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A70945 Christ all and in all. Or, several significant similitudes by which the Lord Jesus Christ is described in the holy Scriptures Being the substance of many sermons preached by that faithful and useful servant of Christ Mr. Ralph Robinson, late pastor at Mary Wolnoth London. Which were appointed by the reverend author on his death-bed (if his brethren should think fit) to be published. Robinson, Ralph, 1614-1655. 1656 (1656) Wing R1705; ESTC R223720 320,677 592

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that long sickness how unlike himself was he he had no actual repentance till Nathan came to him with a message from God and quickned him Sinne quencheth the Spirit in Godly men as the water quencheth the fire Sinne takes off the edge of the soul deads the appetite and affection to the things of God It locks up the heart that it cannot act as it was wont to do 2 Sicknesse begets torment and anguish in the body When sicknesse is in extremity in the body how doth a man cry out of paine head and heart and every part is under torment What restlesse tossings are men under when diseases are violent heare how Job complaines Chap. 30. 16 17 18 Sinne is a Creator of torment and painfulnesse in the soule Felix his sinne made him tremble Acts 24. 25. Cains sinne put his spirit into such anguish that he cries out My punishment is greater then I can beare Gen. 4. 13 14. Judas his sinne did bring such despairing torment upon his soule that he takes away his life to end his misery Matth. 27. init And even Gods own people when they fall into this spiritual disease they are pained at the very heart till by pardon and remission they have obtained a healing from God How full of paine was Davids spirit by reason of his sinne He was as a man upon the rack for a long time if he did ever recover his former serenity Vid. Psalme 6. per totum Psalme 38. per tot Many of the deare children of God do by sinne fill their hearts with such anguish that they are never without much smart to the day of their death 3 Sicknesse doth bring uncomelinesse The most beautiful body in the world if pining sicknesses continue long upon it becomes like a garment that is moth-eaten the eyes sink the colour is lost the skin is shriveld the bones stick out c. Job observes this Chap. 16. 8. Thou hast filled me with wrinkles which is a witnesse against me and my lea●nesse rising up in me beareth witnesse to my face Sicknesse makes streight bodies how down beautiful faces look ghastly well-coloured cheeks look pale and oftentimes the more beautiful sicknesse findes us the more uncomely doth it leave us Sicknesse turnes youth into old age vid. Lam. 3. 4. My flesh and my skin hath he made old Sickness dries up the spirits Prov. 17. 22. A merry heart doth good like a medicine a broken spirit dries up the bones Sin takes away the comelinesse of the soule The first sinful sicknesse that ever entered into the world hath turned the soules and bodies of all mankinde into deformity and uglinesse Could we see the picture of Adams soule in the state of innocency and compare it with the soules that are diseased with sinne we would wonder at the sad change Sinne is a very deformed thing it turned Angels of light into ugly devils Those who were never healed by regeneration and remission of the disease of sin what deformed souls have they they have not one spot of beauty upon them Psal 14. 3. They are altogether become stinking A dead carrion a putrefied carcasse is as beautiful and as sweet an obj●ct as a sinfully-diseased soul Yea even Gods own children by falling into sinne though but in one or two particular acts do lose much of their beauty They do not look with that grace they did before Every act of sin casts a dark thick shadow upon the soul As deep wounds leave skars upon the body so sinful acts leave some skarres of infamy upon the soul A Saint doth not look like the same man he was before he fell into sin 4 Sicknesse brings death Dorcas was sick and died Act. 9. 37. Long sicknesses if they be not removed will bring the strongest body to the dust of death Sicknesse is indeed Anteambulo mortis the forerunner of death The sick-bed is the direct way to the dark bed the grave Sinne doth bring death to the soule One disease of sinne if it be not healed by Christs bloud will certainly bring the soule to eternal death Rom. 6. 23. it hath brought many to hell and it will certainly bring all others to the same condition that live and die in it unhealed He that dies in his sinne shall die for ever II. For the nature of this sicknesse 'T is a more dreadfull sicknesse then any other sicknesse I shall set it out in a few particulars 1. It seizeth upon the most noble part of man All other sicknesses do infest the body onely but sinne is a disease in the soul Those sicknesses are most painful and most mortal which seize upon the vitals and inward parts A disease that feeds upon the spirits doth soone drink up the natural moisture and is not so easily cured Sinne is a disease that doth immediately reach the spirits 'T is the sicknesse of the heart O Jerusalem wash thy heart from wickednesse that thou mayest be saved Jer. 4. 14. The Apostle it 's true speaks of the filthinesse of the flesh and of the spirit 2 Cor. 7. 1. Some sins are onely acted by the brutish fleshly and sensitive part others rest in the spirit as pride vain-glory envy c. yet notwithstanding even those filthinesses of the flesh have their chief seat and residence in the heart according to that of our Saviour Matth. 15. 19. Out of the heart proceed evil thoughts c. All sinne is spiritual wickednesse in regard of the fountaine and root of it As grace is seated in the heart so also is sin Ier. 4. 18. This is thy wickednesse because it is bitter because it reacheth unto thine heart 2. Sinne is a sicknesse which God never made All bodily diseases are the handy work of God He created Plagues Feavers Consumptions c. Amos 3. 6. But sinne is a sicknesse of which God never was the Author 'T is true God sometimes punisheth sinne by sinne not by creating sinne but by suffering a sinful creature to fill up his sinne by withdrawing denying his grace which onely can preserve from sin 3. Sinne is a sicknesse which separates between God and men No other disease can divide between God and the soule Hezekiahs plague Asa's gout Iobs sores none of all these did make any division between God and them Some sicknesses do separate between the husband and the wife the father and the childe at least in regard of actual communion though not in regard of affection but no bodily sicknesse divides between God and men But sinne doth separate between God and the soule Esay 59. 2. It makes God stand at a distance from his own children to hide his face from them and to deale with them as with enemies 4. Sinne is the cause of all other sicknesses All bodily diseases come from this disease Hast thou not procured this thy unto self Thine own doings shall correct thee c. Jer. 2. 19. A distempered soul is the true cause of a distempered body Sinne was the first
life so the meat that is appointed for the natural life if compared with the meat of the Spiritual life is but a very image of meat Christs flesh is real meat 2. In respect of that typical meat which the Jews had lately spoken of v. 31. Our fathers did eat Manna in the desart c. Our Saviour tells them that that is but typical bread but his flesh is bread indeed it is the real substance of which that was but a meere type and shadow Thus for Explication The Observation is this Doct 1. That the Lord Jesus Christ is really and truly the food and meat of beleevers Flesh is here put for the whole person of Christ Jesus Christ as he is held out in the Scriptures is the true real and very meat of beleeving Christians Christ as he is propounded in the Gospel dead broken crucified Christ in all his perfection compleatnesse fulnesse is meat indeed to a true beleever 'T is the very scope of this Sermon from v. 27. to v. 59. in which this truth is inculcated over and over againe and all objections answered which the carnal reason and unbeleefe of mans heart can make against it I shall in the Explication of this Doctrine open these things 1. Prove that Christ is a beleevers meat 2. Shew the Analogy between Christ and other meat 3. How this meat is eaten and received I. That Christ is the soules meat This is proved two wayes First from the types of Christ in the Old Testament The Ceremonial Law had many types of Christ Whatsoever is revealed of Christ in the New Testament was some way or other typified of him in the Ceremonial Law There are foure types which did set out Jesus Christ as the souls meat 1. The Manna in the wildernesse The History of the Manna is set down Exod. 16. the people being in some want of provision in the Wildernesse of sinne began to murmur against Moses and Aaron v. 3. God promiseth v. 4. to raine bread from heaven for them which accordingly was done v. 14 15. That this was a type of the feeding vertue of Christ is plainly discovered by our Saviour in this very Sermon v. 31 32. The Wildernesse did typifie the state of the Church in this world and the Manna was a plaine type of Christ the Churches meat 2. The Shewbread The Law and manner of the Shewbread you have at large Lev. 24. 5 6 7. 8 9. There are two things represented by this Shewbread First the multitude of the faithful presented unto God in his Church as upon a pure table continually serving him made by faith and holinesse as fine cakes and by the mediation of Christ as by incense made a sweet odour unto God Secondly the Spiritual repast which the Church hath from and before God who feedeth them with Christ the bread of life 3. The meat-offerings Concerning this Minchah or meat-offering you may reade at large Lev. 2. 1 c. These meat-offerings were of two sorts some were the meat-offerings of the Congregation some of particular persons of these latter there were several sorts mentioned in that Chapter It 's said v. 3. that Aaron and his sons shall have the remnant of the meat-offering that is all of it but that which is burned upon the Altar for a memorial v. 2. Several things were signified by the meat-offerings Being referred to Christ who by the oblation of his own body was our meat offering Psal 40. 6. Heb. 10. 5. they did shadow out our communion with Christ and participation of his death and resurrection by faith whereby he becomes unto us spiritual meat of which the whole Church are made partakers 4. The flesh of the sacrifices of the peace-offerings and others which were given to the Priests of which you read Lev. 7. 15. they were to be eaten the same day it was killed Now what was meant by the eating of the flesh of these sacrifices and of the flesh of the other sacrifices which were given to the Priests to eat vid. Lev. 10. 12 13 14. Surely Jesus Christ who by his flesh as by precious meat feedeth his people who are spirituall Priests unto everlasting life Secondly from the Sacraments of nourishment both of the Old and New Testament There were Sacraments of implantation or initiation and of growth under the Law Circumcision Passeover under the Gospel Baptisme Supper of the Lord. 1. The Sacrament of nourishment under the Old Testament was the Paschal lamb The Law and rites of this are set down Exod. 12. 3 4 5 c. What did this Paschal Lamb signifie but Jesus Christ our Passeover the Lamb of God which taketh away the sinnes of the world In this Sacrament was Jesus Christ set out as a nourisher He is that precious meat upon which all the true Israel of God feed continually who is therefore called our Passeover 1 Cor. 5. 7. 2. The Lords Supper This is the Sacrament of nourishment under the New Testament And herein clearly Christ is exhibited as our spiritual meat His flesh is the bread the wine is his blood As the body is nourished by bread and wine so is the soule by his body and blood nourished and fed to life eternal II. The Analogy between Christ and corporal meat stands in these three particulars Three great ends of meat 1. Corporal meat is for the preservation of the Susientation natural life The natural life is maintained by meat through the concurrence of Gods ordinary blessing 'T is pabulum vitae Hence bread under which all other provision is comprehended is called the staffe of life Esay 3. 1. Keep the strongest man from meat but a few dayes and the life will extinguish and go out 1 Sam. 30. 12. Jesus Christ is the maintainer and preserver of the spiritual life As he gives it at first so he upholds it 'T is by continual influences from him that the life is kept from expiring If he withdraw his influx never so little the soule is at the giving up of the Ghost even halfe dead 2. Corporal meat is for growth 'T is by meat Vegetation that the body is brought from infancy to childhood from childhood to youth from youth to a perfect man Jesus Christ is he that carries on a Christian from infancy to perfection All the soules growth and increase is from Christ So the Apostle Col. 2. 19. From him the whole body having nourishment ministred c. The branches live and increase by vertue of the sap which is derived from the root Christians grow by vertue of the sap which is to them derived from Jesus Christ Every part growes by Christ 3. Meat is a repayer of natures decayes When Reparation by some violent sicknesse the spirits are consumed the body wasted the strength lost meat fitly and seasonably taken helps through the divine blessing to recover all again 1 Sam. 30. 12. his spirit came to him againe Jesus Christ is the repairer of the soules decayes
work is wrought By this Word is the soule first cut off from the wilde stock of corrupt nature and planted into the true Olive-tree or Vine Jesus Christ Hence the work of planting is in Scripture attributed to the Ministers of the Gospel 1 Cor. 3. 6 7. I have planted saith the Apostle Apollo watered God indeed is the great Planter So v. 1. of this Chapter I am the true Vine and my Father i● the 〈◊〉 He is the Master-Planter the Ministers are subordinate-planters We are labourers together with God 1 Cor. 3. 9. They are so called because by the Word preached this great work is done This the Prophet clearly affirmes Esay 61. 1 2 3. The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me because the Lord hath anointed me to preach Christ that they might be called trees of righteousnesse the planting of the Lord. These mystical trees are Gods planting but the instrument wherby they are made such trees is the Word preached Hence the Word is called the incorruptible seed of regeneration 1 Pet. 1. 23. As all the Trees and Plants in the first Creation were set and sprung up by the Word of God Gen. 1. 11 12. So are all these mystical Branches ingraffed by the Ministerial Word 2. The Spirit of God The Holy Ghost is the immediate Instrument whereby the soule is ingraffed It is the Spirit which gives efficacy to the Word both to cut off the soule from the stock of nature and to implant it into the Stock of grace The Word would never be able to tear off any person from his first root if it were not edged and streng●hred by the Spirit of God The Scripture calle●h the Holy Ghost the finger of God Luke 11. 20. compared with Mat. 1● 28. He is so c●●●ed as for other reasons so for this because he is the immediate instrument whereby God works in the hearts of his creatures Particularly for this work of ingraffing the soule into Christ the Holy Ghost is affirmed to be the immediate instrument 1 Cor. 12. 13. By one Spirit are we all baptized into one body c. and have been all made to drink into one spirit And againe Eph. 2. 21 22. where the Apostle speaking of this great mystery under another resemblance saith that in Christ we are builded an habitation of God thorough the Spirit The same Spirit which builds us upon Christ into one Temple doth ingraffe us into Christ as one Vine 3. Faith This is the immediate instrumental cause on mans part Faith is an uniting grace it knits the soule to Christ and Christ to the soul Faith is an incorporating grace it doth as it were embody the soule into Christ making it one with Christ and Christ with it This is that which the Apostle saith 1 Pet. 2. 4 5. To whom coming as to a living stone c. Ye also are built up as lively stones c. Two things are observable in that Text. First that the Saints are built together upon Christ the foundation-stone an holy house to God Secondly how Christ and they are cemented together into one building this is by beleeving set out by the expression of coming which is used ordinarily for beleeving as Mat. 11. 