as I have begun so by Gods blessing I shall go on to vindicate the authority purity and dignity of Christs Ministry Word and Sacraments And to that end I shall make further progress in this present Text the sure Basis of the Gospels Ministry to us Gentiles Go ye disciple all Nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. Having given you the Explication of the first particular Explicat The Mission Go ye We proceed to the second particular The Commission Not barely no nor properly teach but more fully 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make Disciples 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Disciple all Nations But why disciple rather then teach I answer for a two fold reason the propriety of the word and the congruity of the sense 1. The propriety of the word which neither in profane Authors nor in the sacred Scriptures any where signifies to teach but either to admit another or to give up ones self to be taught To confirm this from the language of the Scripture we observe besides its radix 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which all Lexicons render disco to learn I say besides this we observe that the word here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ill translated to teach is aptly expounded and that according to the use of the Hebrews by a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to make Disciples Joh. 4 1. which exposi ion is further confirm'd by that of S. Matthew where it is said according to the Greek of Joseph of Arimathea Mat. 27.57 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which if 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 did signifie to teach must be absurdly rendred He himself taught Jesus But signifying as we interpret it and all Authors use it a giving up to be taught therefore it is properly rendred as our English reads it Himself was Jesus's disciple 2. The Congruity of the sense It appears a Tautology unbeseeming us to put upon the fundamental law of our Saviour in his constitution of the Gospels Ministry to us Gentiles it appears I say a Tautology to read Go teach baptizing and teaching Yea further we observe if our Saviour had intended the latter teaching either 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 either by way of explication or of amplification to the former he would have said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifying teaching we are hereby taught 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must be properly rendred discipling And then the sense runs clear when the word is read true Go make disciples baptizing and teaching them which teaching extends it self to what may be required before or after Baptism according to the capacity of the discipled Thus then Beloved it appears by this little how requisite it is that Humane learning be handmaid to Divine knowledge for that no Translation can be the authentick Word of God any further then it perfectly agrees with the Original How unfit then are they to interpret Scripture who cannot tell you which is Scripture as sure I am no man can tell you upon his own knowledge but he who is competently skilled in the Original tongues In opening then the Apostles Commission we read it Disciple ye all Nations and propose these two particulars for our Explication 1. What it is to disciple 2. Who they are that are to be discipled 1. What it is to disciple That discipling is more then teaching appears by this that many were taught which were not Disciples of Christ and many are Disciples of Christ which yet are not taught Many were taught which were not Disciples of Christ such were many of age and understanding as of old the Pharisees Again many are Disciples of Christ which yet are not taught such are now the Infants of believing parents who are initiated by baptism to be educated in Christs school by teaching To disciple does not exclude teaching but signifies an initiating to be taught an admitting to be Scholars yet because no man will give up himself to a Master he knows not Christ must first be preached to the Nations before the Nations can be made Disciples unto Christ And thus teaching must necessarily precede discipling but this to the adult only persons of age and understanding whose being discipled brings in their children with them as parts of themselves according to the tenor of Gods covenant Camer in loc and the nature of the Churches communion For as it is observed well by the Learned our Saviour's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is answerable to the Jews 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his making Disciples to their making Proselytes which still admits the children with the parents into the communion of the Church And it is the Criticks observation Dr. Hammond multis nominibus mihi honorandus that when our Saviour says Suffer little children to come unto me his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is equivalent to the Jews 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereby Christ receives little children as his Proselytes that is his Disciples Actual discipling then does not consist in teaching but in receiving in to be taught those that have learnt already to be further taught and those that have not learnt through defect not default to be taught so soon as they can learn Which latter is the condition of Infants dedicated unto Christ who though they are not in a capacity to learn as to the outward Ministry yet this does not exclude them from being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taught of God Sure Joh. 6.45 those men who oppose Infants disciplining and baptism will not confine the teaching of the Spirit to the Ministry of the Word But however it be with Infants as to present teaching Christs disciples they are as admitted into his family and school made partakers of his Churches communion and prayers receiv'd under his protection and guard Thus then the Apostles execute their Commission they go out among the Nations preach the Gospel and upon their preaching the Gentiles believe upon their believing the parents and children are receiv'd to Baptism thereby initiated as Scholars of Christs School listed as Soldiers of his Army inroll'd as Subjects of his Kingdom receiv'd as Members of his Church So that in sum to make disciples is to admit into Church-communion which Church-communion before the Jews peculiar is now become the Gentiles priviledge who whilst they were without Christ they were Aliens from the Commonwealth of Israel Eph. 2.12 13. and strangers from the Covenants of promise but being made nigh by the blood of Jesus Jew and Gentile are made one one Church of Christ one Temple of the Holy Ghost diruto septo the wall of partition being broken down even the Law of commandments
Church of God before Circumcision the Faith of the Parents and the Promise of the Covenant was the Salvation of Infants then when there was no Seal So is it now the Salvation of those who die without the Seal it being most agreeable to the grace and goodness of the Almighty Ut qui alienâ culpâ cecidit alienâ fide refurgat That he who fell by anothers fault might rise again by anothers Faith And as in the Catechumens of old those who were designed to Baptism if any of them died unbaptized their intention of minde and desire of will was in the judgment of the Church interpretativè as the actual Performance And thus we determine in the case of Infants who have votum parentum Ecclesiae the desire of their Parents and of the Church God accepts the will for the deed Thirdly What the Judgment of the Church is as to the state Quest 3 of those children which die before Baptism being children of Anabaptists I answer We can plead no excuse for the Parents Answ though we have some good hope of the Infants which hope is mixt with fear as being raised from a judgment of Charity not any infallible proof nor indeed any very probable argument of verity Children are in a state of Salvation baptized but we cannot say they are so without Baptism except the case of necessity be pleaded and the reason is because God the free-dispenser of his grace hath by Positive Law made this the condition of his promise That we shall continue in our selves and in our children the initiating Seal of his Covenant I will be thy God and the God of thy Seed Gen. 17.9 10. saith the Lord unto Abraham and therefore Thou shalt keep my Covenant thou and thy seed after thee in their Generations every man-childe among you shall be circumcised And the like obligation our Saviour makes as to Baptism when he says Except a man be born of Water John 3.5 and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God If then there be no Salvation without the Covenant of Grace and that Parents are to Covenant for their children what firm hope can there be of those Infants whom their Parents exclude from Promise and condition of the Covenant We certainly know that very often the Parents guil● hath deprived their posterity of the whole Gospels Ministry witness the Nations from whom God hath removed his Candlestick And sure Rev. 2.5 if the Parents contempt of Gods Ordinances hath deprived whole Nations of the comfort of the Gospels Ministry it is justly to be feared though not positively to be determined That the contempt which Anabaptist Parents cast upon Infants Baptism may deprive their children of the benefit of the Covenants promise especially considering That by Schism they are separate from the Church of Christ into which there is no ordinary way of entrance and admission but by Baptism according to our Saviours Commission and Instruction to his Apostles Go ye disciple all Nations baptising them c. 1. Applic. We have here Beloved to answer the Anabaptists grand Quaere Where have ye any Gospel precept for Infants Baptism And withal to establish your Judgments and Faith against all their oppositions and clamors Wherefore we thus prove Gospel Precept in that Christ gives in Commission Disciple all Nations baptising them Now Infants are a part of the Nations capable of discipling and no where excepted from Baptism therefore needs must Baptism extend unto Infants Again it is our Saviours express precept Mark 10.14 Suffer little children to come unto me but children have no way of coming to Christ in which we can suffer or hinder them but by Baptism and therefore Baptism is ordained for children Now back those precepts of Christ with the practise of the Apostles and the Universal Church together with the Grounds and Reasons of that practise and those precepts even childrens discipleship and Church Communion founded upon their interest in the Covenant of Grace And doing this I dare with confidence assert you have Infants Baptism so firmly founded and fixt as not all the wind and storms of the Anabaptists subtlety or fury can overturn it 2. We will answer the Objections of the Adversaries who press us with these Arguments That Infants have not Faith that they are not capable of teaching and not liable to precept These the chief Objections to which we return our particular Replies Object 1 First They have not Faith And our Saviour is express He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved Mark 16.16 thereby intimating That he alone is to be baptized who doth believe Answ I answer to this He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved our Saviour addes But he that believeth not shall be damned Where a not having Faith excludes Infants from being saved as much as from being baptized So that if we count them capable of Salvation we must count them ●●pable of Baptism if capable of being admitted into the Church