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A51848 Several discourses tending to promote peace & holiness among Christians to which are added, three other distinct sermons / by Dr. Manton. Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1685 (1685) Wing M537; Wing T14_CANCELLED; ESTC R8135 192,514 502

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our Lord Jesus Christ Acts 20. 21. Repentance respects God as our End and Faith respects Christ as Mediator as the only way of returning to God from whom we have strayed by our own folly and sin 2. In the exercise of this Repentance and Faith there must be a forsaking the Devil the World and the Flesh and a giving up our selves to God the Father Son and Holy Ghost as our Creator Redeemer and Sanctifier For the former there are three great Enemies to God and us the Devil the World and the Flesh reckoned up Ephes. 2. 2 3. In time past y● walked according to the course of this World after the Prince of the Power of the Air the Spirit that now worketh in the Children of disobedience Among whom also we all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of the Flesh fulfilling the desires of the Flesh and of the Mind There all your Enemies appear abreast the Devil as the grand Deceiver and principle of all wickedness The World with its Pleasures Honours and Profits as the Bait by which the Devil would deceive us and steal away our Hearts from God and divert us from looking after the one thing necessary The Flesh as the corrupt inclination in us which entertaineth and closeth with these Temptations to the neglect of God and wrong of our own Souls this is importunate to be pleased and is the proper internal cause of all our mischief for every Man is enticed and drawn away by his own Lusts. Now these must be renounced before we can return to God by Jesus Christ for as Ioshua told the Israelites so must we say to all of you Iosh. 24. 23. Put away the strange Gods which are among you and incline your Heart to the Lord God of Israel 1. There must be a renouncing of our Idols before our Hearts can incline unto the true God We must be turned from Satan to God Acts 20. 18. And the World must be renounced Titus 2. 12. Denying all ungodliness and worldly Lusts. And we must not look upon our selves as Debtors to the Flesh to fulfil the Lusts thereof Rom. 8. 10. God will have no Copartners and Competitors in our Hearts And then the second part in exercising of our Faith and Repentance is giving up our selves to God the Father Son and Spirit as our Creator Redeemer and Sanctifier And therefore in Baptism which is our first entrance and initiation into the Christian Religion we are baptized in the Name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost Mat. 28. 19. which implieth a dedication and giving up our selves to them according to their personal Relations To the Father as our Creator to love him obey him and depend upon him and be happy in his love as dear Children To Christ as our Redeemer to free us from the guilt of Sin and the wrath of God To the Holy Ghost to guide and sanctify us and comfort us with the sense of our present interest in God's Love and the hopes of future Glory Secondly As to our Progress and Perseverance which is our walking in the narrow way Three things are required And that 1. As to the Enemies of God and our Souls As there is a renouncing required at first so at length there is requisite an overcoming the Devil the World and the Flesh Rev. 2. 7. To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the Tree of Life which is in the midst of the Paradise of God We overcome the Devil when we keep up our Resistance and stand out against his Batteries and Assaults 1 Pet. 5. 8 9. Be sober be vigilant because your Adversary the Devil as a roaring Lion walketh about seeking whom he may devour Whom resist stedfast in the Faith We overcome the World when the terrors and allurements of it have less force and influence upon us 1 John 5. 4 5. Whatsoever is born of God overcometh the World And this is the Victory that overcometh the World even our Faith Who is he that overcometh the World but he that believeth that Iesus is the Son of God and Gal. 6. 14. But God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of our Lord Iesus Christ by whom the World is crucified unto me and I unto the World We overcome and subdue the Flesh when we have crucified the Flesh with the Affections and Lusts Gal. 5. 24. When we get the mastery over the passions and affections thereof and tho we be sometimes foiled yet the drift and bent of our lives is for God and our Salvation 2. As to God to whom we have devoted our selves We must love him above all and not put him off with what the Flesh can spare or the World will allow or the Devil will suffer us to go on contentedly with but we must serve him sincerely in Holiness and Righteousness all our days Luke 1. 75. The love and patient service of our Creator is our great and daily work 3. As to our End We must live in the hope of the coming of Christ and our everlasting Glory Titus 2. 13. Looking for that blessed hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Iesus Christ. And Iude vers 21. Keep your selves in the love of God looking for the Mercy of our Lord Iesus Christ unto eternal Life Well then as we did at first thankfully accept of our recovery by Christ and did at first renounce the Devil the World and the Flesh and consented to follow his direction and use his means in order to our final Happiness so we must still persevere in this mind and resolution till our Glory come in hand This is God's Wisdom Secondly Let us now see how this Counsel of God is entertained by the carnal World 't is there despised slighted and contradicted The World is a distracted World some neglect God's Counsel and never lay it to heart Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation and Mat. 22. 5. But they made light of it and went their ways one to his Farm another to his Merchandize Some laugh at these things and make an holy and heavenly life the matter of their scorn and derision Luke 16. 14. The Pharisees also who were covetous heard all these things and they derided him And Acts 17. 32. Some mocked and others said We will hear thee again of this matter Howbeit certain Men clave unto him and believed There are others who fasten odious reproaches on the godly And tho the Christian Religion be so holy and innocent in its design so agreeable to the nature of God and Man so well contrived to remedy our Miseries and to secure our true and proper Happiness yet the strictness of it is distasted by the World By the prophane who have nothing to excuse their wickedness 't is counted hypocrisy As deceivers yet true 2 Cor. 6. 8. because they cannot condemn the Life they judg the Heart By them who affect the Vanities of the World and
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Concision who instead of circumcising themselves did cut asunder the Church of God But the sound Believers were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Circumcision indeed as being circumcised by the Circumcision made without Hands in putting off the Body of the Sins of the Fl●sh by Christ C●ll 2. 11. They were the true Children of Abraham who did indeed perform that for which Circumcision was intended For we are the Circumcision which worship God in the Spirit and rejoice in Christ Iesus and have no confidence in the Flesh. In the words we have a three-fold Description of the True Circumcision How they stand affected To God Christ Self I. They worship God in the Spirit II. They rejoice in Christ Jesus III. They have no confidence in the Flesh. I. They worship God in the Spirit This Clause may be interpreted 1. In opposition to the Legal Ordinances So 't is taken Iohn 4. 23 24. But the hour cometh and now is when the true Worshippers shall worship the Father in Spirit and in Truth For the Father seeketh such to worship him God is a Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and Truth The Jewish Worship is in a sense called Carnal the Christian Spiritual Heb. 7. 16. A Carnal Commandment Heb. 9. 10. Carnal Ordinances imposed on them till the Time of Reformation And Shadows Heb. 10. 