28. The Spirit of God first works saith in the heart of a person through the Word and then the soul is by the Spirit through faith ingraffed into Christ and made a lively Branch For the second particular What advantage the soul hath by being a Branch of Christ I shall here follow the Metaphor The same advantage the Branch hath by being ingraffed into the Stock hath a Beleever in a spiritual sense by being ingraffed into Christ I name these five 1. Spiritual supportation The Branch hath this benefit from the Stock into which it is ingraffed that it is born up and supported by it The Branch doth not bear the Vine nor doth it beare it self but is born of the Vine A beleever hath supportation from Jesus Christ We stand on Christs legs not on our own I can do all things saith the Apostle through Christ that strengthneth me Phil. 4. 13. The strength of the Branch is in the Vine so is the strength of a Beleever in Christ Who is this that cometh out of the Wildernesse leaning on her beloved Cant. 8. 5. I laid me down and slept saith David I awaked for the Lord susteined me Many blasts passe over a beleever many violent concussions and shakings is he exposed unto partly by reason of sinne partly by temptations from the Devil from men in all these shakings he hath sustentation from Christ into whom he is implanted My grace saith Christ to Paul shall be sufficient for thee for my strength is made perfect in weaknesse in 2 Cor. 12. 9. A beleever may with confidence go to Christ and pray for support in all his weaknesses A beleever may go to Christ and chalenge support Christ would never have made thee a Branch if he had not intended to support and strengthen thee Esay 41. 10. there are repeated promises of sustentation I will strengthen thee I will help thee I will uphold thee In doing in suffering in dying is a beleever supported by Christ A beleever never wants support but when either through pride he will not have it or through slothfulnesse he will not 〈…〉 Jesus Christ 2. Spiritual nourishment The Bran●● doth not give nourishment to the Stock nor doth it nourish it selfe but it receives nourishment from the Stock A beleever hath nourishment from Jesus Christ The Root feeds the Branch it conveys its sap to each Branch whether it be great or little whether it be nearer the Root or at a farther distance from it Christ conveys proper nourishment to every beleever The Apostle speaks of this Col. 2. 19. The whole body from Christ by joynts and bands hath nourishment ministred the Ordinances are the joynts and bands by which nourishment is carried but Christ is the great treasury from whence it is carried He nourishes Faith he feeds Hope he nourisheth love c. Of his fulnesse have we all received and grace for grace John 1. 16. Every grace a beleever hath would die and wither if it did not receive daily nourishment from Jesus Christ 3. Spiritual increase The branch receives its Augmentation from the Vine The graffe when it's first implanted is very small a childe may break it with one of his fingers but by abiding in the Stock it grows till it come to perfection All a Beleevers increase is from Jesus Christ 'T is by and through him that we grow from infancy to a perfect man Two Texts of Scripture do fully set out this benefit of our implantation The one is Col. 2. 19. In him the whole body having nourishment ministred increaseth with the increase of God The other is Eph. 4. 16. Where the Apostle tells us that by and from Christ the whole body being fitly joyned together and compacted by that which every part supplieth maketh increase
When Jesus Christ comes to the soul he brings joy to the soule Esay 9. 3. They joy before thee according to the joy in harvest and as mon rejoyce when they divide the spoile When the Eunuch had his soul bedewed with this raine He went on his way rejaycing Acts 8. 39. The ground of his rejoycing you may see v. 32 33 35. Philip had acquainted him with Christ and Christ upon Philips preaching had rained down a soaking shower upon his soule that created a holy gladnesse in his heart Christ is the onely cheerer of the heart He can remove spiritual melancholy he can take off spiritual heaviness and put unspeakable joy into the soule 'T is true many of the members of Christ want spiritual joy This ariseth either from the restraining of this raine or from their not discerning of this raine When ever the distressed soul shall come to the feeling of these showers it will rejoyce and be no more sad The Doctrine of Christ is a cheering Doctrine The whole Doctrine is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Doctrine of good tidings All the Ordinances of Christ are cheering Ordinances I will make them joyful in my house of prayer God hath planted Jesus Christ as a root of joy to his people As he is a plant of salvation so he is a plant of consolation no joy is either real or lasting which is not bottomed upon Jesus Christ That soul that hath received this raine into his heart shall have some joy here and he shall have everlasting full soul-satisfying joy in Christ and with Christ and from Christ in the other world This is the second Christ is like raine in respect of usefulnesse 3. Christ is like the raine if we consider the manner of its descending There is a great similitude between the manner of Christs descension upon the soule and the descension of the rain upon the earth I shal instance in seven particulars First The raine comes down successively and gradually now a little and then a little The raine doth not fall down all at once but it comes now a shower and then a shower as the earth stands in need of it God pierces now one cloud and then another in a pleasant succession Jesus Christ comes now a little and then a little as the condition of the soule requires A drop in one Ordinance and a drop in another Ordinance A shower falls in this Sermon and a shower at another Sermon This is that which the Prophet mentions Esay 28. 10. Precept must be upon precept line upon line here a little and there a little Now one comforting influence comes down and then another now one quickning impulsion then another now one promise is rained down then another 1 Jesus Christ would have his people in a constant dependance on himself 2 He would have them wait constantly upon every Ordinance 3 He would not have them surfet either upon his Doctrines or comforts therefore he observes a succession in his distillations of good things upon them 4 He would have every Doctrine and every comfort soak into their hearts Luke 9. 44. 5 Christ would have nothing lost which he is pleased to bestow 6 Christ would endear every drop of his grace to his people 7 The soules of his people are like narrow mouth'd vessels they cannot receive much at once without spilling 8 We are such bad husbands that Christ dares not trust us with much at once For these and such like reasons doth he cause all he gives to distill in a way of succession Jesus Christ doth in a way of wisdome parcel out all the good which he raines down upon the souls of his people Secondly The rain comes down irresistibly When God doth by his Word of command speak to the cloud to distil its moisture upon the earth it is not in the power of all the creatures in heaven and earth to hinder its falling down As the clouds cannot open their own veines till God give the word no more can they ●●●●ch themselves when God sets them a bleeding Jesus Christ comes down upon the hearts of men with an irresistible power and efficacy whether we understand it of his Doctrine or of his Scepter or of the influences of his Spirit he doth descend with a forcible and mighty power His Word is called a powerful Word Heb. 4. 12. The Word of the Lord is quick and powerful 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 His Scepter is called a Scepter of strength Psal 110. 2. The Lord shall send the rod of thy strength out of Sion His Spirit is a Spirit of might and it s said to work mightily in the hearts of his people Col. 1. 29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let Pelagians and Arminians talk what their wilde fancy dictates of the res●stibility of grace the Scripture mentions no such thing the raine will come down whether men will or no and let the earth be never so hard it will soak into it When Christ by his Word and Spirit descends it is with a mighty power that the soul is not able to resist it I shall shew the power of Christs Word Spirit and Scepter in three great works Conviction Conversion Consolation To speak particularly to these 1. For Conviction When Christ comes down with an intention thoroughly to convince the conscience of sinne and righteousnesse the soul though it may stand out for a time yet it is through the mighty smitings of Christs Word and Spirit so powerfully over-ruled that it cannot but yield we have an instance of this in Paul Act. 9. 6. Jesus Christ doth with such an invincible evidence come upon his conscience that though he was in a violent motion carried on in a contrary course yet he yields up himselfe as a prisoner into his hands crying out Lord what wilt thou have me do He hath no strength to stand out any longer nay not so much as to dispute it with Christ Of this convincing power the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 14. 24 25. Jesus Christ when he comes down with a purpose to bridle the conscience doth deal so effectually that the proudest sinner is brought upon his knees and made to passe sentence against himself Yea with such a mighty power doth he come down upon the soule that even those who are not savingly brought in have their mouths stopped and are unable to say any thing for themselves Thus it was with those that brought the woman taken in the act of Adultery to Christ John 8. 9. They were so mightily convicted by the Word and Spirit of Christ that they were not able to abide in his presence but shrunk away one by one as men self-condemned Thus it was when Christ descended in the word of Stephen Acts 6. 10. Though they would not yield yet they were so powerfully convinced that they could not resist the Spirit by which he spake Christ doth so demonstratively smite the conscience that carnal reasoning hath no door of evasion Of this powerful
hath taken up a prejudice though they be never so deserving Ahabs prejudice against the Prophets of the Lord would not suffer him to heare them 1 Kings 22. 8. 1 PET. 2. 6. XXII SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon. Febr. 20. 1652. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Precious I Proceed to the Uses which are 1. Information 2. Examination 3. Exhortation 1. For Information This teacheth a twofold lesson 1. The exceeding great glory of the Church of Christ. The Scripture tells us that the Church of God is a glorious body Though the Church taken in its more large acception as it contains all visible professors be in many respects lesse glorious because o● the mixture that is in it it being a field wherein is both wheat and tares Mat. 13. 24 25. Mat. 3. 13. Mat. 13. 48. a barn floore wherein is both good corn and chaff a net in which are fishes good and bad yet the Church of God more strictly taken for the number of them that are effectually called the invisible Church is a very glorious society The Apostle calls it a glorious Church Eph. 5. 27. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It 's glorious as in regard of the holinesse of the members so chiefly in regard of Christ the glorious foundation A house whose corners are laid with precious stones and whose superstructory stones are all lively stones must needs be glorious Never such a building in the world as the Church of God is See how the Evangelical Prophet describes it Esay 54. 11. O you afflicted tossed with tempests and not comforted behold I will lay thy stones with faire colours and lay thy foundation with Saphires c. 'T is much like that description which is made of it Rev. 21. 10 11 12 c. Every thing which is in the Church makes for the glory of it Glorious in its members who are cloathed with the glory of God glorious in regard of the worship which is there used and of the Ordinances there dispensed in regard of the Doctrine there there maintained Calvin I remember understands by those precious stones mentioned Esay 54. 11 12. The variety of the gifts and graces of God to his people Paul understands by the same precious stones the doctrine taught in the Church 1 Cor. 3. 11. The Church is glorious both in respect of the doctrine and of the various gifts and graces of God dispensed amongst the members of it But the great glory of all lies in the foundation-stone Jesus Christ That must needs be a precious building which hath its foundation on such a precious stone as Jesus Christ is who it as far above all precious stones and a great deale more then they are above common stones For the setting out of this consider how Christ excels all other precious stones 1. He excels them in largenesse Other precious stones are but of a small dimension and of a very little weight You may put many of the largest that ever were seen into a small Cabinet but Jesus Christ is very great As God he is infinite without dimension filling heaven and earth with his presence See how the Prophet speaks of the infiniteness and incomprehensiblenesse of Christ in regard of his divine nature Esay 40. 12 13. Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of his hand and meted out the heaven with a span and comprehended the dust of the earth in a measure and weighed the mountaines in scales and the hills in a ballance That all this is spoken of Christ appeares from verse 11. where he is prophecied of as the Shepherd of his flock 2. He excels them in duration Other pearles and precious stones are of a perishing nature they may be defaced broken dissolved they may lose their beauty There 's a day coming when they shall be melted away into nothing Cleopatra dissolved a pearle of very great worth by the Art of Chymistry and drank it at one draught to her Antonius But Jesus Christ is a durable precious stone Neither time nor eternity will be able to dissolve this stone His beauty cannot be lost or dimished He never will have any flaw or crack or spot in him in the eyes of those that are able to judge aright of him His brightnesse is an unfading brightnesse The heavens and the earth fade and wax old like a garment but Jesus Christ is still the same and his years have no end Heb. 1. 11 12. And 3. He excels them in the multiplicity and perfection of his properties There is not any precious stone that hath all excellencies and vertues in it Some excel in one property some are excellent for another vertue Whether their medicinal vertues be considered or their other excellencies as their colour their forme their roundnesse c. One excels most in this kinde another in that But the vertues and excellencies of all pearls and precious stones meet in Christ Whatsoever perfection is to be found in any created stone the same is to be found in Christ The properties of the Saphire the Diamond the Chrysolite the Sardonix the Amethist and of all other stones meet in Christ alone And then they are all in him in a farre more transcendent manner then they are in any of these His brightnesse is above the brightnesse of the Diamond his whitenesse far exceeds the whitenesse of the Pearl The medicinal and physical properties that are in Christ are far more excellent then those that are in other precious stones Some Pearls they say do strengthen the heart others clear the sight others remove the vertigo or dizzinesse of the head and many other useful properties are recorded by learned men but none of them are so excellent in any of these kindes as Christ is for he removes and heales the distempers of the soule and minde as well as of the body he cures the spiritual eye-sight Rev. 3. 18. He cures the troubles of the conscience which no other precious stone can do being never so artificially used He being rightly applyed and taken cures the soul of sinne removes guilt which none other precious stone can do The neck-lace of pearle cannot cure the wounds of conscience the girdle of diamonds cannot remove tremblings from the spirit the costly jewel in the bosome cannot quiet the heart throbbing for sin or Gods departure all this Christ can do And 4. He excels them in this that he hath no hurtful qualities Other precious stones have a killing quality powder of diamonds they say is poysonful put in the bowels or throat takes away life presently But Jesus Christ hath no destructive quality He is occasion of hurt to none but to him that refuseth him Put all these together and it will appeare that the Church of God which is erected upon and united unto such a precious foundation must needs be a glorious Church 2. The great riches of true beleevers A member of Christ how poore soever he is in regard of outward riches yet he is the richest man in