Triumphant then capable of being received into the Church Militant I suppose then no man will imagine Faith of any more necessity to Baptism then it is to Salvation so that if Infants may be saved without Faith infallibly it follows they may be baptized without Faith that is actual Faith in themselves not in their Parents for the Parents Faith avails to the Infants Baptism and credit in alter● qui peccavit in altero he believes in another Acts 2.39 who sinned in another And children baptized are reckoned in the number of the faithful though not propter fidem Sacramenti yet propter Sacramentum fidei though not because of the Faith of the Sacrament yet because of the Sacrament of Faith so St. Augustine very frequently Besides Infants they are indeed non-believers but not unbelievers Now it is infidelity Positive not Negative which excludes from Baptism that infidelity which opposeth or denyeth the Faith not a meer carentia fidei want of Faith in a subject not capable of believing Faith then and Repentance too they are not necessary as to the susception of Baptism but as to the persons baptized not necessary as to the susception of Baptism This is apparent from that of our Saviours being baptized who is the Author of Faith Heb. 12.2 and needed not any Repentance but Repentance and Faith they are necessary as to some persons to be baptized even in whom there are false principles of an adulterate Religion and erroneous perswasions together with actual enormities of a sinful life These these must be put off by a sincere Repentance and actual Faith as being contrary and a direct obex and hinderance to the effects and state of Baptism Faith and Repentance then they are not essentially but accidentally necessary to Baptism not absolutely requisit and to all as not to Infants but conditionally and to some as to the adult Acts 2.38 Acts 8.37 to whom all those particulars are to be
applied in Scripture that of St. Peter to the Jews that of Philip to the Eunuch and the rest To close then Baptism coming in place of Circumcision as the initiating Seal of Gods Covenant Col. 2.11 12. there must needs be this Analogy in the administration That as Abraham first believed and then was circumcised and Isaac he first circumcised and after believed so in the conversion of the Gentiles and discipling of the Nations the Parents first believe and then are baptized but their children first are baptized and after believe And thus want of actual Faith does no more exclude Infants now from Baptism then it did of old from Circumcision Secondly They are not capable of teaching and our Saviours Object 2 commission runs Go teach and baptize I answer We have already blunted the edge of this weapon Answ repelled the force of this Argument and Objection having made it plain from the propriety of the word and the congruity of the sense that our Saviour bids Go disciple all Nations which discipling refers not to teaching before but after a receiving and admitting into Christs School to be taught And thus the Argument is retorted seeing it is our Saviours express precept to disciple all Nations by Baptism and that all men in all ages account children one part of the Nations they being capable of discipling in its proper notion either they must be plainly excepted or necessarily implied Thirdly They are not liable to Precept not having the use of Object 3 Reason I answer The Precept obligeth the Parents Answ and the Promise reacheth the Children as administring the proper remedy of their original guilt and contagion As when a Medicine is prescribed as the onely cure of the sick Patient though the sick know not the Medicine and so is not obliged to the prescription yet the friends of the sick are bound to prepare what is prescribed otherwise they make breach of charity and duty and if the sick die thorow their neglect of means and contempt of the remedy they bring the guilt of blood upon themselves And observe however it is most certain the Parents sin in the neglect of Baptism does not bring a punishment upon the Infant yet may it yea doubtless does it deprive him of a blessing if of no greater blessing sure we are of that which issues from the benefit of the Churches Prayers Notwithstanding then Infants are now no more capable of Precept as to Baptism then before as to Circumcision yet is the obligation as great to Parents and the benefit as great to Infants now and under the Gospel as before and under the Law To close then Notwithstanding all the Objections of the Adversary Mark 10.15 seeing men must receive the Kingdom of Heaven as little children it is most infallible little children do receive the Kingdom of Heaven as well as men Again seeing Infants are capable of the blessings it is an injury to Gods goodness as well as their Souls to deprive them of the Ordinance of Baptism And whereas the Anabaptists urge us to instance in any Infant baptized in the Scripture we urge them to shew in all Scripture or in any other History where or when any Infant of believing Parents was past by and not baptized till years of discretion let all Records be searched and the account of times examined from that period John Baptist begun his Ministry to that John the Evangelist ended his in all about eighty years in which time we doubt not many millions of Infants of believing Parents grew up to full manhood In all this time I say shew one Infant of believing Parents past by and not baptized till years of discretion and this being done there would be some plausible plea against Infants Baptism But there being no instance as to Fact nor Argument as to Reason no Proof as to Scripture to exclude Infants from Baptism We may confidently aver our Saviours Commission and Instruction extends to Infants as well as Parents Go disciple all Nations baptising them c. 3. Whereas woful experience especially that of the German miseries gave occasion to this Proverbial Speech That the Anabaptists Waters turn to Blood how much sad truth we can witness to this unhappy Proverb I had rather bewail then dispute deplore then declare And Oh! that we were Beloved so deeply so devoutly affected with our sins and sufferings both as to Church and State as to turn our late Baptism of Blood into a Baptism of Waters even of mournful Tears In which it will be piety to become all Anabaptists quenching the fire of Heaven with the waters of Siloam Gods wrath I mean by our penitence and his indignation by our contrition 4. Be we exhorted to testifie our holy Communion by an holy Conversation our Communion with Christs Church which we entred by Baptism Remember we then that innocence meekness peace patience purity and the like which are the silver feathers of the sacred Dove Matth. 3.17 Eph. 1.22 23. that holy Spirit which descended upon Christ the Head and still rests upon those who hold Communion with the Church his Body These these our virtutes Baptismales the Baptismal vertues of our new Birth let them be the continued practise of our whole life chuse we to lose the Humidum radicale the radical moysture of our natural constitution rather then that of our Baptismal Regeneration part we with our lives rather then with Faith and a good Conscience for that hereby it is we hold fast our Communion with Christ and our Communion with his Church sealed us by his Sacrament the Sacrament of our initiation and new birth concerning which our Saviour gives in Commission and Instruction to his Apostles Go ye Disciple all Nations Baptising them c. THE FOURTH SERMON UPON Matth. 28. V. 19. and part of the 20. Go ye Disciple all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. Introduction WHen Faith is so much corrupted and Souls are so many subverted who can be silent and be faithful I observe as the receiving of Baptism is the entrance into all the priviledges and blessings of the Covenant and of the Church so the renouncing of Baptism is the open door to the greatest enormities and impieties of this day's Apostates In uno Caesare multi Marii and in one Anabaptist are many Hereticks a Sect as pregnant and fruitful of error and those monstrous too as that Holland-Lady was of children whose numerous brood is said to equal the days in the year It is easie to observe how men first turn Anabaptists despising the Ministry of the Gospel then they become Antinomians rejecting the rule of the Law then Enthusiasts making their fanatick revelations to outvie Gods word then Libertines casting off all Magistracie and Government and then Ranters destroying the very being of humane society yea by their disorders and confusions their blasphemies and execrations making a very
all our Doctrine and Worship And oh if hereby we profess our selves Christians that thus we baptize thus we believe thus we worship thus we bless how great is that Apostacie even from Christianity it self which will deny our Baptism destroy our Creed abolish our Worship and if possible deprive us of our Blessing To close this Beloved Let us as by the profession of a true faith so by the exercise of an holy life O let us so regain and keep firm the love of God the Father that by the grace of Jesus Christ our Lord we may so hold fast the communion of the Holy Ghost Act. 2.3 that our fiery trial shall be but as the Apostles fiery tongues not to consume and destroy but to fortifie and prepare us even to a more firm founding and more glorious building up the Church in the unity of divine Faith and the uniformity of holy Worship Further in the manner and form of Baptisms administration we observe that the Holy Ghost is the third Person in the sacred Trinity and very God upon which it will be very seasonable to enlarge our selves For that which brought Satan like lightening down from Heaven carrying Hell with him it was his rebellious pride of Ero similis Altissimo I will be like to the most High and failing in that proud attempt of advancing the creature to equal the Creator he hath ever since made it his malicious design to depress the honor of the Creator to the condition of a creature witness the horrid Idolatries among the Heathens and the blasphemous Heresies amongst Christians The horrid Idolatries among the Heathens Rom. 1.23 Changing the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like unto corruptible man and to birds and to four-footed beasts and to creeping things The blasphemous Heresies amongst Christians Heresies denying the thrice blessed and glorious Trinity especially the eternal Godhead and the incommunicable subsistence of the Son and of the Holy Ghost And amongst the many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fighters against the Holy Ghost since the Pentecost tongues silenc'd the Heathen Oracles and the preaching of the Gospel banished their idolatrous worship amongst the many fighters I say against the Holy Ghost the militant Church of Christ hath been chiefly assaulted and infested by the Arians Macedonians and Photinians of old time and by the Socinians and Anabaptists of later years Yea even at this day there are too too many amongst our selves who pretend most to the Spirit yet are most blasphemous against the Spirit heretically denying the Divine nature and eternal Godhead of the Holy Ghost Wherefore in a secret zeal to this sacred truth of the Holy Ghosts Divinity a zeal enkindled by that Spirit which descended in fiery tongues upon the Apostles give me leave to explain and confirm to you these two particulars First That the Holy Ghost is the third Person in the sacred Trinity proceeding from the Father and the Son Secondly That this third Person thus proceeding is very God 1. The Holy Ghost is the third Person of the sacred Trinity proceeding