1. Now the Lord would have a Spiritual Worship and the Truth of what was in these Shadows these external Forms he allowed instituted in the Infancy of the Church so that they worship God in the Spirit is they have embraced the true Worship of the Gospel and serve God not by the Carnal Rites of the Law but by the pure rational Worship of the Gospel This is part of the sense 2. It implieth worshipping God with the inward and spiritual Affections of a renewed Heart Heb. 12. 28. Wherefore we receiving a Kingdom which cannot be moved Let us have Grace whereby we may serve God acceptably with Reverence and Godly Fear Worship flowing from Grace engaging the Heart in God's Service is that which God prizeth Therefore a Christian should not rest in an External Form God is my Witness whom I serve with my Spirit Rom. 1. 9. 3. It doth also imply the Assistance and continual Influence of the Holy Spirit Ephes. 6. 18. Praying always with all Prayer and supplication in the Spirit and watching thereunto with all perseverance and supplication for all Saints And Iude v. 20. Praying in the Holy Ghost The Doctrine is this That a True Christian is known by his Worship or is one that doth worship God in the Spirit Here I shall shew you 1. What is Worship 2. What a true Christian 1. doth worship 2. Why in the Spirit 1. What is Worship 'T is either Internal or External The Internal consisteth in the Love and Reverence we owe to God The External in those Offices and Duties by which our Honour and Respect to God is signified and expressed 1. Internal The Soul and Life of our Worship lieth in Faith and Reverence and delight in God above all other things Psal. 2. 11. Serve the Lord with Fear and rejoice with Trembling Such a delight as will become the greatness and goodness of God Worship hath its Rise and Foundation in the Heart of the Worshipper there it must begin In our high thoughts and esteem of God especially two things Love and Trust. 1. Love Deut. 6. 5. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart with all thy Soul and with all thy Might We worship God when we give him such a Love as is Superlative and Transcendental far above the Love that we give to any other thing that so our respect to other things may s●oop and give way to our respect to God 2. The other Affection whereby we express our esteem of God is Trust which is the other Foundation of Worship Psal. 62. 8. Trust in the Lord at all Times pour out your Hearts before him Delightful adhesion to God and an intire dependance upon him if either fail or be intermitted our Worship faileth If Delight Job 27. 10. Will he delight himself in the Almighty Will he always call upon God Isa. 43. 22. But thou hast not called upon me O Jacob but thou hast been weary of me O Israel They that love God and delight in him cannot be long out of his company They take all Opportunities and Occasions of being with God So Dependance and Trust Heb. 3. 12. Take Brethren lest there be in any of you an evil Heart of unbelief in departing from the Living God James 1. 6 7. Let him ask in Faith nothing wavering for he that wavereth is like a Wave of the Sea driven with the Wind and tossed For let not that Man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord. Dependance begets Observance They that distrust God's Promises will not long keep his Precepts If we look for all from him we will often come to him and take all out of his hands Be careful that we do not offend him and displease him 2. External In those Offices and Duties by which our Honour and Respect to God is signified and expressed As by Invocation Thanksgiving Praises Obedience God will be owned both in Heart and Life In all these prescribed Duties by which our Affections towards him are acted If God did not call for outward Worship why did he appoint the Ordinances of Preaching Praying singing Psalms Baptism and the Lord's Supper God that made the whole Man Body and Soul must be worshipped of the whole Man Therefore besides the Inward Affections there must be External Actions In short we are said to worship God either with respect to the Duties which are more directly to be performed to God or in our whole Conversation 1. With respect to the Duties which imply our solemn Converse with God and are more directly to be performed towards him such as the Word Prayer Praise Thanksgiving and Sacraments Surely these must be attended upon because they are special Acts of Love to God and Trust in him And these Duties are the ways wherein God hath promised to meet with his People and appointed us to expect his Grace Exod. 20. 24. In all places where I record my Name I will come unto thee and bless thee And Mark 4. 24. 'T is a Rule of Commerce between us and God With what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you and unto you that hear shall more be given 2. In our whole Conversation Luke 1. 74 75. That we should serve him without Fear in Holiness and Righteousness before him all the days of our lives A Christian's Life is a constant Hymn to God or a continued Act of Worship ever behaving himself as in the sight of God and directing all things as to his Glory He turneth Second-Table Duties into First James 1. 27. Pure Religion and undefiled before God and the
Father is this To visit the Fatherless and Widows in their Affliction and to keep himself unspotted from the World Heb. 13. 16. To do good and to communicate forget not for with such Sacrifices God is well pleased Ephes. 5. 21 22. Submitting your selves one to another in the fear of God Now a true Christian maketh Conscience of all this as of Internal Worship so External As of Solemn and Sacred Acts so of a constant Awfulness of God Secondly The Reasons 1 st Why a true Christian doth worship God 2 dly Why in the Spirit 1 st For the Worship it self 1. Because they have a deep sense of his Being and Excellency impressed upon their Hearts 1. His Being These two Notions live and die together That God is and that he ought to be worshipped and served Heb. 11. 6. The one immediately floweth from the other The first Commandment is Thou shalt have no other Gods before me The second Thou shalt not worship a graven Image If 〈…〉 Worship is certainly 〈…〉 They that have no 〈…〉 they had no God The Psalmist proveth At●●ism by that Psal. 14. 1. The Fool hath said 〈…〉 Heart There is no God And vers 4. They call not upon God 2. His Excellency They have a cleare● sight of God than others have and are more acquainted with him than other● are and therefore are more prone to worship When God had proclaimed his Name and manifested himself to Moses Exod. 34. 8. He made haste and bowed himself to the Earth and worshipped None so ready and forward Psal. 9. 10. They that know thy Name will put their trust in thee 2. Because they have a Principle within them which inclineth them to God Their Hearts are carried to him as light Bodies are carried upward There is such a Grace as Godliness 2 Pet. 1. 6. and distinct in the Notion from Righteousness and Holiness 1 Tim. 6. 11. Follow after Righteousness Godliness 2 Pet. 3. 11. What manner of Persons ought we to be in all Holy Conversation and Godliness What is the Notion then of it 'T is Tendentia mentis in Deum An Impression left upon their Hearts which causeth a bent and tendency towards God as the Fountain of their Mercies the Joy of their Souls and the Center of their Rest. There is such an Inclination in some stronger in others more remiss but in all that are made Partakers of a Divine Nature in some good Degree so as ordinarily to prevail over the Inclinations of the Flesh As Holiness noteth purity of Life so Godliness an Inclination to God 3. Because of their Relations to God which they own God pleadeth his Right Mal. 1. 6. If I be a Father Where is mine Honour If I be a Master Where is my Fear A Father must have Honour and a Master must have Fear And God who is the common 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 Master of all must have both A Worship and Honour in which Reverence and Fear is mixed with Love and Joy Or as the owning of a King implyeth submission to his Government so the owning of a God Adoration and Worship 2 dly Why in the Spirit 1. Because Worship without the Spirit is like a Body without the Soul 't is but the Carcase of a Duty The Heart must be the principal and chief Agent in this Business Mat. 15. 