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A34944 Æternalia, or, A treatise wherein by way of explication, demonstration, confirmation, and application is shewed that the great labour and pains of every Christian ought chiefly to be imployed not about perishing, but eternal good things from John 6, 27 / by Francis Craven. Craven, Francis. 1677 (1677) Wing C6860; ESTC R27286 248,949 428

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upon it unless when thou hast read it or heard it thou call to mind what thou hast read or heard Thus Davids Godly-man had his delight in the Law of the Lord and therein would meditate day and night Psal 1. 2. What Law this is Davids Godly-man delights so much to meditate in is worth our observing it is not the Canon Law nor the Civil Law nor the Law of the Twelve Tables it is not the Law of the Medes and Persians nor the Law of Nations but it is the Law of the Lord a Law that gives rule to all other Lawes and is it self ruled by no other Law a Law leading to perfect happiness and a Law whereby they must live and be ruled that will be happy David pronounceth his Godly-man to be a blessed man that doth this and the man that doth it after a godly manner does i● that he may be blessed he is in some measure a blessed man already but he meditates in the Law of God as one that would be perfectly blessed hereafter 4. Another means he makes use of are both the Sacraments of the Gospel those Seales of the Covenant of Grace and all things therein contained Viz. Baptisme and the Lords Supper I have sometimes wondred at the too usual practise of some that though they will not let their children want the Sacrament of Baptisme yet can themselves be content to be without the Sacrament of the Lords Supper as if that were some unnecessary Ordinance whereas Christ and all spiritual good things are Sacramentally held out as well in the one as in the other as well in the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper as in the Sacrament of Baptisme But then a Christian labours for Eternal good things when he improves both these Sacraments 1. When he dares not neglect to improve the Sacrament of Baptisme that initiatory Sacrament of the Gospel and first visible act of God's grace whereby he is received into his favour and family and the first visible means whereby God doth apply to him by word sign and Seal the blood of Jesus Christ for the remission of his sins He hath learned in his Catechisme that Baptisme in its general notion is an outward and visible sign or means holding out and giveing some inward and invisible grace and favour conveyed and made over thereby unto him and that thereby he is received into the injoyment of some priviledges and benefits that otherwise are not ordinarily to be had and enjoyed Viz. That by that door God hath let him into the Church opened a gate for him to enter into Christ's fold and assured him that Christ in his life and death is his and that he shall be saved by Christ through the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost that he is thereby put into a new state for being before only a child of Adam he is now taken to be a child o● God and so stands upon better terms then meer Nature did instate him in That he shall enjoy pardon grace and Salvation and be priviledged from wrath to come he forsaking the Divel the world with all the Lusts o● the flesh having no fellowship with the unfruitful● works of darkness and being in every other respect faithful in God's Covenant sealed by Baptisme and following the conduct of the Holy Ghost which in Baptisme seals his Vocation his Justification Adoption Sanctification and all other spiritual priviledges one as well as the other he shall at last be made a possessor of that immortality unto which in Baptisme he had a title given him Now when the hopes of such things and the remembrance of that treble Vow and Covenant which was by others made for him in his Baptisme and by himself at Confirmation or laying on of hands resumed and ratified in every part causes him to cleanse himself from all filthiness both of flesh and spirit and to perfect holiness in the fear of God to cleave to God faithfully against all the persuasions of the Divel the world and the flesh not to live as if he had been Baptized into the Divels name but as Baptized into the Name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost as one that hath put on Christ and entred into Christ's death being buried with Christ in Baptisme and therefore reckons himself to be dead indeed unto sin but alive unto God through Jesus Christ Rom. 6. from 3. v. to 8. v. When the thoughts of God's putting his Seal in the way of an Ordinance to ratifie and confirm the Covenant of Grace and all things therein contained do encourage him to wait upon every other ordinance for the gaining all inward prerogatives of Saints by them that at last he may be brought to Mount Zion Heb. 12. 25. to the Souls of just men and to the assemblies of glorified Saints with them to be made a partaker of that life and glory which will be Eternal 2. When he frequently is a guest at the Lord's Table to partake of the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper where are opened floods of Honey and Butter for each believer where is food in abundance for the Saints nourishment and growth in Grace Manna that will continue for ever and make believers continue for ever All other food the sweetness of it is gone in a quarter of an hour and the strength of it gone in a few hours But here the believing Soul is fed to everlasting life the sweetness the strength and the comfort of this food endures for ever when the fullest cups shall be emptied and the largest and plentifullest Tables shall be bared then the food to be had at the Lord's Table shall last for ever and be Eternally advantagious to the worthy receiver Then therefore is a Christian at this kind of labour when he comes hungring and thirsting after Christ and all the benefits of his death and passion even as a hungry man comes to his meat or a thirsty man to drink i. e. with an earnest desire desiring this Sacrament and the good things there held as David desired and panted after God Psal 42. 