from the Father and the Son And what we here speak in so ineffable a mystery let it be salvâ reverentiâ with due reverence to the Divine Majesty The Holy Ghost is the third Person of the Trinity Mat. 10.20 Joh. 15.26 and we prove it thus The Holy Ghost is called in Scripture the Spirit of the Father not as sent by the Father but proceeding from the Father his mission is temporary and his procession is eternal And it is worth our observation that the Holy Ghost here is said to proceed as the Son is said to be begotten even 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 1.14 by an immanent act so proceeding from him as being of the same essence with him And as the Holy Ghost is called the Spirit of the Father Gal. 4.6 Joh. 16.15 so also of the Son And seeing Christ saith All that the Father hath are mine what the Holy Ghost receives by procession from the Father the same he receives also from the Son and that by one immanent act of eternal spiration from them both which act of spiration was signified by our Saviour when he breath'd upon the Apostles Joh. 20.22 thereby giving them the Holy Ghost Now that the Holy Ghost thus proceeding from the Father and the Son is a distinct person from the Son and the Father is most firmly proved from that of S. John where we have expresly the Comforter Joh. 15.26 the Spirit of truth sent by the Son from the Father And lest any should think the Spirit the same in person as he is in essence with the Father our Saviour answers the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Neuter with an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Masculine to denote say the Antients the distinct person of the Holy Ghost An Heterosis like unto this we have in the Text In textu legitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsum in margine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsa verbum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 conteret est masculinun Disciple all nations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Neuter yet is it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Masculine The like very aptly observe in the Septuagint upon Gen. 3.15 A dispute it is whether to read ipse ipsa or ipsum he she or it shall bruise thy head The Septuagint resolves the doubt that it is not meant of mankind in general as the Rabbins would have it and so read ipsum it nor yet of the blessed Virgin in particular as the Romanist contends for it and so read ipsa she but of Christ himself and that is ipse he For so the Septuagint reads it with an Haeterosis I will put enmity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 between thy seed and between her seed where the Antecedent is in the Neuter but the Relative they give us in the Masculine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not she nor it but he pointing unto Christ He shall bruise thy head Many very many the like observations I might give you very frequent in sacred Writ but I instance in these as to second the Father's Note upon that of S. John so to hint unto you how necessary to the interpreting and so to the understanding of sacred Scripture humane literature is however cryed down and declaim'd against by the Illiterate and the Enthusiasts 2. The Holy Ghost the third Person in the sacred Trinity is very God Of this we have several proofs in sacred Scripture giving him the Names the Attributes the Works and the Worship of God To give you a cursory view only of these First The Names of God Whereas it is said the Lord Deut. 32. ●2 Isa 63.14 even Jehovah led Israel in the wilderness the Prophet he tells us this Jehovah was the Spirit of the Lord even the Holy Ghost Again that in the Acts is plain and full Why hath Satan filled thine heart saith S. Peter to
Ananias to lye unto the Holy Ghost Act 5.3 4. and in so doing thou hast not lyed unto men but unto God Again we are said to be Temples of God and how Why in that the Spirit of God even the Holy Ghost who is God dwelleth in us One proof more 1 Cor. 3.16 where it is said The diversities of gifts the differences of administrations and the diversities of operations are all from the Holy Spirit 1 Cor. 12.4 5 6. who is called God and Lord working all in all v. 11. yea even dividing to every man severally as he will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not as a Minister of God according to anothers command but as the Author who is himself God according to his own will As then Christ proves his Divinity in that he communicates life Joh. 5.21 so from hence we prove the Divinity of the Holy Ghost that he distributes his gifts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even as he will Secondly The Attributes of God As that he is eternal Heb 9.14 1 Cor. 2.10 Mar. 12.28 Is 139.7 that he is omniscient that he is omnipotent and that he is omnipresent And much of force there is in this argument of the Holy Ghost's omnipresence an argument not so easily evaded by the sophistical disputes of the Heretick The Holy Ghost in all the Saints of Christs Church is as the soul in all the members of mans body quickning actuating and ordering them so that as there is but one Body Eph. 4.4 so but one Spirit One and the same Holy Ghost then at one and the same time sanctifieth by his gracious presence and operation the Saints of God in heaven and in earth And how is this possible but to a person infinite and omnipresent Thirdly The Works of God As to him is attributed the Creation of the World the giving of Life the distribution of Grace the governing the Church and the Resurrection of the Dead yea by him was Christ conceiv'd in the womb anointed to his Ministry and rais'd from the grave Heb. 7.7 And upon S. Pauls argument which holds to be without all contradiction The less is blessed of the greater upon this argument must the humanity of Christ as Mediator be less in dignity then the Holy Ghost which could not be if the Holy Ghost were not God for that by vertue of the hypostatical union Christ Col. 1.15 as man is the the first-born of every creature Fourthly The Worship of God Adored he is in that Trisagion of the Churches Anthem Rev. 4.8 Holy holy holy Lord God Almighty which was Rom. 9.1 and is and is to come Attested he is as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Discerner of the heart and the Searcher of the Conscience Yea invocated he is in the form of Blessing for his spiritual communion and invocated he is in the form of Baptism 2 Cor. 13.14 for his power of regeneration And here review we the form of Baptism We are baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into the name Bez. in loc that is invocato nomine says Beza by invocating the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost But this is too little for so full an Emphasis To be baptiz'd then into the name what is it but by Baptism to be obliged to the faith worship and obedience of God the Father Son and Holy Ghost For that Baptism being the seal of the Covenant of grace the Regius Character the Royal stamp of this seal is the name of the sacred Trinity so S. Augustine Wherefore as God in the Trinity of persons owns us to be his people so again do we as his people vow faith worship and obedience unto that sacred Trinity of persons as our God Here if I should ask those who now have rak'd up the long since buried Heresie of Macedonius what is their fear of affirming the Holy Ghost God Is it to assert many Gods how vain is this fear how false were that assertion For in the mysterie of the Trinity the distinction of the Persons does not multiply the Nature of the Godhead neither does the Unity of the Nature nullifie the Persons For the Father is God begetting the Son the Son is the same God begotten of the Father and the Holy Ghost is the same God proceeding from the Father and the Son So that each Person is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the manner of subsistence whereby the Godhead is distinguished not a part of the Godhead whereby the essence is divided And as to the procession of the Holy Ghost though true it is after the Orthodox Faith was determined and confirm'd by those Orthodox Fathers who in that Oecumenical Council of Constantinople call'd by the Emperor Theodosius did suppress the then spreading Heresie of Macedonius adding to the Nicene Creed what concerns more fully the Faith of the Holy Ghost that he is the Lord and giver of life who proceedeth from the Father c. Though after this there arose a great controversie betwixt the Greek and Latine Church concerning the Holy Ghost's procession the Grecians affirming it from the Father by the Son the Latines from the Father and the Son After a long time the controversie was composed in the Florentine Synod by the prudence piety and learning of good Bessarion the Crecians being satisfied by the Latines that the Filioque and the Son added to the Nicene Creed was taken from that of Athanasius as more fully exprest to declare the procession of the Holy Ghost But to return to the Administration of Baptism which is very aptly called by the Antients Sacramentum Fidei the Sacrament of Faith as admitting into the houshold of the faithful and being the Sacrament of Faith it is administred in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost as being the sum of our Faith To confess the faith of the Trinity the Antient Church did use their trina immersio a threefold immersion And again to confess the Unity they had but one immersion Greg. l. 1 ep 41. And therefore Gregory writes to Leander the Bishop that it was no matter of reproof whether Baptism was administred with once or with thrice dipping or sprinkling quoniam in tribus immersionibus Personarum trinitas in una potest Divinitatis singularitas designari In three immersions the Trinity of Persons and in one immersion the Unity of Essence may be confest and declared Yea when we say I baptize thee in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost in the name not in the names we profess the power majesty and authority of all the three Persons to be coequal and so in essence and unity co-eternal In those places where the Church useth three immersions or aspersions as at this day in many Countries the Church does there the first dipping or sprinkling is with a nominating the Father the second the Son the third