8. This People draweth nigh to me with their Mouths and honoureth me with their Lips but their Hearts are far from me There is no Love to God rather an habitual aversion from him 2. External Worship is but a Means to the Internal as Prayer Hearing Reading Receiving tend to promote Love Trust Heavenly-mindedness Self-denial Mortification purity of Life and Conversation Now as the Means are only valuable with respect to their End so are these Duties of Hearing Reading Singing Diligence in the use of Means is good but those Acts that are conversant about the End are better such as the Love of God and Delight and Trust in God for Finis est nobilior mediis Nay amongst the Internal Acts as they are Means to one another so the nearer respect they have to the last End the more noble they are As Faith is more noble than bare Knowledg because Knowledg tendeth to Faith Psalm 5. 10. Love than Faith because Faith tendeth to Love Gal. 5. 6. 1 Cor. 13. 13. Faith causeth Love and serveth as the Bellows to in-kindle this Holy Fire and in Love Desire maketh way for Delight as its noblest Act. And accordingly must all things be valued as they suit the great End which is the injoying of God 3. A Man doth not partake of the Gospel-Blessing till he doth serve God in the Spirit that is till he be made partaker of the Regenerating Grace and actual Influence of the Holy Spirit 1. Of his Regenerating Grace Rom. 7. 6. That we should serve in newness of the Spirit and not in oldness of the Letter New Life is the principal of Evangelical Obedience and when we are renewed by the Holy Ghost we walk in newness of Conversation The Gospel is a Ministry of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3. 8. It not only requireth Duty but giveth Power to perform it The Letter of the Law requireth but giveth no Principle or Inclination to do it that is from Regenerating Grace or the Law written upon our Hearts John 3. 6. That which is born of Spirit is Spirit that is suited inclined disposed fitted for a Spiritual Life 2. Actual Influence He still worketh in us what is pleasing in God's sight Helpeth to mortify Corruption Rom. 8. 13. If ye through the Spirit do mortify the Deeds of the Body ye shall live To perfect Holiness Heb. 13. 21. that so we may serve God in all purity of Life We cannot get nor keep nor act nor increase Grace of our selves if forsaken by the Spirit of Grace The foulest Sins would become our Pleasure and the most unquestionable Duties our Burden If he withdraw his quickning Influences you can do nothing Vse 1. It reproveth those that either do not worship God or by halves or not worship him in the Spirit 1. It disproveth their Confidence that do not worship God There are an irreligious sort of Men that neither call upon him in publick or in private in the Family or in the Closet but wholly forget the God that made them and at whose expence they are maintained and kept 1. Let me reason with you as Men Wherefore had you reasonable Souls but to praise and honour and glorify your Creator and Preserver If you believe there is a God why do you not call upon him The neglect of his Worship argueth a doubting of his Being If there be such a supream Lord to whom you must one day give an account how dare you live without him in the World All the Creatures glorify him Psal. 145. 10. they passively but you have a Heart and a Tongue to glorify him actually Man is the Mouth of the Creation to return to God
complain of God but your selves and beg Grace more f●●lingly In short you are not able because you are not willing And your impotency is increased by evil habits contracted and long custom in Sin I now proceed to the fourth Consideration 4. None of these Excuses are sufficient for not following of Christ. And that 1. Because of his Authority Who requireth this Duty from us or imposeth it on us 'T is the Lord Jesus Christ to whose Sentence we must stand or fall When he biddeth us follow him and follow him speedily to excuse our selves is to countermand and contradict his Authority 'T is flat disobedience though we do not deny the Duty but only shift off and excuse our present complyance For he is as peremptory for the Time and Season as for the Duty Now while 't is called to day harden not your hearts Heb. 3. 7 8. God standeth upon his Authority and will have a present Answer If he say To day 't is flat disobedience for us to say To morrow or suffer me ●irst to do this and that business 2. It appeareth from his Charge to his Messengers Nothing can take off a Minister of the Gospel from seeking the Conversion and Salvation of Souls We cannot plead any thing to exempt us from this Work to plead that the Peoples hearts are hard and that the Work is difficult and full of danger will not serve the turn no Their Blood will I require at thy hands Therefore all excuses set aside we must address our selves to our work Acts 20. 23 24. Paul went bound in the Spirit and the Holy Ghost had told him that in every City Bonds and Afflictions did abide and wait for him But saith he None of these things move me neither count I my Life dear to my self so as I may finish my course with joy and the Ministry which I have received of my Lord Iesus to testify the Gospel of the Grace of God He was willing and ready to endure what should befal him at Ierusalem and reckoned nothing of it nor of loss of Life if he might successfully preach the Gospel and serve Christ faithfully in the Office of the Ministry If nothing be an excuse to us can any thing be an excuse to you Should your Souls be nearer and dearer to us than to your selves 3. It appeareth from the matter of the Duty imposed on you If you consider the Excellency and the Nececessity of it To begin first the Excellency All Ex●uses against Obedience to God's Call are 〈◊〉 from the World and the things 〈…〉 in the World Now there is no 〈…〉 between the things of the 〈…〉 following Christ's Counsel 〈…〉 ●verlastingly happ● The Question will soon be reduced to this Which is most to be regarded God or the Creature the Body or the Soul Eternity or Time The Excuses are for the Body for Time for the Creature but the Injunctions of Duty are for God for the Soul and for Eternity Sense saith Favour the Flesh Faith saith Save thy Soul The one is of everlasting Consequence and conduceth to an happiness that hath no end the other only for a time 2 Cor. 4. 18. While we look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal One turn of the Hand of God separateth the neglected Soul from the pampered Body And then whose are all these things 2. The Necessity that we may please God and enjoy him for ever We can never plead for a necessity of sinning for a Man is never driven to those streights whether he shall sin more or less but sometimes Duties come in competition Duty to a Father and a special injunction of Christ's to follow him One must be subordinated to the other and the most necessary must take place the less give place to the greater Now this is much more true of those things which are usually pleaded by way of hesistancy or as a bar to our Duty as our worldly and carnal satisfactions But you will say We must avoid poverty and shame But it is more necessary to avoid damnation Not to preserve our temporal Interests but to seek after eternal Life Luke 10. 42. One thing is necessary 4. It appeareth from the nature of the Work To follow Christ is not to give to him as much as the Flesh can spare but wholly to devote your selves to his Service to sell all for the Pearl of great price Mat. 13. 46. And you are obliged to walk so that all may give way to the Glory of God and the Service of your Redeemer If he will imploy us thus and thus we must not contradict it or please any thing by way of excuse Vse Do not neglect your Duty for vain Excus●s The excusing humour is very rife and very prejudicial to us for the Sluggard hath an high conceit of his own Allegations Prov. 26. 16. The Sluggard is wiser in his own conceit than seven Men that can r●nder a reason In the Eastern Countries their Counsel usually consisted of seven as we read of the seven Princes of Media and Persia Esther 1. 