now shining at the right hand of God we should say the Sun were but like sackcloth in comparison of it how much more bright is he in his Godhead this is so glorious that no man can see it and live The face of Jesus Christ is that which makes and constitutes the very glory of heaven And then 2. His omniscience The Sunne in the firmament travels up and down and beholds every part of the world David saith there is nothing hid from the heat of it Psalm 19. 6. Jesus Christ as he is the Sonne of God is perfectly omniscient The Apostle speaks of his omniscience Heb. 4. 13. There is no creature that is not manifest in his sight c. Yea he sees every thing not by moving up and down as the Sunne doth but by one fixed and constant view There can be no fence made to keep out the sight of his eye he doth simul semel together and at once behold all creatures with all their motions thoughts and imaginations This is the first II. In respect of his effects and workings upon his people There is a great resemblance between the Suns effects upon the creatures and Christs effects upon his people I shall instance in eight particulars 1. The Sunne hath an enlightning vertue The Sunne is the great luminary which God hath appointed and made to carry the light abroad to the inhabitants of the earth The presence of the Sunne makes day The Sunne is the great torch of heaven by which men and other creatures see what to do and where to go Gen. 1. 14 16. By his light we see it and all other things Jesus Christ hath an enlightning power and doth actually enlighten the hearts of men The soul is by nature in darknesse and never sees till Christ beame down his light upon it All men by nature in regard of spiritual light are as that blinde man was John 9. 1. without any spiritual sight They see neither sinnes blacknesse nor their own misery by reason of sinne They see not Christs beauty not graces excellency till their eyes are opened They have thick skales upon their eyes as Paul had before his conversion Act. 9. 18. Therefore they are called darknesse and their state a state of darknesse Eph. 5. 8. Now Christ gives them light When he riseth upon them savingly then and not till then do they see their condition and the way out of it Eph. 5. 14 As the Sun is speculum munds the worlds looking glasse so is Christ speculum Animae the souls looking glasse All spiritual light which is given to the soul is in and thorough Jesus Christ So the Apostle tells us 2 Cor. 4. 6. The Gospel is the vehiculum lucis the great chariot that carries this light abroad but the fountaine of it is this bright Sunne of righteousnesse Jesus Christ Spiritual illumination is Christs work This is that which the Evangelist saith John 1. 9. John Baptist carried the ●orch but Christ himself was the light Till this Sun be up the soul lies in grosse darknesse but when it appeares then light comes Presently Esay 60. 1. When the glory of the Lord is risen upon the soule then is darknesse expell'd and the soul shines forth The heart that is as dark as any dungeon when the beames of this Sunne are darted down into it is as light as a Paradise Christ turnes Egypt into Goshen And then 2. The Sunne hath a warming vertue Though it be not formally hot yet it is hot in its effect Psal 19. 6. The beames of the Sunne warme the earth and the ayre the bodies of the rational and irrational creatures Experience teacheth that the Sunne hath a heating power the light and motion of it causes heat The Lord Jesus Christ hath a warning vertue in him The heart that is as cold as yee is heated and warmed by the influences of his Spirit into a good temper The luke-warme heart when Christ shines upon it is set into a burning heat The beames which are cast from Christ in his Ordinances put the cold soul into a spiritual sweat We have an instance of this in the two Disciples Luke 24. 32. They were in a freezing temper till Christ overtook them but when they had continued a while in that spiritual sun-shine their hearts were put into a violent flame Did not our hearts burn within us while he talked with us by the way The forerunner of Christ tells the Jews that he that came after him did baptize men with the holy Ghost and with fire Matth. 3. 11. Christ can kindle the sparks of grace which seeme to be as dead and put them into a burning flame Many a Saint hath come to the Ordinances with his heart like the cold earth and before he hath departed Christ hath sent him away like a burning lamp the cold water hath been put into a vehement boyling that the heart hath runne over again eruct●vit cor meum Psal 45. 1. Peter grew cold at the high Priests fire when the beames of Christ were withdrawn but when Christ shone upon him his cold heart was heated when Elisha had lien a while upon the Shunamites dead childe his flesh waxed warme 2 King 4. 24. Though a soule be as cold as death if Jesus Christ do but once stretch himself upon it it waxes warme And then 3. The Sunne hath a comforting vertue The Sunne is in Scripture put for comfort Job 30. 28. To walk without the Sunne is to walk without comfort and Solomon tells us that it 's a pleasant thing for the eyes to behold the Sun Eccles 11. 7. Weak and sickly persons when they are brought into the Sunshine finde their spirits cheered by it The Lord Jesus Christ hath a heart-comforting vertue He is the first inlet of comfort into the soul He is the preserver of joy in the soule and he it is that restores joy unto the soul after dejections and droopings of heart Noah was herein a figure of Christ see what his father Prophecies of him Gen. 5. ●9 Jesus Christ is the true Noah the great comforter of his people in all the griefs and sorrows of this world Christ is the foundation of all true comfort to thy soule Tolle Christum tolle sol●●●um that reconci●iation which he hath made between God and man is the very basis of all consolation Whatsoever in God in the Scriptures yeilds any comfort to the soul is so on●y in and through Christ that comfort which is not built upon Christ is bastard comfort which will end in terrour The Spirit of God is called the comforter John 15. 20. his office is immediately to cheer the soul How doth he comfort but even by making application to the soul of a sinner of that which is merited for him All the arguments whereby the spirit comforts the heart are drawn from Christ he seales up to the soul that Christ is his and so fills it with comfort And then 4. The Sune hath a
saved by him as well as we but it was more darkly In the Gospel the heavens were opened wider then ever God did never manifest himself so fully and clearly to the world as he hath done by Jesus Christ The Apostle speaks of this Heb. 1. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hence is that of the Prophet to the Gospel-Church Isa 60. 1 2. 19. 20. All former light was but like the dawning light of the morning in respect of this mid-day light of the Gospel The Gospel Revelation is full and perfect John 1. 18. God was declared before but never so fully as by Christ The fathers looked for additions but Christ brought to light the whole will of God No further Revelation is to be expected till we come to heaven 2 Pet. 1. 19. MAL. 4. 2. The Sunne of righteousnesse shall arise with healing in his wings SEcondly for the second Christ is called the Sunne of righteousness in two respects 1. In regard of himself He is the holy and just one He hath not nor ever shall have the least spot of unrighteousnesse in his own person he was born righteous and innocent That holy thing that shall be borne of thee shall be called the Son of God so saith the Angel to the Mother Virgin Luke 1. 35. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is more then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It hath the force of the abstract And he lived and dyed righteous The Apost●e speaks of him Heb. 7. 26. As of one holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners He was without spot and without guile made like unto us in al things sin only excepted Satan himself though he be the father of lies and full of bitter enmity against Jesus Christ is forced to give this testimony to him that he is the holy one of God Mark 1. 24. He could neith●r have redeemed himself from death nor have saved us from the wrath of God if he had not been perfectly righteous 2. In regard of his Elect He is their righteousnesse so the Prophet calls him Jer. 23. 6. Jesus Christ is the beleevers righteousnesse two wayes 1. He is their righteousnesse in regard of justification It is thorough the Imputation of his righteousness unto them that they are made righteous in the sight of God God looking upon them as invested with the righteousnesse of Christ accounts them righteous Of this the Apostle speaks Rom. 3. 21 22 25 26. All ar unrighteous in themselves and it is through him alone that they come to be righteous 2. He is their righteousnesse in regard of sanctification Of this the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 1. 30. where he tells us that Christ is made unto us of God sanctification as well as righteousnesse Jesus Christ may be as truly called our righteousnesse of sanctification as well as of justification He is so in four respects 1 He is the meritorious cause of it Eph. 5. 25 26. Grace is as truly the purchase of Christ as glory he hath brought holinesse for us as well as heaven sanctification is no lesse the price of Christs blood then salvation We are 1 Cor. 1. 2. sanctified in Christ Jesus propter Christum saith Piscator i. e. propter satisfactionem illius 2 He is the material cause of it It is by the blood of Christ that the filthinesse of the soule is done away Christs blood is the soules laver in which it is washed and made white Heb. 9. 14. And then 3 He is the exemplary cause of it Our sanctification is according to that copy or pattern of holinesse which is in Christ himselfe This is the meaning of that speech of the Apostle Joh. 1. 16. As the print which is made upon the wall answers the engraving or stamp which is upon the seal so doth the believers holinesse answer our holinesse of Christ not in degree and measure but in kinde and quality 4. He is the efficient cause of it 'T is Christ that doth by his spirit through the Ordinances work holinesse in his Saints He stubs up the roots of sinne and sets the routs of grace in the soul Of this the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 6. 11. And it is he that doth both preserve it and carry it on from one degree to another til it come to perfection So that both in regard of his own person and in regard of his elect he is called the Sunne of righteousnesse This is the second particular 3 For the third Christ excels the natural Sun in these eight particulars viz. 1. The natural Sunne shines but in one hemisphere at once Though it circuit about the earth in a little time y●t it doth not sh●ne in all places at once Yea there are some parts of the world in which the Sunne doth not shine for many moneths together Though it be a great body yet the wings of it are not large enough to compasse the earth all at once when it riseth to us it sets to our Antipodes But now Jesus Christ is able to shine over the whole earth at once Though there be many parts of the world in which Christ hath never appeared yet his wings are large enough to over-spread the whole earth This Sunne of righteousnesse shines in England and in America and all the Christian world over at the same moment of time That which is said of the land of Judea concerning the King of Assyria Esa 8. 8. That the stretching out of his wings should fill the bredth of the land is true of Christ in reference to the whole world The stretchings out of his wings are able to cover the breadth of the whole world at one moment 2. The naturall Sunne gives light but not sight If a man want the benefit of seeing he hath no more benefit by the Sunne in respect of seeing then if there were no Sunne at all but the Sunne-beames descend with never so much power upon a blind Bartimeus his eyes will not thereby be opened But now this Sunne of righteousnesse hath a power to give sight as well as light he did in the dayes of his flesh open the eyes of many that were naturally blinde you read of one Joh. 9. of two others Mat. 20. 30. 34. And he doth still open the eyes of them that are spiritually blinde It was he that by Ananias opened the eyes of Saul Acts 9. 17. The truth is no man doth ever spiritually see till the beames of the Sunne descend upon him he is the spiritual day-spring that gives them power to see who are under the power of the grosse darknesse of sin and iniquity 3. The natural Sunne hath endamaging qualities as well as healing qualities It is many times offensive and prejudiced both to men and fruits 1. It doth fully and deface the beautiful countenance of men Cant. 1. 6. If the eye of the Sunne do but look upon us directly it changes the colour of the face into a sworthy hue 2. The hot beames of the Sunne do sometimes by their vehement shining make men
suppling oyntment d●opt upon it it had been stony to this present day Fourthly from the beautifying vertue of this oyntment learn two things 1. What true beauty is To be anointed with Christ to be filled with his graces to be made partaker of the divine nature this is beauty this is true beauty this is lasting beauty this is beauty that will commend us to God 'T is not he that hath the beautiful face but he that hath the beautiful soule that is accepted of God And then 2. He that would be beautiful let him anoint himself with Christ How vaine are persons in painting their faces Jezabels daughters abound 2 Kings 9. 30. as if they would mend Gods workmanship it was formerly whores customes Ezek. 23. 40. Anoint your selves once with this oyntment and all others will be unpleasant And then Fifthly from the healing quality of this oyntment learn two things 1. To acknowledge how their sores were healed Thou wast one full of wounds now they are bound up and healed Thou mayest blesse God for this balsome of heaven ●esus Christ otherwise thou hadst died of thy wounds 2. Get this oyntment into 〈…〉 Wise men will not be without healing oyntment in their house● especially were they are farre from Chirurgion All our houses by reason of sin are no better then spiritual hospitals There 's no balme in Gilead that can heal one sore but this divine balm Jesus Christ get your vessels fill'd with this oyntment and all will be well pray that God would poure this oyntment into your wounded children and servants else they are but dead men LUK. 2. 25. Waiting for the consolation of Israel XXIX SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon May 29. 1653. THere are in this Chapter foure things observable concerning Jesus Christ 1 His nativity ver 1. to ver 21. 2 His circumcision verse 21. 3 The presenting of him in the Temple ver 22. to v. 41. 4 A proof of his prophetical office v. 41. ad finem In that part which speaks of his presentation in the Temple we have many things observable 1. The time of it ver 22. which was the fourtieth day after his nativity 2. The efficient cause of it his parents Joseph and Mary 3. The final cause of it this is declared ver 23 24. 4. The adjuncts accompanying this work These are principally two First the prophecy of Simeon verse 25. to verse 36. Secondly the prophecy of Anna concerning him v. 36 to 39. In this prophecy of Simeon we have 1. A description of some things concerning his person v. 25 26. And then 2. A declaration of his prophecy v. 27 c. His person is described two wayes First by his piety v. 25. init Secondly by his gift of prophecy this is expressed generally by the efficient cause of it v. 25. The holy Ghost was upon him particularly by the revelation which he received v. 26. His piety is set down by three graces 1. His justice or righteousnesse He was just 2. His devotion he was a devout man 3. His faith and hope in expecting the fulfilling of Gods promise concerning Christ This is in the text He waited for the consolation of Israel ●n which words we have two things 1. A description of what Christ is to his people 2. A 〈◊〉 of what Simeon did in reference to ●●rist 〈…〉 him God had revea●ed 〈…〉 by 〈◊〉 ●oly Ghost that Jesus Christ 〈…〉 before his soule went out o● the flesh 〈◊〉 ●he holy man beleeved this and 〈…〉 w●it for it From 〈…〉 two particulars we have this double Observation 1. That Jesus Christ is the consolation of Israel 2. That godly men do expect and wait for the accomplishment of divine promises even of such as are most unlikely to be fulfilled I begin with the first viz. Doct. 1. That Jesus Christ is that consolation of the Israel of God Simeons expectation was for the coming of Christ in the flesh as is clear from v. 25. He that is there called the Lords Christ is here called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the consalation of Israel Christ is the only true consolation of all Gods Israel the consolation of Israel is a periphrasis of Christ the Messiah saith Piscator 1 See the type Noah was herein a type of Christ Gen. 5. 29. 2 See it in the prophecies They that foretold Christ prophecied of him as a comforter Esay 9. 3 6. Esay 40. 1. Esay 51. 3. Esay 52. 9 10. 3 See it in the Angels that proclaimed his birth Luke 2. 10 11. In opening of this doctrine I shall handle these three particulars 1. Who are meant by Israel 2. In what respects Christ is said to be the consolation of Israel 3. That he is the consolation of Israel only 1. For the first By Israel we are to understand true beleevers the members of the truly invisible Church so we find them called Gal. 6. 16. They are called Israel or the Israel of God in two respects First in reference to the people of Israel beleevers are like the people of Israel in three respects 1. In regard of their inward circumcision It was the badge of an Israelite and that whereby he was distinguished from all other Nations that he was circumcised Other Nations are called uncircumcision the Israelites are called ordinarily ●he circumcision Beleevers they and they onely are spiritually circumcised the foreskin of their flesh is mortified and cut off they are circumcised with the circumcision not made with hands Col. 2. 11. The body of sinne is truly mortified in them Hence they are called in Scripture the circumcision as the Israelites were Phil. 3. 3. We are the circumcision saith the Apostle speaking of beleevers which worship God in the Spirit a true Beleever is a true circumcised person 2. In regard of the Law written in their hearts It was the great priviledge of the people of Israel that they had the Law of God amongst them The Apostle mentions this Rom. 2. 2. And the Prophet David long before him Psalme 147. 19. Beleevers have this priviledge above all people under heaven that the Law of God is with them nay the Law of God is in them not the Law of nature but the Law of grace it is not onely written amongst them but it is written in them The Apostle speaks of this Heb. 8. 10. 3. In regard of their neernesse to God It was the great dignity of the people of Israel that they were of all people neerest to God Deut. 4. 7. They were Gods heritage his peculiar people separated from all people under heaven It is the great priviledge of beleevers that they are neerer to God then all other people They are neer to God in affection they are neer to God in relation Of this the Apostle speaks Eph. 2. 13. Thus they are called the Israel of God in regard of the people of Israel Secondly in reference to the 〈…〉 rael Israel is Jacob he had that name 〈◊〉 him of God Gen. 32. 28. Now