1. 2. As the hart pan●eth after the water brooks so pan●eth my soul after thee O God My soul thirsteth for God for the living God As Jesus Christ did after the Passover Luke 22. 15. With desire have I desired to eat this Passover with you also he speaks to his Disciples single desires would not serve his turn his desires are desiring desires beleeving ou● Saviour's words of himself John 6. 48 49 50 51. v. I am that bread of Life your fathers did eat Manna in the Wilderness and are dead This is the bread that came down from Heaven that a man may eat thereof and not dy I am the living bread that came down from Heaven If any man eate of this bread he shall live for ever and putting his seal to the words of holy Bernard In hoc sacramento speaking of the Supper non solum quaelibet gratia sed ille in quo
use the right means for a time only but perseveres labouring in the use thereof he holds out to the end labouring herein not onely in some good moods and hot fits of zeal or strange pangs of Devotion at certain times of their lives as when they are invited to the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper in times of sickness and fears of death or when some heavy judgement of God hath befaln them but when he devo●es himself to a diligent endeavour at all times to store his soul with such things as will for ever be useful to the soul When he followes that good counsel of one Non tantum facite sed perficite and thinks not enough to begin his work unless he crown it with perseverance not ceasing to labour until he come to dy not being weary in well doing for he knows that in due season we shall reap if we faint not Gal. 6. 9. accounting it a shame to faint or be weary in the search of that which being found will more then pay for the pains of searching as one sayes Quaerendi defatigatio turpis est cum id quod quaeritur sit pulcherimum When he follows on to use the right means as the Prophet Elisha followed his Master Elijah whom having once found he would never again go from him never leave him until he saw him taken up into Heaven no more does one truly industrious for the things of Eternity having entred into a course of well doing he never goes from it until he be taken up into Heaven and put into possession of what he hath been labouring for He is like the little Bee which will not off the meanest flower until he hath got something out of it 5. When he will not take up or be put off with any other good things but such as are Eternal he will bless God for the least of the mercies of this life if he have but Offam aq 〈…〉 bread and water if he have but ●ood and rayment as good Jacob desired of God Gen. 28. 20. he is well satisfied therewith and envies not the richest Craesus or Crassus upon the earth and yet will not be put off with the greatest of worldly things for a portion when he is contented with dayly bread with the bread of the day for the day only that he may in diem vivere as birds do the little birds having only what may serve for natures use yet he would not be put off with the greatest of those things which are indifferently distributed to Saints and Sinners Such a one was Luther who when he had great gifts sent him from Dukes and Princes he refused them and saith he I did vehemently protest God should not put me off so t is not that will content me No mercy but the God of mercy would satisfie Davids desire Psal 73. 25. Whom have I in Heaven but thee and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee David would not be put off with any thing in Heaven or Earth but the God of Heaven and earth should David by his diligent labour and pains have gotten not only the earth but Heaven yet that by David would not have been thought enough to put an end to his labour except he had God also The possession of that which would have made another to say with the rich man in the Gospel Soul take thine ease eat drink and be merry Luk. 12. 19. would not have wrought so upon David until David had what he desired viz. God David from labour would not have been eased As it is said of Caius Marius in choosing of his Souldiers he would willingly admit none into his band that were less then six foot high men of a low mean and ordinary stature would not co●●ent him no he would have such as were of a tall and high stature so when not low mean things of the world but only th● highest things of Heaven and Eternity are the object● of a Christians desire then he chiefly labours c. 6. When he goes on to labour and take pains for these eternal good things though he meet with many vexations and sore persecutions when he will onward in the way to Heaven though the way thither be via spinosa sanguinea full of thorns and bryars when he will not be hindred in his journey towards Canaan though he must travel through a wilderness of Serpents and a red Sea When he will follow Christ though he sees Swords and Staves in the way as St. Paul at Miletus tells the Elders of the Church of Ephasus Acts 20. 