14. Therefore let us a little disprove this vain conceit The Sluggard thinketh himself so wise that all others are but giddy and ●raisy-brain'd People that are too nice and scrupulous and make more ado with Religion than needeth But can a Man do too much for God and Heaven 1 Thess. 2. 12. The Sluggard thinketh 't is a venture and he may venture on one side as well as the other but 't is a thousand to one against him in the eye of Reason put aside Faith in doubtful Cases the surest way is to be taken But to draw it to a more certain determination 1. Nothing is a reasonable excuse which God's Word disproveth for the Scriptures were penned to discover the vain Sophisms which are in the Hearts of Men. Heb. 4. 12. For the Word of God is quick and powerful and sharper than any two-edged Sword piercing even to the dividing asunder of Soul and Spirit and of the Ioints and Marrow and is a discerner of the Thoughts and Intents of the Heart To discover the Affections of a sensual Heart however palliated with the pretences of a crafty Understanding Certainly our private Conceits must not be lifted up against the Wisdom of God nor can a Creature be justified in going against his Maker's Will Nothing can be Reason which the God of Wisdom contradicts and calleth Folly Jer. 8. 9. Lo they have rejected the Word of the Lord and what Wisdom is in them 2. Nothing can be pleaded as a reasonable Excuse which your Consciences are not satisfied is Reason Men consult with their Affections rather than with their Consciences Conscience would draw other Conclusions therefore our Excuses are usually our Aggravations Luk. 19. 22. Out of thy own mouth will I judg thee thou wicked Servant The Master expected increase
be fed and increased in us as the Word Sacraments and Prayer The Word Psal. 119. 102. I have not departed from thy Iudgments for thou hast taught me Then Prayer suing out of our Right John 11. 24. Ask and ye shall receive that your Ioy may be full So for the Sacraments Baptism Acts 8. 39. When they were come up out of the Water the Spirit caught away Philip so that the Eunuch saw him no more and he went on his way rejoicing The Lord's Supper it is our Spiritual Refection 4. Sincerity of Obedience 1 Cor. 5. 8. Therefore let us keep the Feast not with old Leaven neither with the Leaven of Malice and Wickedness but with the unleavened Bread of Sincerity and Truth Practical Delight is the chiefest above that of Contemplation a more intimate sense We come now to the last part of a Christian's Character And have no Confidence in the Flesh. To understand it consider there are two things called Flesh in Scripture 1. External Privileges belonging to the worldly Life such as Wealth Greatness and worldly Honour Now to glory in these is to glory in the Flesh and to trust in these is to trust in the Flesh which should be far from Christians Jer. 9. 23 24. Let not the wise Man glory in his Wisdom nor the mighty Man glory in his Might Let not the rich Man glory in his Riches But let him that glorieth glory in this that he knoweth me that I am the Lord c. Where the Prophet laboureth to beat them off from their vain Confidences that they might not rely upon their Power Policy and Wealth but a saving Knowledg of and Interest in God whose Goodness and Faithfulness could only secure them against all Evils and procure them all manner of Blessings 2. The outward Duties and Performances of Religion especially the Ceremonies of Moses Those consisting in External Observances are called Flesh And to have confidence in the Flesh is to place our Confidence in External Privileges and Duties For the Apostle explaineth himself Vers. 4. Though I might also have Confidence in the Flesh if any other Man thinketh he may have confidence in the Flesh I more He was not any whit inferior to any of the Judaizing Brethren in outward Privileges and Duties yea had greater cause of glorying in the Flesh than any of the Pretenders among them And then instances in his Jewish Privileges Circumcision his Family his Sect a Pharisee his Partial Obedience or External Righteousness as to the Law blameless To rest on these things then for our Acceptance with God is to have Confidence in the Flesh. And elsewhere he saith Gal. 3. 3. Having begun in the Spirit are ye now made perfect in the Flesh. When they reverted to the Ceremonies of the Law This is called Flesh because they consist in outward things Corrupt Nature is pleased with such things and doth plead and stand for them Doct. That a good Christian doth not place his Hope and Confidence of acceptance with God in External Privileges and Performances In the first Character a Christian is described by his Worship in the second by his Joy in the third by his Confidence In handling this Point I shall shew you 1 st What are these Externals which are apt to tempt Men to a vain Confidence 2 dly That naturally Men are for a meer external way of serving God and place their whole Confidence therein 3 dly Why a good Christian should have no Confidence in this External Conformity to God's Law 1 st What are these Externals in Religion which are apt to tempt Men to a vain Confidence They may be referred to two heads They are either commanded by God or invented by Man God 's Externals or Man's Externals 1. God's Externals Such as he hath instituted and appointed either in the Law of Moses or in the Law of Christ. In the Law of Moses such as Circumcision with all the appendant Rites these are called Heb. 9. 10. Carnal Ordinances imposed on them till the time of Reformation These were to be observed while the Institution of them was in force and stood unrepealed which was done at the coming of Christ Iohn 4. 23 24. The hour cometh and now is when the true Worshippers shall worship the Father in Spirit and in Truth for the Father seeketh such to worship him God is a Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and in Truth These made great trouble in the Infancy of the Church for the Jews and Judaizing Christians were loth to depart from the Rituals under which they were bred and brought up Though Christ fully evidenced his Commission from Heaven to repeal those Laws and his Apostles strongly pleaded the Ancient Prophecies which foretold it But these are no more of concernment to us except to direct us how to behave our selves in like cases 2. There are Externals in the Law of Christ such as the Sacraments Baptism and the Lord's Supper Hearing of the Word External Prayer and the like Now the Rule is that they must be used but the outward Act not rested in as a sufficient ground of our Acceptance with God used they must be in Faith and Obedience because God hath justified them under great Penalties As Circumcision while the Command was in force Gen. 17. 14. The Man-child whose Flesh is not circumcised shall be cut off from his People He hath broken my Covenant So Baptism Mark 16. 16. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved but he that believeth not shall be damned Not want but neglect or contempt Therefore all these Duties must be used as Means of Salvation and as Expressions of the inward Truth of our Faith in God and Obedience to him we must not cast off Ordinances but yet they must not be rested in as sufficient Grounds of our Acceptance with God While Circumcision was in force they relied on it as it distinguished them from other Nations as the genuine Seed of Abraham and so reckoned to be within the Covenant But the Servants of God did always disprove this vain Confidence Rom. 2. 28 29. He is not a Iew which is one outwardly neither is that Circumcision which is outward in the Flesh but he is a Iew which is one inwardly and Circumcision is that of the Heart in the Spirit and not in the Letter whose praise is not of Men but of God They rejoiced in a shadow when they wanted the thing signified if there were no mortification of Sin or putting off the Body of the Sins of the Flesh. But not only the Apostle but the Prophet long before disproveth their vain Confidence Jer. 9. 25 26. Behold the days come when I will punish them which are circumcised with the uncircumcised Egypt and Edom with the Children of Ammon and Moab are uncircumcised in Flesh and all the House of Israel is uncircumcised in Heart God would proceed against wicked Persons and People circumcised as well as uncircumcised