being above the world the work of God might prosper better in their hearts If ye be rison with Christ c. v. 1 2. This he presseth by two cogent Arguments 1. They are dead to the world v. 3. for ye are dead By faith they are partakers of Christs death and by their profession they are under an obligation of dying more and more 2. Their life is hid with Christ in God v. 3. They are appointed to a higher kinde of life then that which other men live therefore they ought to seek after those things which appertaine to this life Now lest any should object if the life thou speakest of be a hidden life what advantage will it be to be so mindful of it the Apostle answers v. 4. though it be for the present an hidden life yet it shall be revealed and that perfectly When Christ who is our life shall appear c. In which we have these two Propositions viz. 1. Jesus Christ is a beleevers life 2. That Christ who is a Beleevers life shall appear Of these in Order Doct. 1. That Jesus Christ is a Beleevers life For the understanding of this we are to know that a Beleever hath a twofold life for I shall not speak here of the life of nature which a beleever enjoys not as a beleever but as a reasonable creature Jesus Christ is a beleevers life as he lives the life of nature Act. 17. 28. in him we live move and have our being 'T is from Christ that we live the life of men But to wave that a beleever as a beleever hath a double life 1. The life of grace which he lives after he is regenerated by vertue of the Spirit of Christ living in him and uniting him to God by Faith 2. The life of glory which he shall live in heaven to all eternity after this life The soul begins this life immediately upon its departure out of the body and the body shall enter into the possession of this life immediately after the resurrection and reunion of soul and body Both these kindes of life are a Beleevers as he is a beleever and Jesus Christ is a Beleevers life in reference to both these And because both of these are included in the Text the one of them the life of grace is but the inchoation of and a preparation to the life of glory I shall speak of both of them in the handling of the Doctrine Jesus Christ is a beleevers spiritual life He is so to a beleever in these foure respects 1. He is their life originally It is Jesus Christ that works this life in their soules He is the Creator and Former of life in them The second Adam was made a quickning spirit 1 Cor. 15. 45. As the father raiseth the dead and quickneth them so the Sonne quickneth whom he will Joh. 5. 21. Thy soul had never fetched out spiritual breath had not Jesus Christ breathed into it the breath of life The time cometh and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear shall live Joh. 5. 25. The Ordinances are the instrumental cause but Jesus Christ is the efficient cause of the animating of the soul by a spiritual life 2. He is their life materially He is that principle by which they live Every living Creature hath some intrinsecal principle of that life which it lives Jesus Christ is the inward principle of a beleevers life He is the soule of their soule The Apostle speaks of this Gal. 2. 20. I am crucified with Christ neverthelesse I live yet not I but Christ lives in me It is only by vertue of the soules union with Christ that it comes to live the life of grace He is the foundation or form as I may say of their life 3. He is their life conservativè He it is that doth preserve this spiritual life in their soules by continual communication of himself he maintains and upholds the life of grace from dying and perishing When they are sleepy he awakeneth them when they languish and faint he recovers them He strengthens the things which remain that are ready to die He removes those inward distempers which waste this spiritual life and be blesseth those Ordinances which feed this life When David was going down the hill and in regard of this spiritual life was almost at the dust of death so weak that he could scarce fetch his breath Jesus Christ did restore and renew him again He restoreth my soul Psal 23. 3. he cast water upon the dying plant and made it green and vigorous again Of this the Apostle Col. 3. 3. our life is hid with Christ 4. He is their life exemplariter He is the example and pattern according to which they are to live Jesus Christ is the rule according to which they are to walk he is the copy according to which they are to write One end of the incarnation and life of Jesus in the flesh was to set us an exact and perfect pattern for our imitation 1 Pet. 2. 21. And by the diligent viewing and studying of his example is our spiritual life carried on to perfection The Uses of this point are these Use 1. That all those that are without Jesus Christ are spiritually dead The Scripture accounts all unregenerate sinners as dead men They are dead in sins they are dead unto God they are dead unto grace they are as truly without spiritual life as the body is without natural life from which the soul is departed This thy brother was dead and is alive againe Luk. 15. 32. conversion is called the quickning of the dead Mat. 11. 5. because all who are unconverted are as to all spiritual considerations in a dead condition And it cannot be otherwise because they have no interest in Jesus Christ who is the Authour and principle of spiritual life The Apostle asserts this clearly Eph. 2. 1 12. he tells them at the first verse That they were dead in sins and trespasses he gives them the reason v. 12. because at that time they were without Christ And so another Apostle tells us 1 Joh. 5. 12. He that hath the Sonne hath life but he that hath not the Sonne hath not life Till Christ be formed the soul is a dead thing without either life or motion And this is a very miserable condition for a dead soule is far worse then a dead body in as much as the soul is more excellent then the body Consider a few particulars 1. Dead souls are loathsome Nothing more noisome then a dead body By this time he stinketh Joh. 11. 39. Let me bury my dead out of my sight saith Abraham even his wife Gen. 23. 4. she that was the delight of his soul while she was alive became noisom to him when she was dead The soule that is spiritually dead is very loathsome both to God and man The Scripture compares them to stinking carrion Psal 14. 3. They are altogether become
stinking They defile all that comes neer them whatsoever they meddle with whatsoever toucheth them is defiled by them 2. They that are spiritually dead have no use of any of their spiritual senses The soul hath senses as well as the body but he that is dead cannot use any of these They cannot heare they cannot see they cannot taste they cannot smell they cannot feele they cannot heare Christs voice in the Gospel they cannot see the glory of Christ nor of grace they cannot feel the heavy weight of sinne they cannot taste the sweet and delicate pleasures of Jesus Christ they cannot smell the fragrancy of Christs sweet ointments They have no pleasure in those things that are most plesant in themselves and most desirable to such as are spiritually alive They are to all spiritual things and all spiritual things are to them as if they were not 3. This spiritual death if it be not removed is a certaine forerunner of eternal Death Blessed and happy is he that hath part in the first resurrection of him the second death shall have no power Rev. 20 6. but he that continues still in this spiritual death shall for ever be under the power of the second death the eternal death And this is the state of all such as want Jesus Christ Use 2. That that spiritual life which is in the soul of a beleever shall never totally and finally die It may be at deaths door it may be ready to die so it was with the Church of Sardis Rev. 3. 2. A Christian may be in regard of his spiritual life as a tree in the depth of winter no difference to all outward appearance between him and a dead plant but it is impossible that the spiritual life shall utterly be extinguished because Jesus Christ who is our spiritual life lives for ever Your life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3. 3. hid as in a root for safety and security Because I live ye shall live also John 14. 19. while the root liveth the plant cannot die while the fountaine runneth the streames cannot cease while the olive-trees convey their oyle through the pipes into the lamp the lamp cannot go out A living Christian may grow very weak but he cannot die Jesus Christ must cease to live before the life of grace in a Saint do utterly perish while the cause continueth the effect will Use 3. That there is a true spiritual union between Iesus Christ and a beleever This is one of the great mysteries of the Gospel that Christ and a beleever should be made one it s set out by many examples as of root and branches Iohn 15. init head and members Eph. 5. 3. foundation-stone and the superstructory stones Eph. 2. 20. meat and eaters Iohn 6 56. husband and wife Eph. 5. 32. This very doctrine makes it good He could not be our life if he were not united to us and we to him 'T is by vertue of our union with him that we come to draw life from him As the soul and body are united so are Christ and a beleever the whole mystical body is called by his name 1 Cor. 12. 12. so also is Christ speaking of the Church Use 4. Deadnesse of Spirit want of spiritual Activity is very inexcusable in a beleever The ground of this inference is very cleare Jesus Christ is his life Christ hath life enough in him and he is willing enough to communicate more and more of this spiritual life If the fountaine of this life were a meer creature something might be said for thy deadnesse and coldnesse but now seeing Jesus Christ is thy life thy deadnesse is inexcusable in thy self and it is also dishonourable to Christ The life and greennesse of the branches is an honour to the root by which they live Spiritual greennesse and fruitfulnesse is in a beleever an honour to Jesus Christ who is his life Psal 92. 12 13 14 15. The righteous shall flourish as a Palm-tree c. To shew that the Lord is upright c. The fulnesse of Christ is manifested by the fruitfulnesse of a Christian Use 5. It is the duty of a Christian to live comfortably on this Doctrine It affords very much comfort 1. Against the weaknesse of this life in our selves What Christian is there but finds this life very weak in him at some times well when it is weakest in thee it is then strong in Jesus Christ And God looks upon thy spiritual life not only as it is in thee but as it is in Christ 2. Against the fear of the wanting of the Ordinances of life 'T is a great losse to lose the Ordinances Lev. 26. 31. Well though thou lose these yet thou doest not lose thy life These are but the pipes Christ is the Olive-tree These are but the chanels Christ is the fountaine Man liveth not by bread alone but by the word of blessing Thy soul liveth by Christ not by Ordinances They are but the instrumental cause Christ is the efficient 3. Against the feare of Satans workings to destroy this spiritual life 'T is his great designe to take away this spiritual life He labours to stifle it by sinne he stirs up his instruments to remove the Ordinances Well he cannot prevaile He must destroy Christ before he can destroy our life He must either wither the root or he cannot kill the branches Use 6. Let beleevers be careful to carry themselves towards Christ as he who is their life 1. Acknowledge him the Authour of your life 2. Go to him when you want life 3. Strengthen your union with him Eph. 4. 15. 4. Live to him who is your life Rom. 14. 8. Use 7. It should invite all to lay hold on Christ All men are dead by nature There 's no other way to live a spiritual life If Christ be not thy life of grace he will never be thy life of glory COL 3. 4. When Christ our life shall appear then III. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon. June 1. 1651. shall we also appeare with him in glory I Have handled the first Proposition as it relates to the life of grace viz. that Jesus Christ is a beleevers spiritual life I shall now consider of it as it refers to the life of glory and so summe it up into this conclusion viz. Doct. Jesus Christ is the eternal life of every beleever Christ is the everlasting life of all those that are eternally saved As he is their life of grace so he is also their life of glory He is often called in Scripture not only a Saviour but Salvation The salvation of God Luk. 3. 6. An horn of salvation Luk. 1. 69. And all because he is the salvation of all the Elect. I must here put in that Caution which I did before viz. That the Father and Holy Ghost are not to be excluded they are our life as well as Christ The Spirit and the Father are Saviours as well as the Sonne Opera Trinitatis ad