22 23 24. And now behold I go bound in the spirit unto Jerusalem not knowing the thing that shall befal me there save that the Holy Ghost witnesseth in every City saying Bonds and Afflictions abide me But none of these things move me none of these things discourage me as if he had said For I am ready not to be bound only but also to dye at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus Act 21. 13. And hath taken up the like resolution as St. Ambrose took up to Valentinian the younger I follow saith he the determination of the Councel of Nice from which neither sword nor death shall ever seperate me when neither the worlds flatteries nor its frowns shall take him off his pains and labour When neither Nebuchadnezars Musick nor his Furnace can alter his resolutions but continues like the three Children who would not leave off to worship God and worship the golden Image though they knew a fiery Furnace heat seven times hotter then ordinary was provided for them Like Daniel that would not be taken off praying unto God though he knew for certain he should be cast into the Den of Lyons Like St. Paul and Barnabas whom neither the Lycaonians preposterous affection to have deified them nor their devillish rage when they about to stone them could procure either of them to yield one hairs breadth like all the Martyrs that noble Army whom neither the threatnings of fire nor the fair and large promises of their cunning and cruel Adversaries could cause them to shrink from Christ When rather then to desist or draw his neck from under Christ's yoak he will be stretched upon the Cross choosing rather to keep his conscience pure then his skin whole and to secure an Eternal rather then a fading inheritance resolving to gain through the assistance of a good God an eternal Crown though he swims to it in blood not mattering what he suffers upon Earth so he may be but Crowned in Heaven and not retiring for any trouble or persecution whatsoever that stands between him and eternal happiness If by any means I might attain to the Resurrection of the dead sayes the Apostle Phill. 3. 11. Ad gloriam cae●estem vitam aeternam ad quam Christus exitatus ●st quaeque credentibus ex morte exci●●tis a Deo contingit St. Paul speaketh not of the Resurrection of the dead common to
the body and this life they have but there is the life of the Soul and that life they have not We hear of many children born dead its true in this sence all men are born dead men there is not a man born a member of the new Adam but every man is born a member of the old Adam and therefore in a spiritual sence they must needs be born dead men though otherwise endued with a natural life For if the root be dead as the old Adam is all the branches that rise from that root must needs be dead also In Adam all dyed saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 15. 22. v. Adam was the common root of Mankind all Mankind was in him Tamquam in radice as so many Branches in the root and so consequently Adam dying all Mankind dye in him and with him and in this dead condition they all do remain until they do injoy an interest in and union with Jesus Christ the last Adam who was made a quickning spirit 1 Cor. 15. 45. v. he being the fountain and author both of a spiritual and eternal life to all Believers And therefore saith St. John John 5. 12. v. He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life And the Apostle St. Paul calleth him Our life because none live the life of Grace but those who partake of Jesus Christ it is he in whom and by whom they do live Col. 3. 4. v. When Christ who is our life shall appear then shall ye also appear with him in glory Hence saith Wisdom that is Christ Pro. 8. 35. v. Who so findeth me findeth life Not a Soul wanting Jesus Christ but he wanteth life and also in him there dweleth no good thing Rom. 7. 18. v. Neither faith nor any other saving grace dwelleth in such a one but he is as full of all kind of evil as Baal's house of Idolatry as the Sluggard's field of thorns and bryars or as Pharisees sepulchers of dead mens bones such a man's Soul is a very sink of uncleanness and naughtiness ●ut as when a man is made a partaker of Christ he is a new creature old things are past away behold all things are become new 2 Cor. 5. 17. v. So he is also a Good Man bad things are passed away and all things are become good he is become a good man and hath his heart filled with the good treasure of saving Grace Such another as Joseph of Arimathea who was a good man and a just Luke 23. 50. v. Such another as Banabas was a Good man and full of the Holy Ghost Act. 11. 24. v. When Christ came into the Temple John 2. 5. v. he purged his Father's house he overturned the money ●ables he drove out the buyers and sellers So when Christ cometh into any man and taketh up his holy habitation in the heart he throws down every sin he drives out every ●orruption and carnal lust he purges out every evil thing and maketh the heart good The heart of man by nature is a very den of Thieves a pallace of Pride a slaughter-house of Malice a brothel-house of uncleanness a raging sea of Sin a little hell of black and blasp●emous Imaginations and ●warming with all manner of noysom lusts but the Lord Jesus Christ rids the heart hereof and makes it holy Himself is called that holy thing Luk. 1. 35. v. Therefore that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That holy thing it is put in the Neuter gender Emphatically shewing that he hath not the least spot of sin in him but is every way holy typified therein by the high Priest under the Law who had this written upon him Holyness to the Lord but Jesus Christ is not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holy but he is also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that sanctifieth and maketh us holy by his blood cleansing us from all filthy abominations 4. The fourth Instance is that of the Spirit who is called the Spirit of Grace and is of the same essence and consubstantial with the Father and the Son and in all respects co-equal and co-eternal called therefore the Eternal Spirit Heb. 9. 