is of Apostolical institution is not only the general opinion of the Antients but also of modern Divines even Calvin Beza Piscator Chemnitius and others all which subscribe to S. Hierom who calls Confirmation Apostolicam observationem an Apostolical observation And though Calvin disallows this of S. Hierom in his Institutions yet he consents to it in his Commentaries Calv Com in Heb. 6.2 saying upon Heb. 6.2 Hic unus locus testatur hujus Ceremoniae originem affluxisse ab Apostolis This one place doth abundantly testifie the original of this Ceremony to have flowed from the Apostles Read we here the Apostles Catechism a Summary of the First Principles of the Doctrine of Christ and see how he numbers them by pairs Repentance and Faith Baptism and Laying on of hands the Resurrection of the Dead and eternal Judgment So that we easily discern what Laying on of hands the Apostle means even that which succeeds Baptism that of Confirmation In Baptism regeneramur ad vitam we are regenerated to life by Imposition of hands confirmamur ad pugnam we are fortified to battel even to combat against the Flesh the World and the Devil having given up our names unto Christ Act. 8.17 19.6 and listed our selves under his banner Observe that by this Imposition of hands was given the Holy Ghost does rather magnifie then nullifie this ordinance the miraculous gifts being signs and testimonies of the saving graces of the Spirit Besides all that were baptized were confirm'd but certainly all that were confirm'd did not work miracles This then of Confirmation which was of so high account and common practice with the Apostles I see not why it should be otherwise amongst us Sure I am Tert. de praescr cap. 36. we can say of our Mother the Church of England what Tertullian does of the Asian African and Roman Church Aqua signat Spiritu sancto vestit Eucharistia pascit Martyrio exhortatur she signs us to Christ in Baptism invests us with the Spirit in Confirmation feeds us with the Manna of the Eucharist and animates us to the crown of Martyrdom adversus hanc institutionem neminem recipit against this form of institution she receives none to be her children Before we close I will here declare unto you that great obligation that lies upon us by vertue of that promise and vow we made unto Christ in Baptism and after took upon our selves in our Confirmation and withall I will discover to you that great guilt we bring upon our souls in the breach of that obligation Know then in entring covenant and giving up our selvs by vow unto Christ in our baptism we are become bound unto him in a direct oath of Supremacy and Allegiance Eph. 1.21 22. Mat. 28.28 for ever to acknowledge Christ submit unto him and serve him as our great Adonai our supreme Lord the Head of his Church and King of heaven and earth renouncing yea resisting all Foreign jursdiction of Satan and of hell yea all rebellious usurpations of sin and of the flesh And therefore if reflecting upon our own bosoms we find Satan hath invaded the soul and sin usurp'd the throne of the heart it will be no plea to excuse our rebellion and revolt that renouncing our oaths of Supremacie and Allegiance unto Christ we have submitted to the sway of present Powers even our corrupt lusts and Satans suggestions No our guilt is no less th●n that of Perjury and Apostacy accompanied too with the vilest Sacriledge which seldom go asunder For by entring covenant which we all do in Baptism more fully ratified in Confirmation with Christ as the Lord of life and Prince of peace we consecrate our whole selves unto him in his sacred worship and service And therefore after this to fulfill our own lusts and do the works of Satan what is it but to profane what was consecrate unto the Lord yea to alienate and invade what was dedicated and devoted unto Christ To close observe Baptism doth imprint an indelible character upon the baptized as Soldiers listed in Christs Army Subjects sworne to his Crown from whence it is that those wicked ones are then call'd the Children of the kingdom Mat. 18.22 when cast out into utter darkness And therefore to the Apostate Baptism is not to be renewed because this character cannot be lost Fide perdita Sacramentum fidei non amittit having lost the Faith he loseth not the Sacrament of Faith Manet ad noxam criminis non ad vinculum foederis it remains not as to any benefit of the covenant but the aggravation of his guilt Ad cumulum supplicii non ad meritum praemii it remains not as to hope of mercy and reward but as to the heap of wrath and punishment so S. Augustine Wherefore the Bond of Baptism Aug. de nupt coucup l. 1. c. 10. we have aptly illustrated by the Oath of Allegiance whereby a Nation and People become sworne Subjects to their Prince their bond and tye remains however they by their rebellion and revolt do quit their service and break off their allegiance to their Soveraign their bond and obligation that doth remain and shall to their greater guilt and curse and condemnation Thus have we given you as the Institution so the Administration of Baptism and this Administration both in what is necessary as to the Essence of the Sacrament and in what is more especially requisite as to the Solemnity of the Church In all which particulars we have kept to our Saviours Commission and Instruction which he gave his Apostles saying Go ye disciple all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. 1. Receive ye Beloved this seasonable Admonition Applicat 1 Cor. 11.2 That every faithful Soul here present is as a pure Virgin espoused unto Christ And therefore if false Prophets shall endeavour to seduce this Soul and attempt to ravish this Virgin by adulterate opinions she must cry out to the Ministers of Christs Gospel who will be ready to succour and relieve her But if she be silent and betray her chastity to the lust of the Ravisher expose her faith to the deceitfulness of the seducer she incurs the guilt of spiritual fornication and without sincere repentance she shall die and perish in her sin And as for the present Heresie which so horribly infests the Church that of Anabaptism let me give it you in charge as you will answer it at the last day Heb. 13.17 when I must give up an account of my Ministry let me give it you in charge that if any of you here present shall be sollicitated to desert the Church and separate your selves by Anabaptism that inlet to all Blasphemies and Heresies that then you call in to your aid some faithful Pastor of the Church and I here present my self for your assistance Rom. 14.15 and therefore let not any plausible pleas or fair
discendum quod de Deo intelligendum as Hilary speaks we must learn from God what we may understand of God even as we discover the Body of the Sun by the light of its own beams yea God it is who prepares the eye of the practical judgment and proportions the palate of the rectified will to discern the evidence and rellish the sweetness of supernatural Truths and he does it in this order The Church by a Ministerial Manuduction and Ecclesiastical dispensation to those matriculated by Baptism born in her Lap and bred in her Bosom tutored to a reverend esteem of her Maternal Authority to them she transmits this indubitate principle of Christian Verity That the sacred Scriptures are the Word of God But to them who are without the Infidel and Heathen the Church hath her arma praelusoria her preparatory Arguments of Right Reason to fit the minde for a candid reception and diligent examination of the Scriptures And upon this the Spirit of Truth comes in with Conviction to the Conscience perswading the Soul to this assent of Faith that they are the Word of God Wherefore besides the Ministry and Manuduction of the Church there must be an illuminating power of the Spirit yea a power rectifying and raising the minde to a capacity of supernatural light otherwise the Mysteries of Grace to the Natural man will be as the varieties of colours to the blinde the colours are not discerned till the faculty be restored nor are those Mysteries understood till the minde be healed And when thus by the Spirit of God the minde is fitted to the Word and the Word revealed unto the minde then does the Soul discern an excellency in the sacred Scriptures above what is in Humane Writings with as sure a distinction though not so clear an evidence as the eye does discern a beam of the Sun from the blaze of a Candle Quest 3 Thirdly In doubtful cases how may we best interpret the sacred Scriptures Answ I answer That Interpretation of Scripture is best which holds conformity to the Analogy of Faith and consent with the judgment of the Church two sure rules of Scripture interpretation approved and observed by the ablest Expositors of Gods Word 1. Which holds conformity to the Analogy of Faith Rom 12 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which Analogy of Faith is none other thing then that summary and fit proportion which is in the general principles of Christianity and cheif mysteries of Grace plainly set down in the sacred Scriptures A sum whereof we have in our publick Confessions of Faith the Decalogue the Lords Prayer and the Doctrine of the Sacraments seeing then it is the Scripture phrase to be built up in our holy Faith As that stone Jud. 20. which holds not proportion with the rest of the building is either fitted or rejected by the Architect so that interpretation of Scripture which holds not Analogy with the received Doctrines of Faith it must be either amended or cast away by the Religious And in doing this the Faithful of Christs Church they shall according to St. Pauls precept 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 3 16. walk orderly by one and the same rule and so preserve the unity and peace of the Church in being of one and the same minde 2. Consent with the Judgment of the Church For that no Scripture is of private interpretation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 1.20 to be interpreted by a mans own wit fancy or reason but by the enlightning power of the Spirit of Truth for as the Scriptures came not by the proper will Vers 21. so nor are they to be interpreted by the private judgment of men but the same Spirit who is the Author must also be the Interpreter And where may we with more confidence rest assured that this holy Spirit is then where Christ did expresly promise he should ever be with his Church Matth. 28.20 John 16.13 And especially with the Pastors of his Church to whom our Lord gives the promise that His Spirit should lead them into all truth But here it may be demanded what I call the Judgment of the Church I answer The antient perpetual and universal consent of holy Doctrine received at all times in all places and of all the faithful But especially do we fix upon that judgment of the Church in the antient perpetual and universal consent of holy Doctrine collected out of the most consonant Writings of the Primitive Fathers and the sacred Decrees of the first Councils For that without controversie even by confession of all parties in that time were the most Eminent Saints for holiness of life excellency of learning purity of doctrine and constancy of martyrdom And he that will think to go to Heaven in any other path then what these blessed Saints have trod before him I say to him as Constantine to Acesius Erige scalam ascende solus Raise thy self O man a Ladder and climb up alone Now this antient perpetual and universal consent of holy Doctrine collected out of the most consonant Writings of the Primitive Fathers and the sacred Decrees of the first Councils This is that we may call in the language of St. Ambrose Liber Sacerdotalis Ambr. de fid ad Grat. l. 3. c. 7. That Sacerdotal Book signatus a confessoribus multorum Martyrio consecratus signed by the confessions of the most eminent Saints and consecrated by the blood of the holiest Martyrs As then the Authority of the sacred Scriptures gives us the sure rule of Faith so the judgment of the Universal Church gives us the right line of interpretation according to which two it is well worthy our observation the Church of England did exactly draw the platform of her Reformation And this is evident in her Doctrine and Practice 1 In her Doctrine Art 20. amongst many other instances see it in her Book of Articles expresly acknowledging the Church to be the witness and keeper of the sacred Oracles and in her Book of Canons as expresly denying any doctrine necessary to be religiously held and believed which the Catholick Fathers and old Bishops of the Primitive Church have not collected out of the Scriptures And 2 that her practice is suitable to her Doctrine appears by her owning the four General Councils the Apostles Nicen and Athanasian Creeds And in all her disputes against the now silent adversary otherwise too busily employed the Jesuite justifying her reformed estate as conformed to the Primitive Church within the first five Centuries of years And here give me leave to observe unto you how the Presbytery laid the way to their own and our Churches ruine even by setting up private interpretation of Scripture in opposition to the received judgment of the Universal Church For do not the Brownists the Anabaptists under the name and notion of Independents presently beat them with their own weapon The Presbyterian abolisheth the Publick Liturgy and takes away Regular Ordination