extra sunt indivis● Prophets Act. 10. 43. Apostles 1 John 5. 11. Christ himself Joh. 14. 16. do all bear witnesse to this truth That Jesus Christ is life eternal to every true beleever In what respect Christ is our life of glory I shall shew in the following particulars viz. 1. In regard of merit and acquisition Jesus Christ is the procurer of this life of glory Heaven is called a purchased Redemption or Possession Epb. 1●4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jesus Christ is the purchaser of this possession and his blood is the price of the purchase As he hath by his death purchased the Elect so hath he also by his blood purchased this life for those redeemed ones 1 John 4. 9. in this was manifested the love of God towards us because he sent his only begotten Sonne into the world that we might live through him Had not Jesus Christ shed his blood no sinner had ever tasted of this life eternal Eternal life is the free gift of God and yet it is merited by Christ Christ who is the price and meritorious cause of life is the free gift of Gods grace and therefore our salvation is both free and ye● merited 2. He is our life efficaciously Though salvation be purchased for the Elect yet must the Elect of God be fitted and prepared for this salvation before they can be put into the possession of it The Apostle speaks of making the soule meet for the inheritance of the Saints in light Col. 1. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The best of men are unfit for salvation as well as unworthy of salvation Though heaven be prepared for them yet cannot they enter into heaven till they be prepared This fitnesse or preparedness stands in the changing of our nature by the working of grace in the heart and in the merciful acceptation of God covering our infirmities and reckoning our weak endeavours for perfect obedience Natura mentis humanae quantumvis perfect a naturalibus donis absque gratiâ non est susceptibilis gloriae Parisiens lib. de v●rt cap. 11. The Apostle tells us that a man must be wrought for glory 2 Cor. 5. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Elect of God come into the world rough and unpolished filthy and defiled as well as others and they are not fit for this life till they be refined and polished Flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God 1 Cor. 15. 50. Except a man be borne againe he cannot see the Kingdome of heaven Aquinas saith well Gratia haec divina eò infunditur electis ut peragant actiones ordinatas in finem vitae aeternae Now Jesus Christ doth fit and work the Elect for this glory He doth by his Spirit change their nature he doth by his grace renew the spirit of their minde he doth set up his own image in their soules and by working grace fit them for the enjoyment of that life of glory which he hath purchased 3. He is our life He is the fountaine of our eternal glory 1 John 5. 11. This is the record that God hath given to us eternal life and this life is in his Sonne 'T is in him as in the head as in the root as in the fountain or spring All our glory is laid up in Jesus Christ as in a publick treasury Iesus Christ and all beleevers make up one mystical body of which he is the head and they the members therefore is their glory laid up in him 4. Jesus Christ is our life in regard of preparation As he doth prepare us for heaven so doth he prepare heaven for us This is attributed to his Ascension Iohn 14. 2 3. I go to prepare a place for you Not as if the place of glory were not created till the Ascension of Christ There were many souls in heaven glorified before Christ did corporally ascend thither Abel Abraham Isaac Iacob and the Prophets the meaning of it is onely thus much that Iesus Christ did not ascend only for himself to dwell in glory alone but he ascended for our sakes in our stead and place to possesse the purchased inheritance for us and to keep it for us till we actually come to be possessed of it our selves 'T is by way of allusion to the practices of great Kings who send their harbingers before them to make ready for them against their coming Iesus Christ is pleased to stile himself so in reference to the Elect. And therefore the Apostle calls him our forerunner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and tells us that he is entred into the vaile for us Heb. 6. 20. and hence it is that we are said to sit down together with Christ in heavenly places Eph. 2. 6. 5. He is our life as the way to life He calls himself the way Iohn 14. 16. No man comes to the Father but by Christ This is that new and living way which the Apostle mentions Heb. 10. 19 20. 'T is through the vaile of Christs flesh that we enter into the Holy of Holies Iacob in his vision at Bethel saw a ladder which reached from heaven to earth Gen. 28. 12. upon this ladder the Angels of God ascended and descended This ladder is Iesus Christ so he tells us himselfe Iohn 1. 51. hereafter ye shall see heaven opened and the Angels of God ascending and descending upon the Sonne of man He hath not only shewed us the way to heaven by his example but he is the way himself in which we go to God 6. He is our life in regard of distribution and communication As he hath purchased life for us and keeps possession of it for us so he it is that shall put us into possession of it when we come to enjoy it I will come againe and receive you unto my self Iohn 14. 3. The Apostle speaks of this in 2 Tim. 4 8. There is laid up for me a Crown of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Judge shall give me in that day 'T is to be understood of Christ he that hath purchased the Crown for us will in that day visibly set it upon our head Come ye blessed of my Father receive the Kingdome c. Matthew 25. latter end 7. He is our life formally Iesus Christ is the matter of eternal life Our eternal life and glory stands in the full enjoyment of Iesus Christ in heaven The seeing of God the enjoyment of Christ is our very glory Rev. 22. 3 4. The Throne of God and of the lamb shall be in it and his servants shall serve him and they shall see his Face and his Name shall be in their foreheads The glory of heaven is called the eating of the tree of life Rev. 2. 7. Iesus Christ is the tree of life the enjoyment of him is the souls glory Iob therefore reckons up all his eternal glory by this very thing I know that my Redeemer liveth c. I shall behold him not with anothers but with these very eyes Full and perfect ● immediate
a quickning vertue There is that in him which is proper for all diseases The Evangelist tells us that when sick persons resorted to Christ in the days of his flesh there went vertue out of him and healed them all Luke 6. 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no vertue could have gone out of him if all vertue had not been treasured up in him Christ hath eye-salve for blinde eyes mollifying grace for hard-hearts enlivening grace for dead soules humbling grace for proud minds God hath given him fulness of all things necessary for sick soules and wisdom to apply the same for the benefit of those that repair to him Secondly how Christ heales spiritual Diseases 1. He heales by justification Sinne brings guilt Lev. 5. 2 3 4 5. Rom. 3. 19. Every sinne makes the creature liable to wrath This guilt is removed by the grace of justification Jesus Christ applies his spotlesse and perfect righteousnesse to the soule and thereby actually removes the guilt of sinne and makes the sinner as pure in the sight of God as if he had never offended Of this the Apostle speaks Romans 5. 18 19. This is called in Scripture the covering of sinne Psal 32. 1 2. Blessed is the man whose unrighteousnesse is forgiven and whose sinne is covered Christ draws the vaile or garment of his own merit and obedience over the spotted soule of a sinner and thereby covers all his guilt In this respect a sinner is perfectly healed Though sinne abide in him yet the guilt is taken away so that it shall never redound upon the person for condemnation Hence it is that God is said not to behold iniquity in his people Numb 23. 21. Of this healing the Psalmist speaks Psal 103. 3. Who forgiveth all thine iniquities who healeth all thy diseases Of this healing we are to understand that in 2 Chron. 30. 20. The Lord hearkened to Hezekiah and healed the people He did not reckon nor impute the guilt of that sinne to the people 2. He heales the soule by sanctification Every sinne hath filthinesse in it as well as guilt It is of a defiling nature and leaveth defilement upon the soule of the sinner Matth. 15. 11. Hence it is that sinners are said to be filthy creatures Rev. 22. 11. and Psal 14. 3. they are altogether become filthy This is called Macula or labes peccati the spot or staine of sinne Corruption pollution c. It doth immediately follow every offence of sinne and remaines when the act of sinne is over Look as waters when they break their banks and over-flow the earth leave a filthy slime and sediment behind them so all sinful acts leave upon the soule a filthy slime of corruption This filthinesse Jesus Christ heales by Sanctification He doth by his Spirit plant the seeds of grace in the heart he doth make the soul partaker of the divine natu●e 2 Pet. 1. 4. He doth cause all old things to passe away and all things to become new 2 Cor. 5. ●6 He doth write his Lawes in the heart of the sinner Jer. 31. 33. He doth sprinkle cleane water upon the sinner whereby he is cleansed from all his defilements Ezek. 36. 25. And by this meanes the filthinesse of sinne is healed This Sanct●fication hath two parts the one is mortification whereby the body of sinne is wasted Rom 8. 13. and Col. 3. 3 5. The other is regeneration or the spiritual resurrection whereby the inward man is strengthened and renewed from day to day the one is the putting off the old man the other is the putting on the new man Now although the sinner is not healed perfectly and at once of the filthinesse of sinne by Sanctification as he is of the guilt of sinne in regard of justification because this is a real change and therefore it 's carried on successively and gradually whereas justification is onely a relative change and therefore is perfect at once yet he is in so sure and certaine a way of healing that Jesus Christ will never let him go out of his hands till he be fully cured He is perfectly healed in respect of parts already and he shall be perfectly healed in respect of degrees he shall see the day when there shall not be the least speck of sinne or filth either upon the soul or body Thirdly the excellency of this Physician above all other Physicians This appears in many respects 1. In regard of the Subject Other Physicians have to deale onely with the body All their businesse lies in the temper constitution parts of the body in preventing removing diseases that annoy the outward man Their line reacheth no farther The soule is not the object or subject of the Physicians Art But now the chief part about which Christ is employed is the soul the conscience the affections the inward man He heales the distempers of the heart which other Physicians as Physicians can neither know nor heal Vid. Esay ●1 1. 2. Jesus Christ is a Physician for all diseases There are some diseases which are opprobria medicorum no Physician in the world is able to cure them But Jesus Christ can cure all diseases all kindes of diseases and every individual disease He knows the cause of every disease and therefore he can cure all Some Physicians though they have a general skill in all diseases yet their excellency lies sometimes in one or two which they have studied more then others and about which they have been imployed more then in others As some Divines are better versed in some one or two Controversies then others so c. But Christ is as exact in all spiritual diseases as he is in any disease He is as good for the diseases in the head as for those that are in the heart and for those that are in the affections as for those that are in the head He can cure ignorance pride unbelief discontent impatience hardnesse of heart c. and he can cure one as well as another that is he can cure all Christ never yet met with a spiritual distemper which he was not able to call by its right name and to prescribe a fit medicine for It 's said of him in the Gospel That he cured all manner of diseases John 5. 4. He can cure all manner of spiritual diseases 3. Jesus Christ can give no hurtful medicine The most learned Physician in the world being he knows but in part may prescribe something which is not proper for the disease unlesse they had spectacles to see into the body they may be mistaken but Christ cannot be mistaken He never appointed any thing but what was fit yea nothing but what was best for the patients condition And indeed Christs Physick is therefore proper because he prescribes it Other Physicians appoint such receipts because they are proper but Christs receipts are proper because he prescribes them If he will use a plaister of clay and spettle it is therefore right because he will use it John 9. 6. That which
convince men that they are not evil things It was Austins Observation long since God bestowes outward things upon the worst of men that they may not be thought to be the onely good things and he bestowes them sometimes upon his own people that they may not be thought to be evil things 3. To shew his Dominion and right of disposing even these outward things Should not some godly men enjoy these outward things they would be apt to think that God did not meddle with things of this nature but now the conferring of these things upon the godly disproves that Atheism 4. To let men see even sensual men that it is not in vaine to serve God Worldly men say what profit shall we have if we pray to him Job 21. 15. Now they are not capable of understanding the inward profit of holinesse but they can understand the outward advantages God therefore will prove the profit of piety by such Arguments as they are able to understand 5. To fulfill the letter of his Promise He hath promised these outward things to godly men Psal 112. 2 3. Now men would question his faithfulnesse in keeping promise if it should not sometimes be made good in kinde 6. God makes some of his people rich to help such as are poor Wicked men generally hate the people of God for their very holinesse They are not willing to relieve them though God by his power makes them Authours of good to them Therefore that the 〈…〉 flock may have some to stand by them ●● conscience sake God is pleased to make some of their number great that the wicked of the world may not alwaies tread them down without opposition Joseph was made great to provide for his fathers house in their povertie Gen. 50. 20. God makes some of his flock rich and great that the poor of his flock may have some to look after them for his sake This is the second Conclusion Thirdly That grace and holinesse is the best and neerest way to attaine to all outward prosperity For although God as soveraigne Lord make rich and poor whom he please yet no man can expect or hope for temporal felicitie but the man that is truly godly 1 Tim. 4. 8. Godlinesse hath the promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come And Matth. 5. 5. The froward do often enjoy much of these outward things but the promise of the inheritance of them belongs onely to the meek Prov. 3. 16. Riches and honour are put into the hand of wisdome and none but wisdomes children can upon any good ground expect to inherit either of them This is the third Fourthly That the enjoyment of these outward things is no infallible evidence of a good condition 'T is possible for a man to possesse a great portion of outward happinesses and yet be unhappy in regard of his soule The purse may be full of gold and yet the heart emptie of saving grace The body may be fat and in good liking and yet the soule leane and withered A man may have great possessions in the world and yet have no interest in God Our Saviour supposeth this Matthew 16. 26. There are foure things required to make up this supposition 1 A man that gaines the whole world must enjoy all the riches honour pleasure of worldly things 2 He must have a heart capable to take delight in all these 3 He must enjoy all these from the first man to the last man from the beginning to the end of the world 4 Freedome from all vexations and troubles of Spirit This no man ever did enjoy And yet our Saviour supposeth that a man may enjoy all this and yet lose his soule That outward prosperitie cannot evidence a man to be in a state of grace appeares by these seven Arguments 1. They are bestowed upon the worst of men The Scripture tells us of many rich men very rich that lived and died wickedlie What think you of him mentioned Luke 12. 16 17 18 19 20. He was exceeding rich his treasury was too little his store-house was too small for his revenues and yet no interest in God at all that might entitle him to salvation a very foole for all his ri●hes You reade of another in Luke 16. 19. There are all expressions of prosperity that can be imagined and yet v. 23. that very person is in Hell torments You know the story of Nabal 1 Sam. 25. 2 6. he was very wealthie and yet a sinful fool As his name is so is he Nabal is his name and follie is with him You reade of some in Job Chap. 21. 7 8 9 10. that enjoyed much prosperitie and yet desperatelie wicked reade v. 14. They say 〈…〉 from us we desire not the knowledge of 〈…〉 Sodom and Gomorrah were very rich it was a land fruitful as the Garden of God Gen. 13. 10. and yet they that possessed that fruitful land are now suffering the vengeance of eternal fire Jude 7. The Scripture is full of such examples 2. Riches and honour are but common blessings They are the good things of the Foot-stool not the good things of the Throne They are in the left hand of wisdome Prov. 3. 16. Now no common mercie can argue special love Eccles 9. 1. No man knows either love or hatred by any thing that is before him 3. Outward prosperity is very often a hindrance of salvation That of our Saviour would seriously be taken notice of 'T is easier for a camel to go thorough the eye of a needle then for a rich man to enter into the Kingdome of God Mat. 19. 24. Riches too often draw the heart from God they coole zeale quench devotion We see by experience many men that were hot for Religion when they were poore are grown dead cold now they have got estates Our Saviour tells us that the deceitfulnesse of riches choaks the Word and makes the heart unfruitful Vid. Mat. 13. 22. Now that which hinders men from salvation can be no argument of a state of salvation 4. Men may transmit riches to their posterity Now that which a man may have by descent and natural generation can be no evidence of a state of grace No man is born in a state of grace Eph. 2. 2. A man must be borne againe before he can see the Kingdome of Heaven Joh. 3. 3. Many men are borne rich and honourable c. therefore none of these things can entitle a man to heaven 5. If outward prosperity were an Argument of grace then Covetousnesse would be no sinne 'T is no sinne but duty for a man to labour for and to covet evidences of grace We are commanded to do so in Scripture Make your calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1. 10. but covetousnesse is not a duty but a sinne a sinne of a high nature The root of all evil so the Apostle calls it 1 Tim. 6. 10. 'T is idolatrie one of the worst kinds of idolatry 6. Outward prosperity