14. How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your Conscience from dead works to serve the living God The holy Ghost in Scripture is expresly called God Act. 5. 3 4 v. Peter reproving Ananias for lying to the holy Ghost saith Thou hast not lyed unto Man but unto God And St. Paul proves that our bodies are the Temple of the living God 2 Cor. 6. 16. v. Because of the holy Ghost which dwelleth in us 1 Cor. 6. 19. v. Know ye not that your body is the Temple of the holy Ghost which is in you He that in one place is called the holy Ghost in the other place is called the living God And whosoever will be saved is taught in St. Athanasius his Creed to believe thus That the Godhead of the Father of the Son and of the holy Ghost is all one the ●lory equal the Majesty co-eternal An● again Such as the Father is such is the Son and such is the holy Ghost And again The Father Eternal the Son Eternal and the holy Ghost Eternal And yet they are not three Eternals but one Eternal And Eternally blessed is that man who hath gotten this Eternal spirit of the living God into his heart for wheresoever the spirit of God comes it is not idle We read Matth. 8. 7. v. how Christ saith to the Centurion When I come I will heal thy servant I will not meerly come to see him and visit him but when I come I will heal him So when the holy Ghost doth come into a man he will not be idle and do nothing but he will heal the Soul sanctify the heart and purge corrupted nature in some measure Holyness is the natural product of the spirit by its powerful influence and breathings it raises poor dead Souls out of the grave of sin frames them unto a spiritual and divine conformity unto Christ subdues the rebellion of evil hearts and makes the sinner to become another man by a spiritual Metamorphosis This is that work which is ascribed to the holy Ghost 1 Pet. 1 2 v. Elect according to the foreknowledg of God the Father through sanctification of the spirit unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Here is held forth the concurrence of the whole Trinity in the salvation of man The Father electing us the holy Ghost sancti●ying us Jesus Christ shedding his blood for us Hence it is that our Saviour calleth it the holy Spirit Luk. 11. 13. v. If ye being evil know how to give good gifts to your children how much more shall your heavenly Father give the holy Spirit to them that ask him Sanctus dicitur quia sanctificat He calleth him the holy
Spirit which is to sanctify or make holy the hearts of men St. Paul therefore calleth it the spirit of holyness Rom. 1. 4. v. And tells the Corinthians they were sanctified hereby 1 Cor. 6. 11. v. And again thus he doth speak to the Thessalonians God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the Truth The spirit is principal in stamping the Image of God upon the heart and sanctifying the soul by Grace here that he may exalt us to Eternal glory in heaven hereafter Hence we have all our graces and gifts Grace whereby we are sanctified whereby the rebellion of our will is subdued and the uncleanness of our affections purified and we thereby qualified and enable to serve God Hence we have not only our Graces but all our gifts to qualify and inable us in our several places and relations to edify one another 1 Cor. 12. 7. v. The manifestation of the spirit is given to every man to profit withal The gifts of the holy Ghost are given for the common good of all the Church to which only end all ought to be referred Non nobis nati sumus we are neither born nor born again for our selves By the former we are made good Christians and by the latter we are made profitable Christians Hence also it is that we read of the renewing of the Spirit Titus 3. 5. v. for upon whom the spirit is bestowed it changes such from earthly to heavenly from the Image of Adam to the image of Christ Every man by nature in respect of any divine or spiritual good hath a very heart of stone It was the Poets fiction that Men were made of Stones Inde g●nus durum sumus to be sure there is this spiritual Stone in the hearts of men all Mankind naturally a●e a● hard tough rugged and untractable people Insomuch that where any are sanctified by the spirit there children are raised up to Abraham out of stones there water is made to gush out of a rock there dry bones are caused to gather together and made to live and such a gracious quality of softness is wrought by the spirit that it melts before God becomes willing and obedient to all commanded duties and cries out with St. Paul Lord what wilt thou have me to do he is willing to do any thing and pliable to any thing that God commands him Ezek. 36. 26. 