be done by all sorts of Persons Princes and Peasants Noble-men or Tradesmen as well as Ministers and People of a more retired Life 4. Coming into the World to set up the Kingdom of God it was sit his Form of Life should suit with the Nature of that Kingdom Iohn Baptist telleth them The Kingdom of God is at hand and Christ himself That the Kingdom of God was come and was among them Now what is the nature of this Kingdom of God The Apostle telleth you that Rom. 14. 17. The Kingdom of God standeth not in Meat and Drink but in Righteousness and Peace and Ioy in the Holy Ghost There are two expositions of that place and both equally probable the one more general the other more limited and restrained to the Context More general That Righteousness is taken for all new Obedience and Peace for peace of Conscience resulting from the rectitude of our Actions and joy in the Holy Ghost for that supernatural comfort which the Holy Ghost puts into our Hearts by reflecting upon our Privileges in Christ and the Hopes of the World to come Now Christianity consists not in eating or not eating such or such Meats or such kind of Observances but in solid Godliness or in the practice of Christian Graces and Vertues The more limited sense is That by Righteousness is meant just dealings by Peace a peaceable harmless inoffensive sort of living by Joy in the Holy Ghost a delight to do good to one another to advance and build up one another in Godliness not dividing hating excommunicating censuring one another for lesser Things and meer Rituals but pleasing our Neighbour to edification Rom. 15. 2. and 1 Cor. 10. 31 32 33. Whether ye eat or drink or whatsoever ye do do all to the glory of God give no offence neither to Iews nor Gentiles nor to the Church of God even as I please all men in all things not seeking my own profit but the profit of many that they may be saved This meek holy charitable converse to the Glory of God without offence and scandal is that which promoteth God's Kingdom And this would Christ teach us in his own form and course of Life conversing in a sanctified manner with all sorts of Persons to their profit and benefit 5. Because Christ would not gratify Humane Wisdom As he would not gratify Sense by chusing a pompous Life so he would not gratify Humane Wisdom by chusing an austere Life There are two sorts of Men in the World who are not of God the Men of the World and the Saints of this World The Men of the World are brutish Sensualists who are all for Pomp and Glory Christ would not gratify these but came meek and poor to teach us Humility Self-denial and Contentation Mat. 11. 29. Learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart He did not bustle in the World for Respect and Honour His Complaints of his Enemies and his Answers to them were full of Meekness and stood not to abase himself for the Father's Glory and Mens Good so he did not gratify the Men of the World The Saints of this World are such as are strict in outward Observances in eating or not eating in marrying or not marrying in forbearing such Company in such a number and tale of Devotions in abstaining from such lawful things These things the Apostle saith have a shew of Wisdom Col. 2. 23. The World is mightily taken with bodily Exercise and outward Strictness As the Men of the World love to pamper the Body so the Saints of this World needlesly afflict and dishonour the Body This hath a shew and nothing but a shew but Christ would not gratify these neither he used a free but an holy Life and so was censured and traduced as a Wine-bibber and a Glutton to teach his Followers to be contented to be judged according to Men in the Flesh and live to God in the Spirit 1 Pet. 4. 6. He came to preach and to give inward Regeneration and Renovation To shew the proper way of Mortification which is not by a severity of Life but by deadning the mind to the esteem of the World That kind of Life which consists in outward Rigors hath some honour and reputation in the World and maketh a fair shew in the Flesh but he would teach us the Life which consists in Faith Holiness Sobriety Humility of Mind Charity Obedience to God Joy in the Spirit and comfort of the Promises which the World liketh not so well outward and rigorous Observances are more plausible but the Power of Godliness and a true sense of the World to come the World hateth 6. To shew us the true nature of Mortification which consists not in a bare abstinence and shameful retreat from Temptations but in a Spirit fortified against them not in a monkish discontent with the World but an holy contempt of it when we most freely use it And in bridling and governing the Appetite and Desire rather than in scrupulous refraining from the Object it self In an using of the World but not abusing of it 1 Cor. 7. 31. Not so much scrupling the Comforts of the present Life as a valuing and esteeming the Comforts of a better Life prising more the Christian Vow than any by-Laws of our own The Apostle telleth us 1 Tim. 4. 8. That bodily Exercise profiteth little but Godliness is profitable to all things Abstinence from daily Meats Wines Marriage is an act of Self-denial but a very small one for all the good it doth is to tame the Members of the Body and its external Motions and Actions without sanctifying the Heart and inward part as a lively Faith Fear and Love of God doth The profit of bodily Exercise is little in comparison of inward Piety which is necessary to a comfortable Life here and a blessed hereafter Thirdly The Observations which we may build thereon 1. We may observe the Humanity Goodness and Kindness of that Religion which we do profess both with respect to our selves and others 1. Our Selves Man consists of a Body and a Soul and hath respects for either else he were unnatural The Body indeed we are apt to overprize and therefore we need not ●●●pur but a Bridle for our Affections to the bodily life And therefore Religion in the Precepts of it interposeth by way of restraint rather than exhortation Titus 2. 12. That we should live soberly c. And Rom. 13. 14. Make no provision for the Flesh to fulfil the Lusts thereof Do not cherish carnal Desires The Apostle telleth you No Man ever yet hated his own Flesh Ephes. 5. 29. but nourisheth and cherisheth it Our usual fault is an excessive pampering of the Flesh Some have hated their own Souls at least by consequence and interpretation therefore we dare not let loose the Reins and give either incouragement or allowance to Men to indulge their carnal Desires yet to avoid prejudice we must grant what may be granted for Men are
have a passionate love for the Pleasures and Honours thereof because the generality of the World are of that mind they brand it with the imputation of foolish singularity And the Carnal Politicians because it was never yet so well with the World but some things which God requireth are discountenanced they tax it of disobedience and they counted Paul as a mover of Sedition Acts 25. 5. And because the Operations of Grace are above the Line of Nature others tax it of Fanaticism and Enthusiasm Atheists who are all for demonstrations of sense sight and present things because Christianity mainly inviteth to things Spiritual and Heavenly and to live upon the hopes of an unseen World that is yet to come they judg it to be a foppery or meer imposture or needless superstition Though both the Hopes and Precepts of Religion carry a marvellous complyance with right-reason yet none of these things move them Lastly There are others that malign oppose and oppugn Holiness There is an everlasting enmity between the two Seeds as between the Wolf and the Lamb the Raven and the Dove the World will love its own and hate those that go a contrary course Iohn 15. 19. And as he that was born after the Flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit even so it is now Gal. 4. 