to remember what they had done and what they were like to suffer Thus it was with the Publican Luke 18. 13. He smote his breast saith the Text his heart was overwhelmed with grief shame feare sorrow There was a mixture of all these passions in him at once Thus it is with all those that are spiritually sick This is that which our Saviour calls labouring and being heavy loaden Mat. 11. 28. Sicknesse when 't is seen is evermore accompanied with paine and anguish Fourthly Dis-satisfaction with the present condition This follows upon the former And you will finde it hath ever been in such as have seen their spiritual sicknesse What is the meaning of those questions which were propounded by the three thousand Acts 2. 3● By the Jaylor Acts 16. 30 And by Paul Acts 9. 6. Do they not cleerly evince that they were unsatisfied with their present estate It was no pleasing thing to them to continue any longer in that condition As if they should have said 't is no abiding in this estate 'T is such a kinde of reasoning as the foure Lepers had among themselves when the famine was so raging in Samaria 2 Kings 7. 3. Why sit we heare until we die Whatever the successe or event be 〈◊〉 must think of some other course Just so i● is with a conscience-wounded sinner he cannot be contented with that estate Though he know not how to get out yet he cannot be content to abide there Fifthly Despaire of deliverance by any thing in himselfe He that is sick of sinne looks upon himselfe as utterly unable to help himselfe This is that which is called in another place spiritual poverty And saith Calvin Nemo spiritu pauper nisi qui in nihilum apud se redactus Thus it was with those sick sinners before-named Their asking so seriously what they must do did clearly imply that they themselves knew not what to do something they thought must be done and yet they knew not what it was No man is truly sick but he that doth clearly see that in regard of himselfe he is both helplesse and hopelesse Self-insufficiency is one ingredient of spiritual sicknesses Self-denial and soule sicknesse are evermore companions This is cleare from the Publicans confession and prayer Luke 18. 13. He goes out of himselfe to God acknowledging that if ever he was healed he must be healed by mercy Sixthly A willingnesse to take any course God would have him so he may be healed This is implied in that question so often mentioned Acts 2. 37. Acts 9. 6. Acts 16. 30. They are very ready to follow the advice of God given by his Ministers for a speedy cure Cut them lance them scar them bleed them purge them any thing to free them from sinne any thing to save them from wrath which is ready to devoure them They will stick at nothing let God take his own way and use his own medicines whatever he prescribes they are resolved to drink it down be it never so bitter be it never so unsavory be it never so contrary to their corrupt constitution They hope he can heal them they are willing he should use his own method for the healing of them This is the first thing wherein spiritual sicknesse consists 2. That Christ is ready to heal such sinners as these This appears three ways 1. He inviteth such to come to him for cure The invitations of Christ are not empty complements as the invitations of men often are but real things He is not in j●st but in good earnest when he bids men repaire to him Never did one friend send to another with so much heartinesse as Christ doth to men Now we shall finde him inviting sinners under this qualification That 's a famous place in Mat. 11. 28. Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy loaden and I will give you r●st And againe Esay 55. 1. Ho every one that thirst●th come ye to the waters c. Who is he that thirsteth who is he that hath no money but such sinners as I have described These are the patients which Christ invites 2. He hath promis●d to take care for the curing ●f such The promises of Jesus Christ are not false ambiguous or fallacious as the promises of men too frequently are He is the faithful witnesse the Amen Rev. 3. 14 All his words are spoken in simplici●y and verity Now 't is his promise to cure heart-wounded sinners That in Mat. 11. 28. hath an expresse promise annexed to the invitation The promise of refreshing or giving rest is as good ●● if he had said I will heal you To this agrees that in Mat. 5. 3 4 6. Poverty of spirit mournfulnesse of spirit hungring and thirsting do all go in into the description of the sicknesse of the soule and to each of these doth Christ make expresse and ful promises of spiritual healing Christs Promise is the best security Heaven or earth can afford 3. God the Father hath promised it in Christs behalf You will many times finde that the Prophets which have prophecied of him before his incarnation have by Gods appointment and in Gods Name engaged themselves that he should heal such sinners That is a very full place amongst others Esay 42. 3. that it 's meant of Christ is clear from Matth. 12. 20. where this text is applied to Christ and it 's applied to him upon this account that he healed the man with a withered hand v. 10. 13. and multitudes of other diseased persons v. 15. whereupon this of the Prophet is brought in Behold my servant c. A bruised reed shall he not break c. The words are a Meiosis more is understood then is expressed He shall not bruise the meaning is he shall strengthen it he shall not quench the meaning is he shall cause it to flame and nourish it By the bruised reed and the smoaking flax we are to understand such sinners as are bruised and bowed down under the sense of their great wretchednesse these sinners Christ will be ready to cherish You have it set out by another Metaphor Chapter 40. 11. He shall carry the lambs and gently lead them that are with young Who are the lambs and such as with young but broken-spirited Christians that are overwhelmed and pressed down with the apprehension of their own misery Christ will be so farre from neglecting these that he will put them in his bosome a place of warmth tendernesse and security 3. Why Christ is so ready to heal such sinners 1. He doth it in obedience to his Commission God the Father when he sent him into the world gave him a very special charge concerning these persons He was on purpose anointed to the place and office of a Physician that he might take care of such as these You may read his Commission set down at large Esay 61. 1 2 3. There you have the Patients described and the Physick applied and the Authority enjoyning and enabling The Patients
a proper sense as if the bread were changed into the substance of his body c. They are angry with the Protestants because they will not beleeve it Amongst many reasons which overthrow that fond interpretation this and such like other figurative speeches may help us to understand that Christ sometimes calls himself the light sometimes the door and here the Vine not as if he were substantially changed into these things but to shew the spiritual resemblance which is between him and these corporal things Why there should be any more change of substance when Christ saith this is my body then when Christ saith I am the door I am the Vine I cannot see but God hath upon the blinde Papists fulfilled that threatning 2 Thes 〈…〉 ●●dicially blinded their 〈…〉 antiscriptural opinions 〈…〉 2. See the excellency and 〈…〉 All these comparisons are but to convinc● 〈◊〉 carnal soules of Christs transcendent excellency Christ hath in a spiritual sense al the good properties of the Vine and of all the fruits of the Vine He hath all the excellencies of Wine I name foure I. Wine nourisheth It helps digestion Christ is a great nourisher the soul would decay and dwindle to nothing if Christ did not continually nourish it and feed it 2. Wine is a comforter Psal 104. 15. Jesus Christ is the great comforter of the soul When the soul droops and languisheth when it 's cast down and dejected the love and presence of Christ doth chear it again Ps 21. 6. David confesseth it in Ps 23. 3. He restoreth my soul Jesus Christ is the souls restorer 3 Wine emboldneth Being a spiritual creature it doth raise the spirits and being moderately used puts courage into the fearful Jesus Christ doth embolden the soul His presence and his grace fills the soul with a holy courage he that was fearful dares now speak for God and act for God the very tydings of Christs coming expels feare from the hearts of his people Esay 35. 3 4. There is no true valour in the soul till Christ be there All the souls confidence is built on Christ and on Christ alone We have no boldnesse in prayer no boldnesse in approaching to God in any Ordinance but is communicated by and from Jesus Christ Heb. 10 19. 4 Wine is healing Some kind of wines are prefer bed for the healing inward of distempers c. The Samaritan poured oyle and wine Luk. 10. 34. Christ is a great heales he heales broken hearts and wounded spirits and all inward distempers whatsoever There is no health in the soul till Christ be there Vnto you that fear my Name shall the Sun of righteousnesse arise with healing in his wings Mal. 4. 2. Christ is that tree of life whose leaves are for the healing of the Nations Rev. 22. 2. Christ is an excellent and precious person Never look upon the Vine never see the fruit of the Vine but meditate on Jesus Christ JOHN 15. 5. Ye are the branches XV. SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon. Octob. 24. 1652. I Go on to the description of beleevers in reference to Christ as it is laid down in these words Ye are the Branches The Observation will be this viz. Doct. That all true Beleevers are spiritual Branches ingraffed into Jesus Christ Jesus Christ is the royal Stock and all Beleevers are mystical Branches of this Stock The Scripture asserts this priviledge in many places Rom. 6. 5. If we have been planted together in the likenesse of his death we shall be also in the likenesse of his Resurrection 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ is there compared to the Root and Beleevers to the Branches or Cions that grow in this Root Erasmus therefore translates it very fitly Insititii ingraffed or implanted The Apostle sets down this mystery under another apt similitude of the foundation-stone of a house and the superstructory stones Eph. 2. 20 21. Christ is compared to the foundation and the Beleevers to stones built upon that foundation Ye are built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone in 〈◊〉 the whole building fitly framed together 〈◊〉 ●nto ●● holy T●mple in the Lord. There are 〈◊〉 wayes of being Branches of Christ The one is by external profession onely In this respect all that are members of the visible Church are Branches of Christ Thus the Apostle saith that all the Gentiles when they were called into the Church by the preaching of the Gospel were graffed into Christ Rom. 11. 17. the Metaphor is often used in that Chapter This is not that ingraffing which I shall now handle For though it be an honour and priviledge to be a branch of Christ in this general way yet is it not a saving priviledge A man may be a Branch of Christ in this respect and yet at last be cut off and burned So our Saviour saith in the verse after the Text. The other way of being graffed or made a Branch of Christ is by the grace of union Thus all true Beleevers and onely true Beleevers are made Branches This is that which the Apostle elsewhere calls being members of Christ Eph. 5. 30. and dwelling in Christ John 6. 56. and putting on Christ Gal. 3. 27. That they are made Branches of Christ besides these testimonies of Scripture it will appeare from the Sacraments both of Baptisme and the Supper This is the plaine language of both the Sacraments 1. Baptisme speaks it 'T is the seal and signe of this ingraffing This is clear from two texts before cited the one Rom. 6. 5. If we have been planted together into the likenesse of his death How is that see verse before We are buried with him by Baptisme unto death The other i● Gal. 3. 27. As many of you as have been Baptized into Christ have put on Christ Nor as if all baptized persons were really made Branches but because this is sealed in Baptisme as the priviledge of all Beleevers They are as certainly made Branches of Christ invisibly and mystically as all that are baptized are made members of the Church visibly and externally 2. The Supper of the Lord doth also speak it Our eating and drinking of Christ Sacramentally is a seat and pledge of our being ingraffed into him spiritually This is cleare from that Text I cited before John 6. 56. He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him We are therefore nourished by his flesh and blood because we are united to his body In the handling of this Doctrine two things are to be opened by way of Explication 1. How we are made Branches of Christ 2. What benefit we have by being so For the first How men are made Branches of Christ There are three things which concur to this work of the souls ingraffing into Christ The Word of God The Spirit of God Justifying Faith 1. The Word of God The Word preached is the ordinary and common mediate instrument whereby this great
of the body That their knowledge is stronger then it was at first that the habits of grace are strengthned c. This is by vertue of their implantation into the Vine Christ is the beleevers breast the beleever by sucking at the brest growes from a childe to a young man from a young man to an old man in Christ 4. Spiritual fructification The fruitfulnesse of the Branch is from the fulnesse of the Root The Stock sends out its sap to every Branch and so every branch buds and blossoms and brings forth fruit Abeleevers spiritual fruitfulness is from Jesus Christ Christ sends out his sap and fatnesse to him and then he doth according to his kind bud and blossome and bring forth fruits in his season This is that which followes immediately after the Text He that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me ye can do nothing 'T is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 separated from me ye can do nothing David Psalme 1. 3. tells us from whence our fruits spring namely from our implantation He shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water which bringeth forth his fruit in his season So Psal 92. 13. 14. Those that be planted in the house of the Lord shall flourish in the Courts of our God They shall still bring forth fruit in old age c. This preheminencie these mystical trees have of the natural Old age makes the natural tree barren but it makes the mystical tree the more fruitful Consider what God saith to his people Hos 14. 8. From me is thy fruit found This the Church acknowledgeth when she calleth them Christs fruits Cant. 4. 16. They are borne by the Church 〈…〉 produced by Christ The● 〈…〉 fruits in regard of benefit but 〈…〉 Christs fruit in regard of production The Creation the Preservation the ripening of 〈◊〉 are from Christ They are our fruits in regard of Inhaesion but they are Christs fruits in regard of Procreation That Christian is either blinded with ignorance or filled with malice or swelled with pride who will not acknowledge his spiritual fructification to be from Christ 5. Spiritual fellowship The Branch by vertue of its ingraffing into the Stock hath fellowship with the Stock it doth partake of all the good of the Stock A beleever by vertue of his implantation into Christ hath spiritual fellowship with Jesus Christ in all his good things God is faithful saith the Apostle by whom ye are called into the fellowship of his Sonne Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 1. 9. He that is a Branch of Christ is spiritually married to Christ Hos 2. 