27. v. And I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes and ye shall keep my Judgments and do them Such a willing obedience is wrought by the spirit when that is made good that you have in the 26. v. A new spirit will I put within you and I will take the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh If a man could put a vegetative life into a stone what would the stone do it would grow as a plant doth grow If a man could put a sensitive life into a stone what would the stone then do it would stirr and move as a worm or beast doth If a man could put a reasonable soul into a stone what would the stone do it would talk as a man doth it would discourse of heavenly matters as a man doth and pursue the matters of the world as a man doth But if a man could put the spirit of God and the spirit of Grace into a stone what then would the soul do it would speak of God and Christ of Heaven and Happyness it would pursue spiritual and heavenly matters and things This is every Man's estate and condition as long as there is nothing but the life of reason in them they savour nothing but the things of the World they talk of nothing but the world and they labor after nothing but the Temporal things of this world but if once the spirit of God be in them if once they have gotten the spirit of God it stirrs them up to talk of Heaven and to labor after the things of heaven it works in them holy motions and holy affections How fruitful in all kind of goodness does the spirit make those in whose hearts it dwells read Gal. 5. 22. v. It is fruitful in love joy peace long suffering gentleness goodness faith meekness temperance All these are the fruits of the Spirit The spirit is as seed in the heart which will spring up and shew it self it cannot lye dead but will work and move it will make the Soul that was barren to become fruitful it animateth the Soul as to an heavenly being so to all kind of heavenly working When others are empty Vines like Israel Hos 10. 1. v. Israel is an empty vine And when others are unfruitful willows and barren grounds not trees of the Garden but of the Wilderness wild degenerate plants and for their unfruitfulness in goodness shall have an heavy doom pass upon them Matth. 25. 30. v. Cast ye the unprofitable servant into utter darkness These being filled with the fruits of righteousness which are by Jesus Christ unto the Glory and praise of God Phil. 1. 11. v. are plants of renown like the Pomcitron which as Naturalists say bears fruit at all times of the year they are like the ground in the Parable which brought forth Some sixty and some an hundred fold Matth. 13. 8. v. And it may be said of them as of Joseph Gen. 49. 22. v. Joseph is a fruitful bough Who have their fruit unto holyness and their end everlasting life Rom. 6. 22. v. 5. The fifth Instance is that of a good Conscience A good Conscience will be of no little concernment hereafter Forty thousand pounds for a good Conscience cryed out a wicked wealthy Worldling when he was dying and passing into Eternity I may here propound a most serious question to those whose hearts are more taken up with the Temporal things of this world then with the Eternal things of another world Quid prodest bonis plena arca si in anis sit conscientia What good is there in a Chest full of goods when the Conscience is empty of goodness Conscience will live for ever Conscience dyes not when a wicked dyes Death it self is not able to part Conscience from a sinner As the probationer disciple said to Christ Matth. 8. 19. v. Master I will follow thee wheresoever thou goest So will Conscience follow a sinner whithersoever he goes It is said of the Statue of Juno placed in a City near to Euphrates in Assyria that it always looks towards those that come into her Temple be they where they will in the Temple she stares still upon them if they go by her yet she follows them with her eye So unto all places whithersoever a sinner goes Conscience will follow him Goes he to God's tribunal to receive the sentence of his Eternal doom to have the question of his Eternal estate to be absolutely and unalterably determined even thither will
God the Father who is the God of all grace Jude 1. That is purged from his sins by Jesus Christ w●o is the author and giver of Grace Rev. 1. 15. v. That like Barnabas is full of the holy Ghost Act. 11. 24. v. And in whom is found a good Conscience the consequent of grace purged from dead works to serve the living God Heb. 9. 14. These are the true Riches Luk. 16. 11. v. which cannot stand with Reprobation 1. The first Instance is that of Grace this is the curious enamel and embroidery of the Soul making Christ's Spouse all glorious within and it is the true Philosophers Stone this turns all into gold and makes a man like Caleb of another spirit Grace may well be reckoned amongst the good things that are of enduring nature Temporal things are but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but for a season but Grace hath Eternity stampt upon it It is called durable Riches Prov. 8. 10. v. other good things take wings and fly from us Grace takes wings and flyes with us to Heaven Glory with God will be Eternal and so is Grace from God Eternal Grace and glory differ very little Grace is glory in the bud and glory is grace at the full Grace is glory in the seed and Glory is grace in the flower Grace is that glory the Saints have in this life which is Militant and Glory is Grace to be had in that life which is Triumphant Grace is a blossom of Eternity and will last to Eternity as being the foundation on which the Superstructure of glory which is Eternal is laid called therefore Vnctio manence the anointing that abides 1 John 2. 27. v. Grace is therefore compared to a river of the water of life John 7. 