29. and so it will be to the end of the World When the Powers of the World give any rest yet the carnal Seed will be mocking and scoffing and bringing God's holy Ways into contempt branding them with Censures and Calumnies The Reasons of this are partly because Men are drunk with the delusions of the Flesh and so cannot judg of Spiritual Things partly to excuse themselves Men will be quarreling at Religion when they have no mind to practise it and dispute away Duties when they are unwilling to perform them Partly they take occasion from the failings of God's People tho there is no reason why they should do so An Art should not be condemned for the workman's want of skill but they do so If Christians be serious to any degree of sadness then Religion is counted an uncomfortable thi●g it mopeth them If there be any differences among God's People because of their several degrees of light oh then there are so many Sects and Factions and Controversies about Religion they suspect all and are true to none If any creep into the Holy Profession and pallute it with their Scandals then all strictness in Religion is but a pretence and imposture If Men be strict and would avoid every ordinary failing incident to Mankind then they are more nice than wise and this is preciseness and indiscretion 'T were endless to rake in this Puddle and to reckon up all the Cavils and Exceptions which naughty Men commense against the Ways of God Thirdly How and Why it must be justified by the sincere Professors of the Gospel 1. How I answer three ways 1. It must be approved and received by themselves 'T is Wisdom's Children that can only justify Wisdom they that have entertained it felt the power and force of it in their own hearts yea their very receiving is a justifying they shew the clamourings of the World do not move them Therefore it must be approved by us before it can be recommended to others and approved not speculatively only but practically so as to resolve to follow after Salvation in this way Speculatively they may approve it that have but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 2. 18 and 20 verses a form of Knowledg and dishonour it in their practices as vers 23 24. Men may justify Religion in word by a bare naked approbation and soundly vindicate it from the Cavils and Exceptions of Men. But godly Men have eyes to see the beauty and excellency of it and have sincerely accepted it Acts 2. 41. They received the Word gladly 'T is good news to a poor guilty Conscience to hear of a pardoning God and a merciful and faithful Redeemer the promise of eternal Life and a sure way had to come to it They are said to justify God that accepted his Counsel Luke 7. 29 30. The Hearts of God's Children are thorowly possessed with the reality excellency and blessedness of this Religion they know and believe the infinite consequence of these things Their Faith is a kind of justifying Iohn 3. 33. He that hath received his Testimony hath set to his Seal that God is true 2. It must be professed and owned when it is vilified and in contempt and disgrace in the World We must stand to Christ and his ways tho we stand alone as Elijah 1 Kings 19. 10. and not be ashamed of Holiness notwithstanding trouble and contradiction Christ will be confessed before Men and will be ashamed before God and Angels of them who are ashamed of him in the World and refuse to own Him and his Ways and Truths only because they are despised and contradicted and discountenanced in the World Pleading for Religion is one of the professing Acts 2 Cor. 4. 13. We having the same Spirit of Faith according as it is written I believed and therefore have I spoken We also believe and therefore speak As David when sore afflicted did confess and avow his confidence in God so we heartily believing and approving the Gospel must make a bold profession of it The Sacraments were ordained for this purpose for badges of Profession Baptism is a visible entring into Covenant with God Mark 16. 16. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved and he that believeth not shall be damned Where not only Belief is required but open Profession Baptism is a Badg and a Bond a Badg to distinguish the worshippers of Christ from others and a Bond to bind us to open profession of the Name of Christ. The Lord's Supper it is a profession of Communion 1 Cor. 10. 16. The Cup of Blessing which we bless is it not the Communion of the Blood of Christ The Bread which we break is it not the communion of the Body of Christ and vers 18. Are not they which eat of the Sacrifices partakers of the Altar They that did any part of the Sacrifices did eat and drink with God at the Altar And ver 20 21. I would not that ye should have fellowship with Devils Ye cannot drink the Cup of the Lord and the Cup of Devils ye cannot be partakers of the Lord's Table and the Table of Devils Professing communicating with Christ is not consistent with professing communicating with Devils So Prayer and Praise is a part of Confessing Rom. 10. 10. With the Heart Man beliveth unto Righteousness and with the Mouth Confession is made unto Salvation The first is proved vers 11. For the Scripture saith Whosoever believeth on him shall not be ashamed The second vers 13. For whosoever shall call upon the Name of the Lord shall be saved Calling upon the Name of the Lord in Prayer and Praise 'T is an open professing Act
prodest illis Baptismus quid prodest Spiritus Sanctus cujus arbitrio dicunt se Temperari c. Behold those that boast themselves to be redeemed from the tyranny of the Devil to be dead to the World to have crucified the Flesh They are overcome by their base and bru●ish Lusts even as we are whom they account to be still under the Kingdom of the Devil What doth their Baptism profit them what the Holy Ghost whose direction they profess to live by Why should we trouble our selves about changing our course which is as good as theirs So in Salvian's time the Heathens were wont to upbraid the Christians thus Vbi est ●atholica Lex quam credunt Vbi sunt pietatis castitatis exempla quae discunt Evangelia legunt impudi●u●t Apostolos audiant ine●riantur Cristum s●quuntur capiunt c. They talk of an Holy Christ and yet are unjust unclean wrathful cove●ous of a meek patient Christ and yet are rapacious and violent of Holy Apostles and yet are impure in their conversations Our Author goeth on thus Sancta à Christianis fierent si Sancta Christus docuisset aestimari à 〈◊〉 potest is●e qui colitur quomodo bonus Magister ●ujus tum malos esse videmus Discipulos If their Christ were an holy meek Christ they would be better c. And as carnal Men now speak For all their Godliness and Religion that they talk of our life and course and dealings are as good and honest and justifiable as theirs Thus the wicked are justified in their way 5. Christ will one day justify all his sincere Followers before Men and Angels and Devils Luke 12. 8. Whosoever shall confess me him shall the Son of Man confess before the Angels of God Let us justify his ways and he will justify us and our Faith at length shall be found to Praise and Glory and Honour Christ will then wipe off all the Aspertions which be cast upon the Children of Wisdom for Godliness-sake as Faction Pride Singularity Hypocrisy and that which was branded with such ignominious Titles will then be found to be the very Wisdom of God 6. Because of the necessity of justifying Wisdom in the times we live in 't is said 2 Pet. 3. 3. In the last Time there shall come Scoffers and Mockers walking after their own Lusts. The last days shall be full of these prophane Scoffers While Truths were new and the exercises of the Christian Religion lovely there was great concord and seriousness amongst the Professors of the Gospel and then prophane Scoffers were rare and unfrequent Before Mens senses were benummed with the customary use of Religious Duties the Notions of God were fresh and lively upon their Hearts but afterwards when the Profession of Christianity grew into a form and national Interest and Men were rather made Christians by the chance of their Birth than choice and rational Convictions then the Church was much pestered with this kind of Cattel especially now are they rise among us who live in the dregs of Christianity when Men are grown weary of the Name of Christ and the ancient severity and strictness is much lost and the memory of those Miracles and wonder●ul Effects by which our Religion was confirmed is almost worn out or else questioned by Men of subtile Wits and a prostituted Conscience Therefore now Mockers and Men of atheistical Spirits swarm every where and it concerneth Wisdom's Children to justify it and to maintain its former Vigor and Power The Vse that we may make is double 1. To the Enemies of Wisdom Judg not of an Holy Life and those that profess it at a distance and by hear-say but try We are not afraid to come to the Bar with our Enemies John 7. 