19 20. I will betroth thee unto me for ever in righteousnesse in judgemene in loving-kindenesse in mercies and in faithfulnesse Marriage gives the wife an interest in all the good things of her husband His honours his riches his relations are now related to her Her name is set upon all the goods which are marked with her husbands name where he is Caius she is Caia where he is Master she is Mistresse By our implantation into Christ all his possessions are ours His honours are ours we are called by his name He Christ we Christians His riches are ours his relations are ours I ascend to my Father and your Father to my God and your God John 20. 17. Hereby 1. We communicate with Christ in his death Rom. 6. 5. All the fruits of his death are ours onely by reason of our ingraffing into him 2. Hereby also we communicate with Christ in the fruits of his resurrection Rom. 6. 5. We shall also be in the likenesse of his resurrection Hereby 3. we have communion with him in his life Rom. 6. 8. If we be dead with Christ we beleeve that we shall also live with him He will be for ever unto us a spring of spiritual life Because I live you shall live also John 14. 19. Herein do these spiritual Branches differ from the natural a natural branch may die though the Root live but a spiritual Branch of Christ can never die while there is life in Christ his Root Hereby 4. Do we participate of the Spirit of Christ the Spirit of Christ is ours because we are Branches of Christ in 1 Cor. 6. 17. He that is joyned unto the Lord is one Spirit Consider but one Text which doth fully shew our spiritual fellowship from this very ground 'T is 1 Cor. 1. 30. Of him are ye in Christ Jesus c. There are three things in this text First that beleevers are in Christ Secondly that their being in Christ is from Gods Donation Of him are ye in Christ Thirdly that by vertue of their interest in Christ it is that they come to have fellowship with Christ he is to them wisdome c. because they are in him He is their wisdom as he hath revealed salvation to them as he guides them in the way of salvation He is their righteousnesse as he hath perfectly obeyed the Law commanding and as he hath fully satisfied the Law 〈…〉 Sanctification to them as he hath 〈◊〉 them his Spirit to renue them by regeneration and he is their Redemption as he shall raise the● up at the last day and glorifie them Th●● much for Explication The Uses of this Point are of three sorts 1. Information 2. Exhortation 3. Consolation 1. For Information 1. We may learn from this Metaphor the nature of the union that is between Christ and beleevers The Doctrine of our spiritual union with Christ is a stupendious mystery therefore the Holy Ghost makes use of natural similitudes to set it forth Among others he makes use of this of the Vine and Branches Which teacheth us three properties of this Union 1 That it is a Real union The Branches and the Vine are not united appearingly but truly Christ and a beleever are united not imaginarily but really Though it be an invisible union to the eye of sense yet it is visible to the eye of faith Though it be a spiritual union yet it is a true union Hence it is that the Name of Christ is communicated to all his members 1 Cor. 12. 12. so also is Christ Not Christ personal but Christ mystical If the union were not in reality Jesus Christ would never impart his name to any of them 2. That it is a very strict union The union between the Vine and Branches is not a loose union but a close union by vertue of this union they are made one tree The union between Christ and a beleever is a very close union They are not united together as a wooden legge is united to the body onely by external bands and ligaments but as the natural legge is united to the body by inward bands by those influences of Spirits Animal and Vital which descend from the Head to the members The beleever is not tied to Christ onely by the bands of an outward profession but made one with Christ by a reall incorporation Christ
others but an unmeasurable fulnesse of all grace A fulnesse of redundancy which from him might flow out to all the Elect for the filling of them with a fulness of sufficiency Of this the Scripture speaks John 3. 34. and Iohn 1. 16. In all these respects God hath raised him up to be a Horne of salvation Thus much for the opening of the Doctrine The Uses of this Doctrine Vse 1. For Information in two things First The miserable condition of those that are without Iesus Christ Who are without Christ Not onely Jewes and Turks and Pagans but all unbeleevers in the Church Whosoever is without true saving faith is without Christ 'T is faith that makes Christ Actually ours Faith unites us to Christ and Christ to us Their misery is very great Christ is a horn of salvation the onely Horn of salvation he that is without Christ is without salvation God hath put the salvation of men into Christs hands 1 Iohn 5. 11. He hath given us eternal life and this life is in his Sonne And he that hath the Sonne hath life but he that hath not the Son hath not life ver 12. God himself cannot save him that is without an interest in Christ He hath set down this way of salvation and he cannot deny himself It is a question amongst the Schoolmen whether God could have saved sinners without Christs satisfaction They generally conclude upon good grounds that he might but now 't is not so much as a question God hath resolved that whosoever is saved shall be saved by Christ and without mutability he cannot save men another way Better never to have seen the light then to die without an interest in Christ And he that doth not beleeve truely in him hath no saving interest in him Iohn 3. 18. How shall I know whether I do truly beleeve or no I shall here to help you lay down a twofold note of true faith 1. It is a heart-purifying grace This effect of faith the Apostle mentions in Acts 15. 9. Whosoever hath true faith in Christ will find his heart purified and cleansed thereby The efficient cause of the purification of the heart is the Spirit of God who is called the Spirit of Sanctification 2 Thes 2. ●3 The 〈◊〉 cause is Christs blood 1 Iohn ● 7. The instrumental cause is faith This grace purifies the hear●● as it is an instrument whereby the blood of Christ which purifies is conveyed to the soul and as it doth take hold upon the promise of cleansing the promise is I will sprinkle clean water Ezek. 36. 25. Faith applies this promise and improves and so purifies the heart If you have not purification of heart you have not faith and if you have not faith you have not Christ as a Horne of salvation Now that heart may be said to be purified that hath these three properties 1. If it bewaile impurity Impurity that is truly lamented is in Gods account as if it were removed Rom. 7. 23 24. If thy pollution be thy greatest burden thy heart is purified in Gods sight 2. If it be cautious of every thing that may defile A heart that is purified dares not willingly come neere any defiling puddle it will avoid occasions temptations of defilement Iob 31. 1. Carefulnesse of shunning defilement is an infallible note of purification 3. If it be through inadvertency defiled it will not be quiet till it be made clean A purified heart cannot lie in any uncleannesse when God hath once discovered it to him Thus David when he saw his pollution with what earnestnesse doth he run to the Laver that he may be washed Ps 51. 2 7. 2. Saving faith hath very high and precious thoughts of Christ This character is laid down by the Apostle in 1 Pet. 2. 7. No unbeleever can truly have precious thoughts of Christ nay they have low thoughts of him as 1 Pet. 2. 7 8. and Cant. ● 9. Try your faith by this note Now if Christ be truly precious 1 He shall reig●● and rule over thee His precepts will be as precious as his promises His Sovereignty will be as precious as his sacrifice his yoke will be as desirable as his merits the Apostle opposeth saith and disobedience 1 Pet. 2. 7. Where Christ is disobeyed he is not beleeved in 2 If Christ be truly precious to thee his dishonours will pierce thy soul The dishonours done to him in his truths worship government will be a greater grief to thy heart then all the dishonours that are done unto thy selfe 3 If Christ be truly precious to thee it will be thy meat and drink to do him any service Thou wilt make it thy study to set him up and to make him great where ever thou comest 4 If Christ be precious to thee all his Ordinances will be precious Thou wilt have a high esteeme of his Word of his Sacraments of his Sabbaths and that for his sake who hath instituted these things If it be not thus with thee thou art an unbeleever and if an unbeleever thou hast for present no saving interest in him that is the horne of salvation Secondly The impossibility of the perishing of any of the Elect. Their eternal salvation is a thing of absolute certainty They can never perish They may seem to be lost sometimes in their own apprehension I said saith Jonah I am cast out of thy sight Jonah 2. 4. He was in his own eyes as if he had been a cast-a●ay 〈…〉 impossible it should be so as in other 〈…〉 so in this because Christ is the horne of their salvation He that hath wrought their salvation is able to preserve salvation for them and them for salvation If Christ be able to save you ye shall be saved When you look upon that in your selves that may seem to hinder your salvation look upon that that is in Christ to maintain your salvation You shall be as certainly saved as Christ himself is saved Father I will that they whom thou hast given me may be with me where I am that they may behold my glory c. John 17. 24. Your salvation is now fully accomplished he that was able to accomplish your salvation is able much more to apply it now it is accomplished Consider these seven Notions to make this out 1 Christ will not lose the merit of his blood nor be deprived of the end of his death and he must do both these if one of his Elect should miss of salvation 2 Christ did not conquer for the Devil but from the Devil Christ will not be at the charge and cost of redemption and when he hath done suffer the devil to go away with the spoile 3 Christ will not impoverish himself to enrich the Devil and impoverished he should be if one of the Elect should perish for every Saint helps to make up his mystical fulnesse So the Apostle tells us Eph. 1. ult 4 Iesus Christ will not rob his Father to enrich the Devil Now if
He shall come down like the rain upon the mowen grasse This seems to be more agreeable to the meaning of the Holy Ghost especially because of the clause following which is added by way of Explication As the showers that water the earth As the showers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rain and showers differ onely as lesse and more raine signifies smaller showers and showers signifie greater raine Deut. 32. 2. Raine falling in multitude of drops is called a shower That water the earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word Zarziph which is here translated water is onely used in this place in all the Bible it signifies to water by dispersion to water by drops The showers are dispersed in drops all over the face of the earth in a very regular and artificial way God hath divided saith Job a water course for the overflowings of waters Job 38. 25. The raine is from the cloud spouted out by drops after such a manner that every part hath its share Thus much for Explication The Observation is this Doct. Jesus Christ is to his Church as the rain to the mowen grasse as the showers of rain that drop down upon the earth Jesus Christ is the spiritual raine of his Church Jesus Christ is a mystical shower to the hearts of his people When God gave Christ out of his bosome he did then if ever raine a golden shower upon the world The Prophets do use this Metaphor in their predictions of Christ Esay 45. 8. Drop down ye heavens from above and let the skies poure down righteousnesse c. Though it be expressely a prediction of that great return of the Church from their captivity Yet as Calvin well observes it relates to the spiritual Kingdome of Christ when all this should be compleatly fulfilled The heavens did never drop down salvation they never rained righteousnesse so abundantly as when they rained down him who is the Lord our righteousnesse In the handling of this Doctrine I shall open three things 1. What that is which in Christ may be compared to the rain 2. Wherein lieth the resemblance between Christ and rain 3. Wherein lies the disproportion there I shall shew how Christ excels all other raine For the firste This Metaphor of raine doth relate to three things of Christ It respects three particulars 1. It hath relation to his Doctrine It is usual in Scripture for Doctrines to be compared to the raine My Doctrine saith Moses shall 〈◊〉 at the raine my speech shall distil as the dew 〈◊〉 Ordinarily the preaching of the Prophets Deut. ●● ● ●● c●lled Dropping Ezek. 20. 46. Drop thy word ●oward the south and Prophecy Ezek. 21. 2. Drop ●●y word toward the holy places Prophecy against the land of Israel I finde divers Expositors interpreting that Text of Christs Doctrine Saith Chrysostome the coming down of the rain upon the grasse or upon the fleece of wool as he renders it signifies the preaching of Christ in the Synagogue And certainly Christs Doctrine if ever the Doctrine of any person may be well compared to the raine His Doctrine is from above and it hath all the properties of raine The Prophet makes the comparison Esay 55. 10 11. 2. It hath relation to the spiritual Government of his Kingdome The administration of judgement is many times set out by the descending of the raine Job speaking of himselfe as a Magistrate useth this Metaphor Chap. 29. 22 23. My speech saith he dropped upon them They waited for me as for the raine and they opened their mouth wide as for the latter raine Evill Governours are compared to a parching drought whereby the estates of the Subjects are withered they are like those destroying Gardeners that pluck up the very roots of the herbs but good Governours are like Gardeners that do daily water the flowers and so cause them to thrive Jesus Christ is such a Governour as seeks the wealth of all his Subjects he drops down rain upon them whereby they are multiplied and increase The Prophet speaks of this Hos 6. 3. His going forth is prepared as the morning he shall come unto us as the raine as the latter and former raine unto the earth Christs government tends not to the impoverishing but to the enriching of his Subjects In his dayes shall the righteous flourish verse after the Text. Jesus Christ is not a waster but a waterer of the spiritual estates of those that are under the Government of his Scepter The Psalmist compares his Scepter to dew Ps 110. 3. It hath relation to the influences of his Spirit The influences of Christs Spirit are compared to the raine The Prophet useth this Metaphor to set out the distillations of his Spirit upon his C●u●●h Joel 3. 18. It shall come to passe in that day that the mountains shall drop down ●●to ●i●e and the ●ill● shall flow with milk c. When Jesus Christ h●d communicated his Spirit to the Church See wh●t she saith Cant. 5. 5. I opened to my beloved and my hands dropped with myrrh and my fingers with sweet ●●●●lling myrrh up●n the handles of the lock Christ did there come down as the raine by the secret vertue of his Spirit he caused many precious drops to fall upon the soul of his Church Calvin expounds this Text of the secret distillations of Christs grace upon his people so that whether we respect Christs Doctrine or his spiritual Government or the secret influx of his Spirit in regard of all these doth he come down as the raine upon the mowen grasse and as the showers that water the earth This is the first thing Qui respectus For the second Quae propo●tio Wherein stands the resemblance between Christ and raine I shall mention three particulars 1. The raine is the immediate and proper work of God The Scripture doth by this put a difference between the true God and Idols Jer. 14. 22. Man can neither set abroach the vessels of heaven to cause raine nor can he stop them when God hath set them abroach The key of the raine hangs at Gods girdle Man may speak long enough to the clouds before they give a drop of moisture but if God do but lift up his finger they are dissolved As he brings forth the wine our of his treasures so doth he draw the raine out of his Cellars Jesus Christ comes down like the raine in this respect for he is the immediate and proper gift of God This raine had never fallen from heaven if God had not of his own accord bestowed it had all the Angels of God been conven'd in an Assembly how to restore lost man they could never have found out this way The Scripture attributes the whole work of giving Christ to God alone My Doctrine is not mine Joh. 7. 16. but his that sent me His Doctrine is from God John 12. 49 His Scepter is from God Psal 110. 2. His King he is called Psal 2. 6. He prepared him a body Heb. 10. 5.