38. He that believeth on me as the Scripture hath said out of his belly shall flow Rivers of living Water now this is spoken of the Spirit as appears by the following verse the 39. v. clears it that Christ spoke de donis spiritus sancti This river can never be dryed up for the spirit of God is the spring that feeds it A Christian may lose his estate though never so great yea he may lose his life but he cannot lose his Grace Enemies may plunder him of his money and plate but not of the Pearl of Grace for that is locked up in the Cabinet of the heart Grace is in the number of those riches that Lewis of Bavyer Emperour of Germany spoke of when he said Hujusmodi comparandae sunt opes quae cum nau●ragio simul enatent Such goods are worth getting and owning as will not sink or wash away if a Shipwreck happen but will swim with us to the Shore Now Grace that is of such a lasting nature is no flower that grows in Nature's garden but is a slip taken off from the Tree of Life in the heavenly Paradice and planted by the spirit of God in the Soul And where ever Grace is it makes a great change it makes those men good that were bad it makes those holy that were most unholy Man by the Fall was rendred most Deformed and much Degenerated from his primitive Innocency he that had seen Adam in Paradise and afterwards met him in the vast fields would not have known him to be the same man and in this defaced and deformed Image did he beget his Postery how unlike are they to Adam in the state of innocency before the Fall how vile how wicked and yet Grace changes the very worst Grace hath changed such as have been the most hopeless men upon whom spiritual Physitians for a great while have lost all their labor You have mentioned a most admirable and wonderful change made by converting Grace in that 1 Cor. 6. 11. v. And such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the spirit of our God In the 9. and 10. v. the Apostle had made mention of Beasts and Monsters rather then of Men endued with reason and says he in the 11. v. Such were some of you these Corinthians it seems were very bad for the Apostle setting forth their badness speaks in the Neuter Gender 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not such persons but such sins demonstrating their wickedness they were not so much peccatores as ipsa peccata sins as the very sins themselves Yet behold they are changed by the power of Grace But ye are washed c. Here God raised up children unto Abraham out of stones and caused a company of Black-moores to have their skins made white Here God took crooked trees and made them pillars in his Temple unpolished stones and by Grace polished them for his building So cast your eyes upon St. Paul and see what he was before Grace came unto him he tells you himself 1. Tim. 1. 13. v. Who was before a blasphemer and a persecutor and injurious i. e. to the Church and people of Christ he was exceedingly mad against them and persecuted them even to strange Cities but what a good man was Paul afterwards Sin hath made the nature of man which in the time of innocency was holy to become unholy it hath changed Righteousness into Hemlock and Wormwood as Amos speaks of Israel Amos 6. 12. v. that was a wicked change but Grace turned Hemlock into righteousness When the hand of God was out against the Church for her sins and afflicted her sore Jeremy complains Lam. 4. That her Gold was become Dross and her Wine water This was a change from good to bad but Grace works a quite contrary change it makes dross to become gold and water wine This is a change from bad to good Though Sin be an impure Issue a befilthying thing 2. Cor. 1. yet grace cleanseth the heart Grace is therefore called the washing of Regeneration Titus 3. 5. v. Not by works of righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of Regeneration and renewing of the holy Ghost Grace cleanseth out those Leopard spots that are in the Soul Grace beautifies and adornes the Soul a Soul beautified with grace is like a room richly hung with Arras or Tapestry or the Firmament bespangled with glittering Starrs This then is the first particular shewing that Eternal good things are the best of good things because they make those good who injoy them to be rich in grace is of greater consequence then to be rich in gold When Cyrus had given Artabazus a Cup of gold and Chrysantas but a kiss in token of special favor Artabazus complained that the Cup he gave him was not so good gold as the ●iss he gave Chrysantas it holds here that the greatest and best of temporal things are not so good gold as Grace Gold though it may make a man the richer yet it cannot make a man the better let the gold be never so good it cannot
a Christian and ●oth as it were proclaim to the world that he is over●boured and but hardly used If any of us should see a servant continually sad and dejected hear him murmuring and complaining we must needs think that he either loves not his Master or likes not his worke or fears his pay Such a servant discredits his Masters service and such a Christian also disgraces Religion as if he were like to gain nothing by all his Religious labour and pains As God loveth a cheerful giver 2 Cor. 9. 7 v. so God loveth a cheerful Labourer that in Psal 100. 2. v. may be a command as well as advice Serve the Lord with gladness come before his presence with singing As St. James saith if any be merry let him sing Psalmes so I say if any sing Psalmes read the word pray or do any other commanded duty let him be merry The Apostle did take pleasure in infirmities in reproaches in necessities in persecutions in distresses for Christ sake 2 Cor. 12. 10. v. He did not only submit to God's dealings but rejoyced in them so should every Christian not only set about this labour but he should rejoyce in it his Soul should make him like the Chariot of Aminadab and a love to Eternal good things should Oyl the wheel of his affections he should go through his work as the Plowman goes through his drudging work whistling and singing imitating our blessed Saviour who delighted to do his fathers will it was to him meat and drink as he said to his Disciples at the Well of Samaria John 4. 