Not onely yearly or monethly but even daily new Doctrines of Faith and all from the pretended new Revelations and new discoveries of the Spirit Yea from the influence of this Vulgar Error it is That the meanest Artisans become the chief Preachers the Day-laborer in the Brick a Master builder of the Temple from hence it is That Sacriledge is expunged the Decalogue the Lords Prayer and the Creed banished the Church and all disorder and confusion breaks in like a flood That you may know then we heartily desire to preserve your common right and special blessing of reading the sacred Scriptures against the Papists as well as prevent the particular abuse and fatal mischief of corrupting the holy Word by the Factious Observe We acknowledge that the holy Scriptures in Truths absolutely necessary to Salvation they are plain and easie but 2 Pet. 3.16 in Mysteries excellently profitable for edification they are in many places dubious and difficult to be understood Wherefore we allow every private person a Judgment of Discretion to apply what is easie and plain but not a Power of Interpretation to expound what is difficult and dubious Certainly John 5.39 2 Pet 3.18 every man is bound to search the Scriptures that he may know and improve that knowledge too of Gods will Yea bound he is to apply what he reads and reading understands for the ordering his conversation in Truth and Holiness in Faith and obedience Thus then you see we by no means like that Popish stupidity that you should live like Horse and Mule without understanding No more then we like that factious frenzy that every man should think himself more then Doctor of the Chair to interpret Scripture by his private Spirit Wherefore for the true Interpretation of Scripture observe We admit the Judgment of the Church as a Trusty Guide and the Opinion of the Learned as a Rational Argument but we approve the Scripture it self as an Infallible Rule clearing those Texts which are dark and doubtful by those places which are more plain evident being still careful to keep close to the Analogy of Faith consisting in those principles of Christianity which are clearly set forth in Scripture and generally receiv'd of the Church What think you now then Beloved he who is not acquainted with the Judgment of the Church and so wants his Trusty Guide he who is not acquainted with the Opinions of the Learned and so wants his Rational Argument he who is not well instructed in the Principles of Religion and so knows not the Analogy of Faith he who is not skilled in the Language and Phrase and Method of the Scripture and so wants his Infallible Rule is such a person however he may pretend to the Spirit is such a person think you fit to be an Interpreter of the Word Wherefore to interpret Scriptures by the Spirit not being qualified as to the use of means for right Interpretation it is certainly most certainly plain Enthusiasm A phanatick presumption the greatest evidence of the Spirit of Error being so opposit in act and operation to the order and method of the Spirit of Truth Object But here the Enthusiast to prove his interpeting Scripture by the Spirit to be lawful and right he urgeth that of St. Paul as his Herculean Argument 1 Cor. 2.14 That the Spiritual man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intelligit ac discernit as Beza renders it he understands and discerns Judicat as the Vulgar Latin and our English he judgeth and that all things in matters of Faith and of Manners of Doctrine and of Conversation So that what needs more to interpret Scripture then to have the Spirit the case seems clear if St. Paul may decide the Question Answ But stay no Triumph before Victory To this I answer The same Apostle who saith The spiritual man judgeth all things says also 1 Cor. 14.32 The Spirits of the Prophets are subject to the Prophets where by Prophets are especially intended the Interpreters of the Scriptures and that the Enthusiast himself will readily acknowledge Now then observe If the Spiritual man will interpret Scripture by the Spirit he must remember That his spirit must be subject to the Prophets submit unto the Judgment of the Church in those holy Interpreters which have gone before him or which are now surviving with him Otherwise he is not spiritual but carnal carnally puft up with the pride of his own spirit which he blasphemously calls the Motion of Gods Spirit Thus then to interpret Scripture by the Spirit according to St. Pauls direction taking the Church for our Guide holy Expositors for our Instruction there can be no just quarrel at our Interpretation For that we keep to the right Rule and Line to the Polar Star and the skilful Pilot the happy Union of what the Text hath joyned the Word of God and the Ministry of the Church for so is the Instruction of our Saviour in his Commission to his Apostles Go ye disciple all Nations Teaching them to observe whatsoever I have commanded you 1. By vertue of our Ministerial charge we do here Applic. in foro Conscientiae in the Court of Conscience arraign and condemn the Heresies and Schisms of our present times of that so horrid though so common sin of Scripture-Sacriledge men surreptitiously stealing away the true meaning or prophanely corrupting the proper phrase of Gods Word thereby making the Delphick Oracle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sacred Scriptures I mean to speak that sense which the Spirit of Error hath imposed not the Spirit of Truth revealed Church-Sacriledge and Scripture-Sacriledge they commonly go together they who will prophane the House of God will not stick to corrupt the Word of Christ and they who will not spare to defile his Worship will not care to pervert his Truth Wherefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz o●at 36. Rev. 22.18 19. as for the Sacrilegious invaders of the Holy Scriptures whether they be such as violate the Letter or such as pervert the Sense let them see the guilt of their sin in the horror of its punishment denounced by St. John saying I testifie unto everyman that heareth the words of the Prophecy of this Book If any man shall adde unto these things God shall add unto him the plagues that are written in this Book And if any man shall take away from the words of the Book of this Prophecy God shall take away his part out of the Book of Life and out of the Holy City and from the things which are written in this Book O dreadful Commination God will assuredly cut him off from benefit by the Testament of Christ who shall by Heretical forgery either detract or corrupt it The Gospel of Christ is his Testament and if it be but a Mans Testament how much more when it is The Testament of God being confirmed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being by Legal Authority ratified and declared Authentick No man disannulleth Gal.
3.15 or addeth thereto No man disannulleth or addeth that is No man ought to disannul or adde under peril of hainous impiety and shameful punishment And let not any think St. John seals up onely the Book of Revelations but that guided by the Spirit of Truth he seals up the whole Books of the New Testament with that dreadful Commination against all Violators of the sacred Scriptures And this whether it be in the Letter or the Sense of Christs holy Word for that of Tertullian is most firmly true Tert. de Praescript c. 17. Tantum veritati obstrepit adulter sensus quantum corruptor stilus To impose an adulterate sense is as much injury to the Word of Truth as to violate the proper phrase And therefore Valentinus and so the Heresies of our times do as much damage to the Scriptures verity in misinterpreting the Sense though they spare the Letter as Marcion did by mangling the sentences and chopping off the words Hear then and tremble O ye seduced Souls who through some carnal prejudice and temporal interest involve your selves in this so horrid sin of Scripture-Sacriledge for that perverting the sense or corrupting the Letter of Christs holy Word of Truth 2 Pet. 3.16 ye do it to your own destruction 2. Observe Beloved these two sure Rules of Instruction and Exhortation 1. Keep close to the Doctrine of the Scriptures 2. Hold fast to the Judgment of the Church Keep close to the doctrine of the Scriptures that will keep you from the seductions of the Romanist Hold fast to the Judgment of the Church that will preserve you from the Errors of the Separatist For so hath God been pleased to make the Militant State of our Mother the Church of England to be betwixt the eager opposition of two enraged Enemies the Church of Rome and the Brethren of the Separation against whom she thus makes good the combate from the Authority of the sacred Scriptures and the Judgment of the Primitive Church Urging the Authority of the Scriptures the Romanist flies at the point of that weapon and would soon be beat out of the field were it not some return he makes by pretending the Church Again Urging the Judgment of the Church the Separatist staggers at that blow and would soon fall to the ground were it not some hold he catcheth by wresting the Scriptures To close then That ye may continue firm and sound in the Faith be careful that in the Epidemical distempers of the times ye change not the dyet of your Souls least what you think to make your food prove your poyson Feed on your Mothers Milk keep to that sum of our Churches Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government which is contained in the Publick Liturgy in the Thirty nine Articles the Books of Homilies and Ordination all consenting with the Word of God and Truth of Christ Withal see that to the confession of a true Faith Aquin. ye joyn the confession of an holy life Confitetur qui nulla parte diffitetur He confesses truly who confesseth thorowly Confess we with the mouth and with the hand in our words and in our works This is the best Harmony of Confessions And thus Matth. 