24. Iudg not according to appearance but judg Righteous Iudgment If Men would not be blinded with visible Appearance and the Mask of Passiou Prejudice and Interest and condemn the People of God as they are represented in a false Mirror judg and spare not and where you ●ind the true Spirit of Christianity take all leave we desire no other Trial but speak not against things you know not Try and judg as you find where is the deepest sense of the other World where the most careful preparation to get thither the joy of Faith the love of Holiness If Christianity will allow that worldly Pomp that vanity and liberty which others take then judg the Servants of the Lord as guilty of a foolish niceness preciseness and singularity but if we be baptized into these things and unquestionably and indispensibly bound to them either renounce your Baptism or forbear your Censures or rather chuse this clear and pure way to everlasting Glory If you will not stand to God's Word stand to your own sober Moods We will make you your selves Judges when you are serious and best able to judg of things not in you Passion when Lusts are stirring When you are entring the Confines of Eternity when Conscience is likely to speak truth to you you will wish then you were one of those poor godly Men whom now you count proud humorous and factious 2. To the Children of VVisdom Do not scandalize the Holy VVays of God but justify them be neither ashamed of them nor a shame to them Till the ancient strictness be revived VVisdom will never be justified The faithful Followers of Chirst must expect Troubles in this World LUKE 9. 57 58 59 60 61 62. And it came to pass that as they went in the way a certain Man said unto him Lord I will follow thee whithersoever thou goest And Iesus said unto him Foxes have Holes and Birds of the Air have Nests but the Son of Man hath not where to lay ●●s Head And he said unto another Follow 〈◊〉 but he said Lord suffer me first to go and bury my Father Iesus said unto them Let the Dead 〈◊〉 their Dead but go thou and prea●● the Kingdom of God And another also said Lord I will foll●● thee but let me first go bid them farewel which are at home at my House And Iesus said unto him No Man having put his Hand to the Plough and looking back is fit for the Kingdom of God HERE are three Stories put together by the Evangelist to teach us in what manner we should address our selves to follow Christ. The first is of a Scribe that came uncalled but his Heart was not right with God having a temporal biass upon it The second is of one called vers 59. Christ saith Follow me But he would first cherish then bury his dying Father But Christ would have no delays but presently sets him about his Ministry and Service in the Gospel This upon the Authority of Clemens Alexandrinus who received it upon Ancient Tradition is supposed to be Philip. A third offereth himself to follow Christ but first he would take his farewel at home and compose Matters in his Family But when we set our Faces
therefore he should have done what he could Job 15. 6. Thine own Mouth condemneth thee yea thine own Lips testify against thee That 's the strongest Conviction which ariseth from a Man 's own Bosom that 's the reason why there are so many Appeals to Conscience in Scripture 1 Cor. 10. 15. I speak as to wise Men judg ye what I say Your own Hearts tell you ye ought to be better to mind God more and the World less to be more serious in preparing for your eternal estate 3. Nothing can be a reasonable Excuse which reflects upon God as if he had made an hard Law which none can keep especially if urged against the Law of Grace This is to say the Ways of God are not equal therefore there can be no excuse for the total omission of necessary Duties 4. No Excuse can be reasonable but what you dare plead at the Bar of Christ for that is Reason which will go for Reason at last Then the weight of all Pleas will be considered and all negligent Persons that have not improved the Light of Nature or have not obeyed the Gospel will be left without excuse What doth it avail Prisoners to set up a Mock-Sessions among themselves to acquit one and condemn another He is in a good condition that shall be excused in the last Judgment and in a bad condition that shall be condemned then I now proceed to the second Point Secondly That those who are called to follow Christ should follow him speedily without interposing any delays Consider 1. Ready Obedience is a good evidence of a sound Impression of Grace left upon our Hearts There is slighter Conviction which breedeth a sense of our Duty but doth not so strongly urge us to the performance of it And there is a more sound Conviction which is accompanied with a prevailing efficacy and then all Excuses and Delays are laid aside and Men kindly comply with God's Call Cant. 1. 4. Draw me I will run after thee Run It noteth an earnest and speedy motion the Fruit of the powerful attraction of the Spirit Mat. 4. 20. They straightway left their N●ts and followed him The scoffing atheistical World thinketh it easiness and fond credulity but it argu●th a sound Impression The impulsions of the Holy Spirit work in an instant for they carry their own evidence with them Gal. 1. 11. Immediatly I consulted not with Flesh and Blood In Divinis non est deliberandum When our Call is clear there needeth no debate or demurring upon the Matter 2. The Work goeth on the more kindly when we speedily obey the sanctifying motions of the Spirit and the present influence and impulsion of his Grace You have not such an advantage of a warm conviction afterward When the Waters are stirred then we must put in for a cure Iohn 5. 4. To adjourn and put it off as Foelix did Acts 24. 15. doth damp and cool the Work you quench this holy Fire or to stand hucking with God as Pharaoh did the Work dieth on your hand 3. There is hazard in delaying and putting off such a business of concernment as Conversion to God Certainly this is a business of the greatest concernment and the greatest Work should be first thought of Mat. 6. 33. Seek first the Kingdom of God and the Righteousness thereof and most thought of Psal. 27. 4. One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after that I may dwell in the House of the Lord. Now if we delay it is left upon great hazards Life is uncertain for you know not what a day may bring forth Prov. 27. 1. Boast not thy s●lf of to morrow for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth If God had given leave as Princes sometimes in a Proclamation for all to come in within a certain day so if God had said Whosoever doth not repent till thirty of forty Years be out there were no great hazard till the time were expired we might entertain Sin a little while longer But we know not the day of our death therefore we should get God to bless us er'e we die A new Call is uncertain 2 Cor. 6. 1 2. It may be he will treat with us no more in such a warm and affectionate manner If he call yet not vouchsafe such assistances of his Grace if peradventure God will give them repentance unto Life 2 Tim. 2. 25. 'T is an hazard or uncertain if the Spirit of God will put another thought of turning into your hearts when former Grace is despised Isa. 55. 6. Call upon the Lord while he is near and seek him while he may be found 4. Consider the mischiefs of delaying every day we contract a greater indisposition of embracing God's Call We complain now 't is hard if it be hard to day it will be harder to morrow when God is more provoked and Sin more strengthned Ier. 13. 23. Yea it may be our natural Faculties are decayed the vigor of our Youth exhausted When the tackling is spoiled and the Ship rotten it is an ill time to put to Sea Eccles. 