34. v. Jesus saith unto them my meat is to do the will of him that sent me and to finish his work Christ's delight in gaining souls and bringing them to the knowledge of the Gospel took his mind off bodily food and refreshment even when he had need thereof the delight he took herein allayed the sense of his outward necessities and was more refreshing to him then meat and drink could be it made him to forget his meat and it was as meat unto him he took more delight in this worke then an hungry man could take in meat As Abrahams servant would not eat till he had dispatcht his errand Gen. 24. 33. v. he preferred his work before his food it was more content to him to dispatch the work his Master sent him about then to be eating and drinking But that I must draw to a conclusion here might be laid down many particulars to shew what reason a Christian hath to be chearful in this his labour For First he hath good company with him and that will make men cheerful though their labour should be a little more then ordinarily difficult and tedious Most men will be merry in good company if ever they will be merry and herein a Christian hath the company of the Eternal Trinity and the immortal Angels Secondly He is certain to be a great gainer by his labour he is not called upon to labour like a Captive or a Galley slave for nothing God hath made promises to him of good Rewards he hath promised a Crown of Righteousness 1 Tim. 4. 8. v. a Crown of Life Rev. 2. 10. v. Such a Crown of Life as is a Crown of Glory 1 Pet. 5. 4. v. and such a Crown of Glory as is everlasting an Inheritance incorruptible undefiled and that fadeth not away 1 Pet. 1. 4. v. All which are such things as are enough to make a lame man walk and a broken arm to bear a burden Thirdly he is assured of a future and Eternal rest after the labour of this life ended It is not with a Christian as it is with an Ox that when he can labour no longer is carryed to the slaughter and ceaseth to be but he lives for ever yet ceaseth to labour and enjoyes a Sabb●th of Sabb●ths in the Heavens Rev. 14. 13. v. Blessed are they which dye in the Lord for they rest from their labour When once this present life ends he shall pass his Eternity of bliss in contemplating loveing lauding and praysing the incomprehensible Glorious Majesty of our Creator Redeemer and Sa●ctifier and in perpetual Hallelujahs unto him that sits upon the Throne in the fellowship of Caelestial Spirits who rest not day nor night saying Holy Holy Holy Lord God Almighty which was and which is and is to come Rev. 4. 8. v. Fourthly his work while he labours as he should for these things is accepted it is no small trouble to a man both in and for the doing of any thing when the person by whom he is imployed accepts not of what he does as the contrary must needs be a great cheering Eccles 9. 7. v. Go thy way eat thy bread with joy and drink thy wine with a merry heart for God now accepteth thy works Fifthly he hath good help and assistance he is assisted herein auxilio spiritus by the help of the spirit and the spirit makes all a Christians labour work and duties easy Heaven is promised unto him to encourage him and make him willing to labour and the spirit is given unto him to assist him and make him able not any one will much complain what ever his work is who hath power and affections too The spirit worketh in every Christian the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both to will and to do Sixthly His labour is easy it is so if we will beleive either the testimony of Christ or the testimony of St. John both the Master and the Disciple give their testimonies hereunto we have the testimony of Christ Matt. 11. 30. v. My yoak is easy and my burden is light Sin layes an heavy yoak upon men and therefore Sin is compared to a Talent of Lead Zach. 5. 7. v. to shew the weightiness of it but Christ tells us his yoak is easy the yoak that was easy so long ago when Christ said it cannot be grown uneasy with wearing for the longer any thing is worn the easier that thing is to wear We have the testimony of St. John 1 Joh. 5. 3. v. His Commandements are not grievous As Christ spake what he well knew so questionless St. John spake what he by experience had found to be true Indeed to labour for these things may be irksome and troublesome to him that is unwilling and would not labour that would not at all strive to enter in at the strait Gate or climb up the Hill or it may at the first beholding of it appear so unto one that never set himself to labour or it may be so to one that loves not any kind of labour for as love will make any kind of labour delectable want of love makes it burdensome Or Lastly it may be so even to the carnal fleshly and unregenerate part of a beleiver for in such there is a Law in the members which rebells against the Lawes of Heaven but to the regenerated part of a Christian it is not irksome but