10.32 Confess we Christ before men and he will confess us before his Father which is in Heaven Own we him in this Tru●h and he will own us in his Glory hear we his Word and do we his Will so shall we receive his Reward and this in an eternal Rest unto our Souls Thus have we done with the Explication and the Application of what concerns the Mission and Commission together with the several Instructions given by our Saviour to his Apostles in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye Disciple all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Teaching them to observe whatsoever I have commanded you Halleluiah THE FIRST SERMON UPON Coloss 1. v. 18 19. And he is the Head of the Body the Church who is the beginning the first-born from the dead that in all things he might have the preheminence for it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell OUR Lord Jesus Christ being ascended into the highest Heavens Introduct and there sate down on the right hand of God Rom 8.34 Heb. 7.25 he ever lives to make intercession for us From which exaltation and intercession the Apostle draws his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ being able to save unto the utmost all that come unto God by him Able to save unto the utmost for that in his intercession is applied unto the Church for her salvation the utmost efficacie of the richest price the fullest power and the highest favour that humanity can receive from God or Divinity communicate to man For it is worth our observing That our blessed Lord to make our salvation sure he saves us by all means possible for salvation to be secur'd He saves us by ransom by rescue and by request by way of price by way of power and by way of favour Christs Resurrection that gives testimony to the sufficiencie of price laid down in his Passion his Ascension that gives testimony to the sufficiencie of power which he exercised in his Resurrection his sitting at Gods right hand that gives testimony to the sufficiencie of favour whereby he is exalted in his Ascension and lastly the Intercession of Christ that is applicatory of all these for the full and final redemption of his chosen In his Intercession he pleads the merit of his Passion as the full paiment he pleads the efficacie of his Resurrection as his clear acquittance he pleads the benefit of his Ascension as giving actual possession Eph. 1.6 Mat. 17.5 Heb. 1.2 and pleads the vertue of his Session at the right hand of the Father as thereby declared to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beloved Son of God and lawful Heir of Heaven Yea our holy Jesus and blessed Mediator being sate down at the right hand of God he is not only by a gracious decree appointed by an holy unction consecrated but also by a glorious investiture from the Father he is established in the spiritual oeconomy Act. 2.36 Rom. 14.9 Mat. 28.18 and actual administration of that soveraign authority whereby he is constituted and declared to be Lord and Christ Judge of quick and dead King of heaven and earth and as S. Paul here gives us the description Head of the body the Church the beginning the first-born from the dead c. Connexion Before we give you the Division of the words we must give you their Dependance to which we are directed by the Copulative and And he is the Head of the body the Church which Copulative does join what we must not separate the Context and the Text. If then we do but look three Verses back we find how the Apostle having set forth the benefits of Redemption he presently subjoins a description of the
him the Head to the skirts of his clothing to the meanest of the faithful Which oil of grace as it heals our wounds so it cleanseth our natures and consecrates our persons thereby evidencing in a conformity to Christ in holiness that we have a communion with him in his fulness 2. How may we best confirm this our communion with him Quest 2 Answ We confirm our communion with Christ Answ by strengthening our faith in him For that faith it is by which as Christ exhibits and communicates himself unto us so do we in a reciprocal act adhere and wholly give up ourselves unto him so that the stronger is our faith the firmer is our union and by how much our union is more firm by so much is our communion the more full This this is that which gives faith its excellency as it is in other graces Theological and Moral even its object and its act its object Christ in the price he gives for satisfaction to Gods justice the purchase he makes of salvation to his chosen and the promises he tenders for application of both All which though secondarily indeed they are the objects of love and hope yet primarily and in a precedencie the objects of faith Those Officers are in highest honor who are nearest to the Kings person and thus is Faith a chief grace in dignity as being nearest in place to the person of Christ And as thus Faith hath its excellency from its object so from its act Rom. 3.25 and 5.1 whose peculiar office it is to be the instrument of justification and salvation in an applicatory act conveying the righteousness and life of Christ to the soul and person of the Believer Faith then it is which unites us unto Christ and gives us possession of him Eph. 3.17 who is therefore said to dwell in our hearts by faith Wherefore if we would confirm our communion we must strengthen our faith and how is this but by a frequent exercise of fervent prayer a devout meditation upon the Gospels promises and a worthy partaking the blessed Sacrament of the Eucharist yea all the duties of an holy obedience Thus even thus we confirm our communion with Christ in his fulness as our Head Applicat 1. By way of Expostulation the more forcibly to woe and win the soul to Christ Were it so O man that thou didst now possess all secular contentments in the greatest confluence of this Worlds fulness whether it be for riches honor pleasures or whatsoever worldly men and carnal minds count most precious yet how far are all these from sustaining the soul against the fears of an approaching death the terrors of an accusing guilt and the horrors of a future Judgment all which the truly penitent and faithful soul can happily calm and silence by vertue of that communion he hath in the righteousness and life of Christ The creature then is insufficient to make man happy seeing it is full of vanity and man is insufficient to make himself happy seeing he is full of sin Needs therefore must he be involved in an eternal guilt and misery unless Christ the Fountain of grace and happiness uniting us to himself by his Spirit doth give us a communion with him in his fulness And now O man that thou mayst be united to him and obtain a communion with him hear what is the command of thy God 1 Joh. 3.23 it is even this that thou believe on the name of his Son Jesus Christ yea hear Christ himself in the Ministry of his Word lovingly inviting thee with a Come unto me Yet further he hath made the Ministry of his Word to be an embassage of peace in which he not only lovingly invites but more graciously intreats 2 Cor. 5.20 so says the Apostle As though God did intreat you by us we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled unto God And if now O man neither the command of thy God will awe thee nor the invitation of Christ move thee nor yet his intreaties prevail upon thee hear at last his pathetical expostulation by his Prophet Ezek. 18.30 31 32. if not to thy conversion yet to thy conviction O house of Israel repent and turn your selves from all your transgressions so iniquity shall not be your ruine Cast away from you all your transgressions whereby ye have transgressed and make you a new heart and a new spirit for why will ye die O house of Israel For I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth saith the Lord God Wherefore turn your selves and live ye In the meditation of which words suppose you heard Beloved this expostulary Dialogue betwixt Christ and the Sinner Thus saith Christ See see O man I who am thy Judge proffer my self thine Advocate I against whom thou hast sinned proffer my self thy Saviour and therefore why wilt thou die The Sinner answers I die because the Law the Minister of death condemns me for my sin Ay but I who have satisfied the Law promise thee absolution upon repentance therefore why wilt thou die I die because I have made a league with hell and a covenant with death and my soul is so fast in fetters and in prison that I cannot come forth Ay but I have vanquish'd and triumph'd over death and hell and offer thee power to break that covenant and dissolve that league and so return and live and therefore yet why wilt thou die I die because I carry about with me a body of sin a law in my members which presseth me forwards into all impieties Ay but I bring thee a regenerating grace to make thee a new heart and a new spirit and therefore yet again why wilt thou die I die because I was of old ordained of God to this condemnation reprobated in his eternal decree Ay but O foolish and perverse soul I give thee my word my oath I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked And therefore search not my Decrees which are secret but see the truth of my Gospel revealed which tells thee that I came into the world to save sinners And therefore whilst I stretch forth mine arms flie not my embraces of love whilst I tender thee my grace resist not my Spirit And if yet thou continue thy rebellion I will not yet withdraw my compassion but shall still bespeak thee and all obstinate sinners in the Ministry of my word saying Why will ye die seeing I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth Wherefore turn your selves and live cast away from you all your transgressions and make you new hearts and new spirits so iniquity shall not be your ruine Now then O man be thou drawn from thy self unto Christ by a gracious resignation of a holy faith Cast off O cast off the sollicitations of thy dearest and closest corruptions the strongest temptations of the World and the Flesh and yield O yield up thy will unto Christs scepter captivate thy lusts to
a Mother for fruitfulness this the Kingdom of Heaven this the Body of Christ this the Church Universal the Church Catholick which is invisible the object of Faith and not of Sense and therefore we say in our Creed I believe the holy Catholick Church Which holy Catholick Church ● Tim ● 15 Cant. 6.8 as by S. Paul it is said to be Columna Veritatis the Pillar of Truth so by Solomon Columna Unitatis the Dove of Unity Indeed the Church can be but one because Christ her Head is but one who is the same yesterday to day Heb. 1● 8 and for ever The same 1. Objectivè in his Word yesterday shadowed in the Law to day shewed in the Gospel the New Testament being claspt up in the Old and the Old laid open in the New The Old Testament and the New like two concentrick circles they differ in their circumference yet agree in one center and that center Christ 2. As Christ is the same objectivè in his Word so is he the same subjectivè in his Attributes his Wisdom Goodness Power yea dignity and authority one and the same Shepherd of his Flock one and the same King of his people one and the same Head of his Church 3. The same effective in the gifts and graces of his Spirit in the power and efficacy of his Word and of his Sacraments Now the light of the Gentiles Luke 2.32 as before the glory of his people Israel as yesterday to Abraham Isaac and Jacob so to day he is to as many as believe on him Jesus a Saviour And if thus but one Head then necessarily but one Body if but one Christ then but one Church But one Church however it receives its divers names of distinction according to its different degrees of communion as being either militant or triumphant The Church militant in tempore peregrinationis in the time of her sojourning here in fear and the Church triumphant in aeternitate mansionis Aug. Enchi● c 56. in the eternity of her dwelling with Christ in glory so S. Augustine Militant is that part of the Church which is on earth still fighting in a continued warfare against the flesh the world and the devil Triumphant is that part of the Church which now rest from their labours Rev. 14.13 who by the power of Christ have vanquish'd the powers of darkness and therefore with victorious palms in their hands clothed with the robes of glory they stand continually before the throne of God Rev. 7.9 15. and serve him in his temple Both these the Militant and Triumphant make up one Church Catholick Aug. ibid. one now in vinculo charitatis in the bond of charity and shall be for ever one in consortio aeternitatis in the fellowship of eternity But further this Catholick Church with which we have communion with Christ as she is Columba Unitatis the Dove of Unity so Columba Puritatis too the Dove of Purity she is the holy Catholick Church Though on Earth indeed she be incompassed with many infirmities Psal 45.13 overshadowed with many afflictions yet is she the Kings daughter all glorious within indued she is with Christs holy Spirit