12. 1. Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy Youth And besides consider the suspicion that is upon a late Repentance The most prophane would have God for their portion at last 5. The Reasons for delay are inconsiderable Suppose it be our satisfaction in our present estate The Pleasures of Sin are sweet and we are loth to forgo them but those Pleasures must one day be renounced or you are for ever miserable Why not now Sin will be as sweet to the carnal Appetite hereafter as now it is and Salvation is dispensed upon the same terms you cannot be saved hereafter with less ado or bring down Christ and Heaven to a lower rate If this be a Reason now it will for ever lie as a Reason against Christ and against Conversion The Laws of Christianity are unalterable always the same and your Hearts not like to be better Or is it That you are willing now but you have no leasure when such encumbrances are over you shall get your Hearts into a better posture Oh no 't is hypocrisy to think you are willing when you delay Nothing now hindreth but a want of Will and when God treateth with thee about thine eternal Peace it is the best time but God always cometh to the Sinner unseasonably in his own account But consider it was the Devil that said Mat. 8. 29. Art thou come hither to torment us before the time The Vse is 1. To reprove that dallying with God in the Work of Conversion which is so common and so natural to us The Causes of it are 1. Unbelief or want of a due sense and sight of things to come If Men were perswaded of eternal Life and eternal Death they would not stand hovering between Heaven and Hell but presently engage their Hearts to draw nigh to God But we cannot see afar off 2 Pet. 1. 9. He that lacketh
sum of the Salvation which we expect or our everlasting Happiness with God in Heaven 2. What is the Right of Believers or the Interest of Faith in this great Benefit I Anser 1. It doth not merit this Reward for it is not a Reward of due Debt by virtue of any intrinsick Righteousness in us or any thing that we can do and suffer but of mere Grace and Favour Ephes. 2. 8. For by Grace ye are saved through Faith and that not of your selves it is the Gift of God The Apostle is very tender of the Honour of Grace and the Interest of Grace in our Salvation From the first step to the last period all is of Grace and this Glory of his free Grace God must not be robbed of neither in whole nor in part We have all from his Elective Love we have all from the Merit and Righteousness of Christ and all from the almighty Operation of the sanctifying Spirit Faith it self is a Gift and Fruit of God's Grace in us To you 't is given to believe Phil. 1. 29. Therefore surely 't is God's free Grace Favour and Good-will which doth freely bestow that Salvation on the Elect which Christ by his Merit hath purchased and that very Faith by which we apply and make out our actual Claim and Title is wrought in us by the Spirit so that there is nothing in the Persons to whom all this is given to induce God to confer so great Benefit on us 2. Tho it be an undeserved Favour upon which our Works have no meritorious Influence yet Believers have an undoubted Right by the Grant and Promise of God wherein they may comfort themselves and which they may plead before God John 3. 16. God so loved the World that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have Life Everlastingly And Iohn 5. 24. Verily verily I say unto you He that heareth my words and believeth in him that sent me hath everlasting Life and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from Death to Life And in many places where the Believer is qualified as the Heir of Glory He that entertaineth Christ's Doctrine and receiveth and owneth him as the True Messiah and Saviour of the World and dependeth upon him and obeyeth him this Man hath a full right and new Covenant-Title to eternal Life 3. He hath not only a new Covenant-Right but a begun Possession We have some small Beginnings Earnests and Foretastes of it in this partly in the Graces partly in the Comforts of the Spirit 1. In the Graces of the Holy Spirit For Salvation is begun in our new Birth Titus 3. 5. And therefore Sanctifying Grace is called Immortal or incorruptible Seed 1 Pet. 1. 23. There is an eternal Principle put into them which carrieth them to eternal Ends. The Life is begun in all that shall be saved and it is still working towards its final Perfection The Apostle telleth us That he that hateth his Brother hath not eternal Life abiding in him 1 Joh. 3. 15. Whereby he implieth That he that loveth his Brother or hath any saving Grace he hath eternal Life begun in him 2. As to Comforts so they have some foretastes of that sweetness which is in Heaven by the Life and Exercise of Faith which is followed with Peace and Joy Rom. 15. 13. Or in their approaches to God in the Word and Prayer where Cod most familiarly manifests himself unto his People 1 Pet. 1. 3. or upon some apprehensions of his favour or the exercise of Hope and Love 2 Pet. 1. 8. By these or the like ways the Spirit of God giveth us the foretaste Surely such an Author such an Object must needs put ravishing and heavenly Joy into the Heart of a Believer 4. They are also made meet to partake of the heavenly Inheritance Col. 1. 12. There is Ius Haereditarium and Ius Aptitudinale The difference is as between an Heir grown and in his nonage when a Child in the Cradle As their Natures are more renewed and purified and their Souls weaned from the delights of sense they are changed into the Divine Nature 3. What is that saving-Faith which giveth us a title to it This deserveth to be cleared that we may not deceive our selves with a false claim Saving-Faith is such a believing in Christ for reconciliation with God and the everlasting Fruition of him in Glory as maketh us to forsake all things in this World and give up our selves to the conduct of the Word and Spirit for the obtaining of it 1. The general Nature of it I express by believing There is in it Assent Consent and A●●iance 1. Assent That leadeth on the rest when we believe the Truth of God's Word Acts 24. 14 15. especially those practical Truths which do most nearly concern our recovery to God as concerning Man's Sin and Misery that we have broken his Laws and are obnoxious to his Justice and have deserved punishment for our Sins Rom. 3. 23. And concerning Christ his Person and Office that he is the Son of God and that he came from God to bring home Sinners to God and what he hath done to reconcile us to him 1 Pet. 3. 18. For Christ also hath once suffered for our Sins the Iust for the Vnjust that he might bring us to God being put to death in the Flesh but quickned by the Spirit And also concerning your Duty and Happiness the End and the Way There is no other End and Happiness but God no other Way but the Mediator and the Means appointed by him Iohn 14. 6. Now these and such-like Truths must be believed that is in the sense we are now upon assented unto as faithful Sayings and worthy of all acceptation and regard 2. There is a Consent in Faith whether you apply it to the Word or Christ. If Christ be propounded as the Object of it 't is called a receiving Iohn 1. 12. But as many as received him to them gave he power to become the Sons of God So the word Acts 2. 41. They gladly received his Word that is embraced the Gospel-Covenant being really affected with what he had spoken concerning their Sin and their Duty Without this the Assent is but Intellectual and Speculative not Practical An Opinion not an Act or Motion of the new Nature I am to receive the Christ offered to embrace the Covenant propounded To accept of the Blessings offered for my Happiness and to resolve upon the Duties required as my Work This is Consent or an hearty accepting of Christ or the Covenant of Grace offered to us in his Name 3. There is Affiance Trust Dependance or Confidence which is a quiet repose of Heart in the Mercy of God or Fidelity of Christ that he will give me Pardon and Life if I seek after it in the way that he hath appointed This cometh in upon the former for when I consent to seek my happiness in God through Christ I depend