for thee Uni● me to Christ 111 who is the Fountain of life that I may live who by nature am dead in sins and trespasses Let thine Eternal spirit by its powerful influence and breathings heal 114 my Soul sanctifie my heart subdue the rebellion 115 of my will and purifie all uncleanness out of my affections that acting from inward principles of holiness I may imitating blessed St. Paul exercise 121 my self to have alwayes a conscience void of offence towards man and 122 in simplicity and godly sincerity not in fleshly wisdome but by the grace of God I may have my conversation in the world in all things willing ●12 to live honestly and walking before thee in truth and with a perfect heart doing that which is good that so when thou shalt bring to my mind the History 126 of my life which having been very sinful might here be followed with dreadful apprehensions of thy wrath and some glimpses and pre-occupations of Hell and hereafter with Eternal torments I may have that which will afford unto me inward consolation and refreshment and in the day when I must pass 127 through the valley and shadow of death that neither the terrors of death nor the fiercest oppositions of Hell and the Divel may dismay me let me be found interested in what will do me 145 good then and being lasting good things will last beyond Death go with me out of this 131 world stand me in stead at the day of 23● 152 Judgement and keep me out 137 of Hell If whilst I live thou shalt make my condition an afflicted condition that 141 I must go through the valley of Baca towards Zion● yet bestow upon me what thou knowest 142 will make me bear afflictions patiently be as an Ark to uphold my spirits and keep them from sinking in the greatest deluge of calamities Though here I should meet with shame and disgrace O Christ yet with thee let me 174 enjoy Eternal Glory though here I should live but a short life yet in Heaven let me live 175 an Eternal life though here I should not have one joyful hour yet hereafter let me enter into my Masters 177 joy into that joy which Eternity begins 178 but Eternity shall never end though here I should never enjoy any earthly inheritance yet let me not miss of that Inheritance incorruptible 179 which fadeth not away in the 180 everlasting Kingdome of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ and there also receive that Crown 182 of glory that fadeth not away though here I should not have a house to shelter my self from storms and tempests yet let me be admitted into that house not 184 made with hands Eternal in the Heavens and scituated in the new Jerusalem which is the everlasting habitation of 189 Angels and glorified Saints Take my heart off these lower things wherein so many do fancy 221 doth consist the only comfort of their lives which are only for the body 198 and but vanity and vexation 191 of spirit and set it upon those alwayes 188 desirable good things in Heaven which only can satisfie 193 the longings of it and make my soul 198 that most precious and immortal 203 being happy By faith help me to look above 22● the gaiety and eye-dazling 224 objects here in the world and to see the excellency and worth of those things that are 215 invisible but are made 235 known in the Gospel Oh that my head were water 245 and mine Eye a fountain of tears that I might weep day and night for them who make all the motions 250 of their Souls to wait upon earthly designs and for the gaining 252 the Mammon of unrighteousness in this world such ●s prefe● momentany pleasures before 244 Eter●al joyes and spend their whole time in making pro●sion for the flesh without the least thought upon E●ernity that follows and never think of their present ●nfulness or their future Eternal misery Pardon ●e O my God that I have at any time postponed 256 the things of Heaven to the things of this world ●referring dross before Gold the fatness of the Earth ●efore the dew of Heaven earthly Mammon before Heavenly Mansions and the good things of this life ●efore the good things of another and better life yea ●ood and ●aiment for my body before Grace and Glory ●or my soul and now O Lord ●help me to consider ●hat it is ●igh time for me to mind the concerns of my ●oul and to be labouring for Eternal good things and ●261 seeking those things that are above and to ●ve above those things which 269 I cannot live with●ut yea wholly to spend my time whilst 269 I am ●n the body about those things whereof I shall have ●ost need when I am out of the body and principally ●o Labour for on earth those things that will be of use ● Heaven Make me spiritually 273 wise to lay up ●uch a stock and store that will do me good through●ut all Eternity and before my body be laid in the Grave to take care that my never dying soul may be ●arryed into Abrahams bosome by a turning to thee O God by accepting of Jesus Christ by getting my ●ins pardoned and my evidence for Heaven cleared ●hough I do yet remain upon Earth let I pray thee ●hy spirit help me to converse in Heaven 274 and ●o have mine Eyes fixed upon those invisible things ●or ever blessed be thy most holy name O Lord that I am not placed among the common Beggars of this world that I have not been sent to beg my bread from door to door it might 278 have been my portion to have crowched to another for a morsel of bread to have been a vagabond and have saught my bread out of desolate places and to have lived as another Lazarus 279 in a starving and famishing condition O Lord I beseech thee never lay me under the heavy judgement of poverty in this world least I be poor and steal and take the name of thee my God in vain neither let me be a beggar in another world in Hell to howl for a drop of water to cools my tongue Yet if poverty must be the condition thou O God wilt have me to end my dayes in and I must be made worldly 287 poor yet O God vouchsafe to make me spiritually rich rich in Faith even enriched with the unsearchable riches of Jesus Christ let me be found to be an heir of Salvation even an heir 288 of God and a joynt heir with Christ an heir of that Kingdome 289 which thou hast promised to them that love thee Help me O Lord to overlook the splendid braveries of this world the greatest and best things of this life 299 as those things which are 293 not but are as so many Empty 294 clouds and Wells without Water ciphers without figures and but as shadows to real substances being altogether void of 291 what will make me happy to Eternity and to Labour that I may have