adorned she is with his holy Graces clothed she is with his perfect Righteousness Holy the Church is 1 In Christ her Head who is perfectly holy even holiness it self 2 Holy she is in her Triumphant part Eph. 5.27 which is made compleat in Holiness sine ruga aut macula without either wrincle or spot without either wrincle of imperfection or spot of uncleanness 3 Holy she is in her Militant part also holy by sanctification partially and by imputation of Christs Righteousness perfectly so sanctified she is not as to be free from all abiding of sin Rom. 6.12 that 's for the estate of glory but so as to be free from the reigning of sin that 's for the state of grace Our holiness in this life it is but inchoative and in part in fieri not in facto our perfection of holiness shall not be till our consummation in happiness and when we shall be made compleatly happy then shall we be made also perfectly holy Thus you have seen what is the Church of Christ in its larger acception and in its nearer relation In its larger acception as the Church of the Elect the Elect Angels and Elect Saints in its nearer relation as the Church of the redeemed redeemed in an effectual communication of Christs fulness as he is the Head The Head of the Body the Church c. 3. What the Church is of which Christ is said to be the Head in its different adjuncts as visible and invisible The Church Catholick or Universal not being genericè but integraliter Universale the Universal Church as we say the Universal World as it is aptly distinguished according to its different states into the Church Militant and Triumphant so is it distinguished no less aptly according to its divers adjuncts into the Church visible and invisible Which distinction being observed to be not a distribution of the Genu● into its Species nor of the whole into its parts as if either one Church or one part of the Church were visible and another invisible but a distinction of adjuncts to the same subject This being observed we may the better answer and retort the Arguments of the Romish adversary in the great contest concerning the visibility of the Church To be invisible is an affection of the Catholick Church in respect of its internal and essential form To be visible is an affection of the same Catholick Church according to its form external and accidental The internal and essential form of the Church consists in union with Christ through the Spirit the object of Faith and not of Sense in which regard the Church must needs be invisible But now the external and accidental form of the Church is the Ministry of the Word and Sacraments with a publick profession of the true Faith of Christ and in this the Church must needs be visible yea by how much that profession and Ministry is the more publick and pure by so much is the Church the more conspicuous and glorious The Church then as it is visible may be thus defined to be The whole company of men and women professing the Faith of Christ in the sincere preaching of the Word and right administration of the Sacraments And this is the definition of the Church according to its external and accidental form that definition before given being according to its form Internal and Essential and by this we may understand how men are said to be of the Church and to be in Christ either by outward profession or by inward sanctification that an external this an internal communion by the outward profession of an external communion onely so the Formal Hypocrite by the inward sanctification of an internal as well as the outward profession of an external communion so the Truly Regenerate
Many there are then who bear the name of Christians ay and of Catholicks too who yet are in Christ John 15.2 6 but as withered branches in the Vine yea they are in the Church as Wens in the Body not in a vital and internal communion but in a formal and external profession Thus speaking of the Authors of Heresie and Heads of Faction which separated themselves from the communion of the Church They went out from us says the Apostle but they were not of us 1 John 2.19 for if they had been of us they would no doubt have continued with us but they went out that they might be made manifest that they were not all of us They went out from us as to the external and accidental form of the Church as it is the visible company of Professors but they were not of us as to the internal and essential form of the Church as it is the invisible Body of Christ Very fitly then is the visible Church compared in Scripture unto a field in which there grows up together Wheat and Tares Matth. 13.29 30. Matth 3.12 Matth. 13 47. to a floor on which there lies together Corn and Chaff to a draw not in which are contained good Fish and bad for that in the Church as it is visible there are Hypocrites mixt with true Believers the wicked with the godly And therefore the Apostle compares the visible Church to a great house 2 Tim. 2.20 where there are not onely Vessels of Gold and of Silver but also of Wood and of Earth yea Some to honor and some to dishonor Thus in the visible Church there are not onely strong Believers but also weak Christians not onely those who are more eminent in the gifts and graces of the Spirit but also those who are weaklings and of less spiritual abilities then others Yea further as there are some to honor that is some who through the Election of Grace shall at last inherit eternal glory so some to dishonor Rom. 2.5 that is some who through their impenitence and hardness of heart treasure up to themselves wrath against the day of wrath and shall be plunged in eternal misery And thus ye have seen in its several particulars What the Church is of which Christ is said to be the Head 3. How the Church of which Christ is the Head is said to be a Body viz. Especially from the communion of the faithful as Members Eph. 4.4 a communion so near that they are all said to have but one Spirit Acts 4.32 yea one heart and one soul and all this from the efficacy of love Col. 3.14 that bond of perfectness and knot of unity A Sacramental representation of this Mystical Communion 1 Cor 10.17 is given us in the holy Eucharist according to that of the Apostle We being many are one Bread and one Body for we are all partakers of that one Bread That Bread which exhibites to us the flesh of Christ our quickning and enlivening Food Food not which we convert by any carnal digestion into the nature of our body but which converts us by a spiritual operation into the nature of Christs Body making us to be heavenly and spiritual as he is spiritual and heavenly We change not it but it changeth us for so is the powerful operation of spiritual Food to convert into the nature of its self action still following the stronger force and spirituals are more powerful then corporals grace more active then nature By vertue of this communion of the Faithful the Church is said to be Corpus compactum connexum Eph. 4.16 a Body fitly joyned together and compacted no rents of Schism but every member hath its proper place Vers 13. and its peculiar connexion in the whole and this Till we all meet in the unity of the Faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ Unto a perfect man this does intimate the near and full communion of Christs Church all the Faithful being as one political person in Christ Gal. 3.28 according to that There is neither Jew nor Greek there is neither bond nor free there is neither male nor female but all are one in Christ Jesus and it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not one Body but one Person Now to grow up to a perfect man according to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ is the increase of the Church till consummate in its communion of Members and fulness of perfection which shall be at the last day when the whole number of the Elect is gathered and so Christ in the Church and the Church in Christ have mutually their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their compleat growth like that of the Head in the Body and the Body in the Head and all in one political person and perfect man To close then such is the communion of the Faithful one with another as Members and all in Christ as their Head that he who by Schism separates from the Church though never so seeming a Saint he cuts himself off from Christ and in the prosecution of this separation though he should zealously give up his life unto death his goods unto the spoil his body unto the fire 1 Cor. 13.2 3. yet all this would not be fidei corona Cypr. de Unit Eccles n. 12. but paena perfidia as St. Cyprian speaks not a crown of Faith but a punishment of unfaithfulness the suffering not of a Martyr but of a Malefactor For let the cause be what it will to die in Schism without the Pale of the Church is to perish in sin without the Gate of Heaven Indeed as the Branch withers which is broken off from the Root the River dries up which is cut off from the Fountain so the Soul shall perish which is divided from Christ And that Soul is certainly divided from Christ the Head which separates from the Church which is his Body His Body in a communion of the faithful as Members Here it will be a seasonable service to resolve you these four Questions 1. Whether the Church of Christ on Earth may totally fall away 2. What is meant by that common saying That out of the Church there is no Salvation 3. What have we to answer those who say We have no Church 4. Seeing we are to hold communion with the Church how may we know which is a true Church with which we may hold communion First Whether the Church of Christ on Earth may totally fall Quest 1 away We see in the World such a general defection from truth and holiness that some may haply propose this Question as well worthy our present resolution Indeed Polutheism a worshipping many gods hath ever been an argument for Atheism a not worshipping any God And in these our days whilst men see so many
manifestation of himself to his Saints In this Sanctuary is the Golden Pot of Manna even an abundant fulness of Divine Joy whose sweetness is incorruptible and everlasting yea here is Aarons Rod which being withered after budded flowred and brought forth ripe Almonds that is the dead bodies of Gods Saints raised to life are cloathed with immortality and glory Or further By the Tabernacle and Sanctuary was represented not onely the Mystical but also the Natural Body of Christ not onely his Church but also himself He the Ark of the Testament as the Word of the Father placed in the Tabernacle as cloathed with flesh He the Table of Shew-bread as our Life and Food in the Eucharist he the Candlestick as our Spiritual Light he the Incense in the sweet savor of his Merits he the Sacrifice in the sufferings of his Cross he the Altar in the efficacy of his Mediation by which ou● persons and our Prayers our selves and our services become accepted of the Father Further yet The Tabernacle and Sanctuary was a Map of the Universe the greater World and of Man the lesser World 1. A Map of the Universe the greater World the outward Court representing the outmost Creation the holy Place the Church of Christ and the Holy of Holies the Heavenly Presence 2. A Map of Man the lesser World consisting of Body Soul and Spirit the outward Court that 's the Body 1 Thess 5.23 the inward Tabernacle that 's the Soul and the holy Sanctuary that 's the Spirit by which Spirit we have our communion yea and our communication too with our God And well may the Temple of God be compared unto man 1 Cor. 3.16 1 Cor. 6.16 seeing man so often in Scripture is called The Temple of God Now how well might David in all these Representations of the Sanctuary contemplate a Beauty and that Beauty divine even the Beauty of the Lord No wonder then if David be so importunate in his suit to have his dwelling in so pleasant a seat as the House of the Lord an Habitation which hath Heaven for its prospect the beauty of the Lord for the object of the eye and delight of the Soul But however David doth behold the beauty of the Lord in the Sanctuary yet where is that beauty in our Churches what is that glory of his presence as may denominate them his Houses Why see it in our Churches sacred Liturgy both as to the decency and order of her daily Service and Sacramental Administrations First As to the decency and order of her daily Service There being nothing in Devotion nothing in Doctrine nothing in Substance nothing in Circumstance but what Gods Word either explicitely commands or implicitely allows O lovely Order of holy Worship right a form of Divine Service as being a continued Exercise of all the parts of holy Worship taking up the whole minde and soul of the Spiritual man In this Divine service the Church by an orderly progress of Piety and performance of Devotion sometimes makes confession of sin sometimes deprecations of wrath sometimes Petitions of mercy sometimes intercessions for all men even all estates and conditions of men whatsoever from the highest Prince to the meanest Peasant from the holiest Saint to the vilest sinners Turks and Infidels not excepted Yea in this Form of Divine service and Publick worship see how the Church of Christ doth sometimes adore Gods sacred Majesty sometimes extol his glorious attributes sometimes commemorate his famous acts sometimes recount his gracious blessings sometimes denounce his severe judgments sometimes declare his Fatherly promises sometimes set forth his heavenly praises Sometimes the Church makes profession of her Faith sometimes she publisheth the commands of her God sometimes she is humbled in larger yet not long winded supplications sometimes she is exercised in shorter yet piercing and pathetical ejaculations All which hang together not as mens extemporary non-sense like ropes of Sand but in an orderly composure like a chain of Gold one part still linkt within another to become a fit ornament to set off the Churches beauty whereby she is the more comely and fair in the eyes of her beloved Secondly View we the Beauty of holy Worship in the Churches Publick Administrations to instance in that one of the blessed Sacrament of the Eucharist O how does Divine Order Reverence and Devotion mutually contend which shall give greatest lustre to the Beauty of this solemnity First the judgment is rightly informed from sacred Scripture in the Mysteries of that blessed Sacrament And the judgment being rightly informed by instruction the affections are divinely raised by exhortation set on with that perswasive argument and inforcing motive the riches of grace and promises of life which God hath vouchsafed unto his chosen through Christ This done the Church proceeds to an oral confession of sins and upon that a Ministerial absolution of the penitent and after with heart and hands and eyes lift up to Heaven all joyn together in the devout Harmony of Prayers and Praises Then the Faithful Pastor of the Flock having offered unto God the Sacrifice of his own Rev. 8.3 and others Devotion ascending up before the Throne of Grace as sacred Odors made acceptable through the Incense of Christs merits he proceeds with fear and reverence to the Consecration of the Sacramental Elements and how is this why observe It is with a most pathetical commemoration of Gods love of Christs passion and of mans redemption yea with an obediential and Eucharistical acknowledgement of Christs holy Institution with the Order and End of the blessed Sacrament Upon which is pronounced the Word of blessing with Prayer consecrating the Bread and Wine to be the Sacramental signs and seal of Christs Body and Blood The Consecration ended View we the Administration in which the dearest pledges of Divine love are delivered with a Summary Recapitulation of the whole Sacraments mystery That so the Soul of the receiver may have a present impression of renewed Devotion in the very act of receiving This Ministration being performed the close of the whole service is applicatory of the whole solemnity in most devout and pathetical Prayers with Heavenly and Evangelical praises which being ended the Congregation is dismist with a Ministerial Benediction Now ex pede Herculem know ye the Eagle by its Feather the Diamond by its spark the excellency of the Churches Liturgy by this one part of her Publick service the solemnity of the Eucharist of which Sacraments administring I may say what St. Paul said of the Corinthians prophesying 1 Cor. 14.25 That if an unbeliever or any one except a pertinacious Separatist come into the Congregation of Gods people while they are exercised in this solemn service of Divine Order Reverence and Devotion he will be ready to fall down upon his face and worship God reporting that God is in them of a truth I may confidently affirm That so lovely is the Beauty of the Churches Order
Will the Preaching of which Word Christ hath committed to the Pastors of his Church And Oh the dignity and charge of their sacred Function Mal. 2.7 Whose lips are appointed to preserve knowledge and that men should seek the Law at their mouths So that when we speak it ought to be with that care and Conscience 1 Pet 4 11. as delivering to you the very Oracles of God O si quando loquamur ut Oracula vivamus ut numina Oh that when we speak unto you the Oracles of Gods truth that we then did present our selves examples of his holiness That so our lives integrity might be Et Censura Disciplina 2 Cor. 4.7 both a Censure and a Discipline to others enormity but We have our treasure in Earthen vessels Further yet this of Davids inquiring St. Hierome renders by an attendere and others by a visitare a visiting and attending Gods Temple And indeed though true it is That to the devout Saint and Servant of God every day is a Sabbath and every place a Temple yet as this does not exempt us from the observation of the Lords day so nor from the frequenting Gods House for as the one is a set and holy time so is the other a separate and holy place for his Publick worship according to that Levit. 19.30 Ye shall observe my Sabbaths and reverence my Sanctuary which was spoken to the Jew in the Letter but to the Christian in the Analogy And strange it is That they should be so remiss in reverencing Gods Sanctuary who yet seem so zealous for observing his Sabbaths dis-joyning in their practise what God hath so near joyned in his Precept But that we are to visit Gods Sanctuary and there attend his service is not onely from the precept of holy Scripture but also from the dictate of Divine Reason which is this That we are all to be considered in a double capacity as to our particular persons and our Political Relations Which Political Relations are especially two the first as to Civil Community the second as to Mystical Communion Now as in Temporal Matters we have our private places for our private affairs but publick Halls for publick services So in Spiritual Matters we have our private Closets for our private Devotions but publick Temples for publick Worship Civil Communion as Members of some Corporation requires the former and no less doth our Mystical Communion as Members of the Church require the latter But observe further David though so glorious a King yet will become an attendant in Gods house O the haughty pride then of the meaner Peasant Psal 95.6 who will not bow nor bend not fall down and worship in Gods Sanctuary O the haughty pride I say of the meaner Peasant For who are they that so much contemn the Worship and despise the reverence due to God in his Temple are they the mighty Kings or the truly Noble no but the meanest and the lowest of the people Thus whilst we see the Potentate prostrate we behold the Peasant stiff in Gods service yea at present do we not behold the servant covered whilst the Master is bare in Gods presence Strange disorder as unreasonable as it is irreverent which to reform know all actions we say in the Schools are specified ab objecto fine from their object and their end what then is civil in respect of men and secular Affairs is Religions in respect of God and his glory And thus bowing the Knee uncovering the Head and the like which are civil actions in a respect to men they become Religious and Divine having God for their object and his glory for their end The Soul actuating the Body an holy Fear actuating the Soul and the Spirit of God actuating that holy Fear So that apertio capitis a mans uncovering of the Head in Gods House is a part of Worship and a keeping the Head bare is a continued worshipping and if so then not to bare the Head is irreverence if not prophanation David here though a mighty Prince yet of a far more humble temper then the meanest A●tisan of our age he thinks it no indignity to his Royal person but rather a delight to his devout Soul to attend Gods service he will leave his Pallace to visit Gods Temple and quit his Throne to wait at Gods Altar For so says the Psalmist to declare the fervor of his Devotion One thing have I desired of the Lord and that will I seek after that I may dwell in the House of Lord all the days of my life to behold the Beauty of the Lord and to inquire in his Temple We proceed to Application Applic. 1. To give you several seasonable Admonitions know It is the Prophets title which best adorns and beautifies the Christians Temple Ezek. 48.35 even Jehovah Shammah The Lord is there And where the Lord is there will be his Servants the holy Angels are in their Masters House they we may be sure frequent our Publick Meetings Yea doubtless nothing done on Earth is more joyous to the Angels or formidable to the Divels then the united Prayers and fighs and tears and lauds and praises of Gods Saints in Gods Sanctuary Wherefore if it be the presence of God of Christ and of the Angels which makes the place of Gods worship beautiful we may truly say of Gods Sanctuary Psal 45.13 what is said of the Kings Daughter It is all glorious within It s chief Beauty consists not in the outward Forms but the inward Mysteries not in the stately structure but the gracious presence not in the visible Congregation but the invisible Communion the Beauty is not the object of bodily but of Spiritual eyes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theod. de graec affect cur Serm. 11. it is of such things as Faith doth Minister and present unto us And therefore we cannot but justly reprove those who boast of their knowledge and cry up their Faith as if they were the onely men of a quick sight and peircing eye Whereas they have so thick a film of prejudice and prophaneness that they cannot behold with David the beauty of the Lord in his Sanctuary Know vain men that for the accomplishment of true delight there must be not onely a pleasing object but also a prepared faculty and if there be no affection in the faculty there can be no fruition of the object Hence it is that the rarest harmony affects not the Asses ear so nor heavenly delights earthly mindes and why not because there is no pleasantness in the object but no fitness in the subject no fitness either of faculty or of affection either of faculty to discern or of affection to desire Wherefore O ye prophane men and dissolute mindes know The reason why you are not taken with the Beauty of the Lord in the service of his Sanctuary it is because either prejudice and error hath blinded your judgments or the flesh and the world