conviction we may understand that of the Prophet Esay 11. 4. Where speaking of Christ he saith that he shall smite the earth with the rod of his mouth and with the breath of his lips shall slay the wicked When Christ sets upon the work of conviction he comes with so much efficacy that he smites some to submission all to silence 2. For Conversion When Christ descends upon the soul in the work of Conversion what strength doth he put forth the strong holds of sinne are battered down every high thing that exalts it self against the knowledge of Christ is brought into captivity to the obedience of his Scepter 2 Cor. 10. 4. Devils are cast out of the possession which they have kept for many yeares without the least disturbance Strong lusts are mortified and the very constitution of the soul is changed What aileth thee O thou sea that thou fleddest thou Jordan that thou wast driven back ye mountaines that ye skipped like rams c. Ps 114. 5 6. The Prophet speaks those words of the powerful entrance of the children of Israel into Canaan The like is done by Christ in the conversion of a sinner Jordan is driven back the whole course of the soul is altered The mountaines skip like rams There are many mountaines in the soul of a sinner as p●ide unbelief self-conceitednesse Atheisme profaneness c. These mountains are plucked up by the roots in a moment when Christ begins the work of Conversion See how the Prophet doth allegorically set out the powerful descension of Christ in this work Esay 11 6 7 8. The wolf shall dwell with the lamb c. All the woolvish ravenous and brutish qualities and affections of the soul are powerfully subdued and brought under All that have known a person before wonder at the great change which is wrought and he wonders more at himselfe then all others can do Christ put his bridle of power into his lips and turned the current of his soul he scarce knows how When Christ came upon the heart of Elisha what a mighty power was put forth 1 Kings 19. 19 20 21. Elijah casts his mantle upon him the Spirit of Christ descends in that action and see how the man is changed He left the oxen and ran after Elijah forsakes all his friends to wait upon the Prophet When Christ by his Word and Spirit descends upon the heart of the Jaylor what a strange work is wrought upon him Acts 16. 33 He takes the Apostles the very same houre and washes their stripes Had any one that had over-night seen him beating the Apostles so cruelly as he did told him well before the morning-light thou shalt wish that all those stripes had been upon thy own body thou shalt before the Sunne arise wash those bloody stripes with thy tears would not he have thought him mad and yet all this came to passe Jesus Christ comes down with so much power that though the will would stand out against him yet it cannot resist Many a person comes to Church perhaps with an intention to laugh at the Preacher Christ poures down a shower upon him which hath so much power that he that came a scorner departs a mourner Zacheus is upon the Sycamore tree Jesus Christ lets a few drops upon him and he is so powerfully subdued that he comes down speedily at the first call Luke 19. 5 6. Matthew sits at the Excise-office gathering tribute Christ raines down but one shower and that hath so much power that the man leaves all and follows him he cannot stay to take one mans money more he ariseth from his profitable seat and runnes after Christ Matth. 9. 9 10. Peter and Andrew are busie as Christ passes by mending their nets Christ distils a few drops upon them in that call of his Follow me and I will make you fishers of men and how mightily are they overpowered they will not stay one tyde more yea they will not give another stitch but arise and follow him Mat. 4. 18 19 20. 3. For Consolation When Christ comes down with a purpose to comfort a sadded heart he comforts it with power See the promise Esay 66. 13. I will comfort you and ye shall be comforted The Consolations of the Word and Spirit of Christ come with such efficacy that the soul cannot shut them out the mourning is presently turned into dancing The Consolations of Christ are called strong consolations Heb. 6. 18. not onely in regard of the matter of them but in regard of the reception of them where ever they come they come with strength Hannah is in bitternesse of Spirit for a time Jesus Christ doth but as she is at prayer poure down a few fresh drops upon her and she goes away and is no more sad 1 Sam. 1. 18. Mary Magdalen stands at the Sepulchre full of sorrow she weeps many a brinish ●eare John 20. 11. Jesus Christ doth but open the cloud and drop a few drops upon her and what j●y is in her heart Take the most melancholy and persive sinner though he be like Rach●l that would not be comforted yet one promise of Christ rained down upon him and set on by his Spirit will make him lay aside his mourning garments Though Ministers cannot answer the objections of sorrowing Christians ye● Christ can answer them so powerfully that the soul shall have nothing to answer againe This is the second particular Thirdly The raine comes down voluntarily undeservedly The Prophet tells us how the dew and showers fall They tarry not for man nor wait for the sonnes of men Micah 7. 5. The raine doth not expect any humane concurrence or causality Though it come down upon us yet it comes down without us The raine descends for our advantage but not for our deserving The distillation of Christ comes down undeservedly on our part The soule meets with many a shower from Christ when it deserves no such thing The good either of Christs Doctrine or his Scepter or his Spirit are not merited by us Should we have no raine from Christ till we did deserve it we should suffer an eternal drought The first grace of Christ is preventing grace I am found of them that sought not after me Esay 65. 1. And all the after-grace of Christ is undeserved grace We do as little to deserve the influences of Christ as we do to deserve the distillations of the clouds All that Christ doth for us is onely from the meer motion of his own grace Esay 55. 1. Of his own will begat he us by the word of truth James 1. 18. We must say Grace grace to all the soul-fatning drops that come from Christ He forgets that Christ comes down as the rain that dreams of merit All the sonnes of men want Christ but none of the sonnes of men can deserve Christ Fourthly The raine comes down unexpectedly Sometimes when the skie is black with clouds the winde riseth and driveth them away without so much as a drop
Out of his fulnesse have we all received and grace for grace John 1. 16. Christ doth not exhale vapours from the earth but sends down vapours from himself to the earth All his materials are in himself and from himself if Jesus Christ could not raine upon us till we did furnish him with materials we should be out of hopes of receiving one drop from him to the day of our death We can furnish him with materials for fire and brimstone but the ingredients of his comfortable raine are from himself alone 3. The raine is not necessary at all times There are seasons when the husbandman craves no raine He is sometimes afraid of showers and wishes for Sun shine rather then showers As snow in Summer and raine in harvest so honour is not seemly for a foole Prov. 26. 1. But now Jesus Christ is never unnecessary This raine can never faill unseasonably There 's no time but the drops of Christs doctrine come welcome to the soul There 's no moment wherein the influences of Christs Spirit are not grateful to the soule That day that is not a rainy day is a mournful day The earth may be too full of raine but the soule can never be too full of this heavenly moisture Si dixisti sufficit periisti 4. The raine is s●metimes hurtful to the earth Immoderate raine is as prejudicial as immoderate drought A poor man that oppresseth the poore is like a sweeping raine that leaveth ●● food Prov. 28. 3. As parching heat doth sometimes dry up the fruits of the earth So excessive raine doth often drown the fruits of the earth Sometimes men and cattel are drowned sometimes houses with their inhabitants are swept away by overflowing showers But now Jesus Christ is never prejudicial to the soul If ever this raine do any annoyance to men it is by accident because it is not received or improved The distillation of Christs Doctrine is sometimes the savour of death 2 Cor. 2. 15. but this is onely because men are not bettered by it The Scepter of Christ doth break many in pieces Psalme 2. 9. but this is because men do not submit to it The influences and strivings of Christ by his Spirit are sometimes the occasion of the hardning of mens hearts and so consequently of their destruction but this is because they do resist and oppose them This raine hath intrinsecally no hurtful destructive property in it If it ever prove destructive it is because of some evil quality in them upon whom it falls 5. The raine is no distinguishing Argument between good and bad It falls promiscuously upon the righteous and unrighteous This our Saviour tells us Matth. 5. 45. The raine indeed sometimes falls in one place when it doth not fall on another Amos 4. 7. but on whatsoever City or Village it falls it comes down equally on all As fat drops fall upon the sluggards field as upon the field of the most diligent man But now this spiritual raine is more distinguishing Though all where the Gospel is preached have the same common Doctrine and all have some common influences of Christs Spirit yet there are special drops distilled upon the Elect which others never partake of Some are hardned others are softned some are rained upon to conversion others are rained upon for obduration some are melted and dissolved others are stiffned and enraged The peculiar drops of special grace are not communicated to all alike from Jesus Christ Arminians may talk of Universal grace that Christ doth no more for Peter then for Judas but the Scripture speaks of peculiar grace which is not communicated to all Why is it that thou wilt reveal thy self to us and not unto the world John 14. 22. There is hidden Manna which Christ never intended to bestow on all There are secret drops which Christ lets fall on one soul in a Congregation and doth not distill upon others This raine falls with a most exact distinction He hath mercy on whom he will have mercy saith the Apostle Rev. 2. 17. and whom he will he hardeneth Rom. 9. 18. Christ hath excluded some from the benefit of his prayers John 17. 19. And they that are shut out of the benefit of his prayers are excluded from the saving merit of his blood His propitiation is not extended further then his mediation 1 John 2. ● 2. The peculiarity of the descending of this raine is cleerly shewed by our Saviour in the answer he gives to that question of his Disciples concerning his preaching to the people in Parables Mat. 13. 10 11 12 13 14 15. Though the raine of Christs Doctrine fall down indifferently upon all yet the special grace of understanding applying and improving that Doctrine is not given unto all 6. The rain can make nothing spring where nothing hath rooted The showers are able to make both grasse and corne and other plants grow up but if either the earth be barren or if there be no foundation of roots the showers can do nothing the raine can make nothing grow up out of rocks It cannot make wheat grow where none was sowen But now Jesus Christ doth not onely make seed grow where seed is sowen but he makes seed grow where none was sowen Christ by the drops of his Doctrine and by the influences of his Spirit makes the rocks bring forth fruit He doth not onely cause plants to spring in good soyle but by the dropping of his grace turnes a barren soyle into a fruitful soyle one good shower from Christ will make the barren Heath as good ground as the fruitful valley The Word of Christ is called seed 1 Pet. 1. 23. it doth not onely make seed grow but it is seed it self Christ by raining down turnes the Thorne-tree into an Apple-tree He changes the thistle into wheat Other raine brings up something where something was but this rain brings up something where nothing was Other showers bring forth figs from Fig-trees but these showers bring forth figs from thistles Other raine brings up a crop where a crop was sown but this raine brings forth a crop where none was sown Those three thousand you reade of Act. 2. 37. had not one root in them when Peter began to preach but before he had done raining upon them their hearts were a nursery of all living plants The Uses of this Point 1. How justly may Christ expect fruitfulnesse from his people My beloved saith the Prophet had a vineyard planted in a very fruitful hill And he fenced it and gathered out the stones c. and he looked that it should bring forth grapes Esay 5. 1 2 3. It is but equal that they that live under Christs Doctrine and Scepter and under the influences of his Spirit should bring forth both good fruit and plenty of fruit the people of God are compared to a tree planted by the rivers of water which bringeth forth his fruit in his season Psal 1. 3. Christ is spiritual raine he is both
cleansing raine and fatning raine They that live under such droppings will be one day found inexcusable if they be not very fruitful those pastures that are manur'd every year if they have seasonable Sun-shine and showers are laid open to the wilde champion if they be not fruitful Remember seriously that of the Apostle and lay it well to heart Heb. 6. 7 8. No Argument can be used to plead for those that live under these fat showers without abundance of fruit 2. Behold the necessity of Christ Is not rain necessary for the ground are not seasonable showers necessary for the fields and pastures can any plants live long if they be not watered No more can any plants that are in the soul live without continual supply from Christ The Doctrine of Christ is not unnecessary the Scepter of Christ is not unuseful the influences of Christs Spirit are not in vaine Christ in all these respects is as necessary to the soule as the raine and dew are to the earth He is either blind or proud that doth not see an absolute necessity of Christ Egypt is fruitful though it have no raine the yearly overflowings of the river Nilus is instead of showers Jesus Christ is as the river Nilus to our Egypt did not he by the overflowing streams of his grace water our hearts they would neither bud nor blossom nor bring forth He is both the husbandman that plants our fruits he is the soyle that beares them and he alone is the rain that waters them Never think of the need the earth hath of the rain but meditate of the need your souls have of the droppings of Jesus Christ 3. How blinde and wicked are they that are offended at the Doctrine of Jesus Christ When Christ was on earth many were scandalized at his Doctrine And there are many still even amongst Christians that are offended at it He is to this day a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence to them that stumble at his Word Rom. 9. 33. Men finde out many wayes of stumbling at the Doctrine of Christ To instance in a few 1 Some are offended at the strictnesse of his Doctrine Christ by his Doctrine doth condemn not onely the outward acts but the inward motions of sinne in the heart Mat. 5. 28. He commands the plucking out of the right eye c. Duri Sermones durioris Magistri have some said of these Precepts which are indeed the commendation of Christs Doctrine 2. Some are offended at the simplicity of his Doctrine Thus the wise Greeks were offended at him The Apostle mentions this 1 Cor. 1. 17. 18. They were of opinion that Tully and Demosthenes did far excel the Doctrine of Christ for eloquence 3 Others are offanded at the spirituality of his Doctrine They think his Doctrine is too mystical and sublime This was that which made many take offence at him John 6. 51 52 60 61. They thought it was a strange kinde of Doctrine that Christ should give them his flesh to eat 4 Others are offended at the Divisions which follow upon his Doctrine Though the Doctrine of Christ be in it self a Doctrine of peace yet accidentally meeting with the corruptions of wicked hearts it s an occasion of division Luke ●2 49. I am come to send fire on the earth and Matth. 10. 34 35. Think not saith our Saviour that I am come to send peace an earth I am not come to send peace but a sword c. These accidental divisions which follow upon Christs Doctrine cause many to be offended at him And if any can receive his Doctrine yet they are offended at his Government This is a general offence Psal 2. 2. 3. Let us break their bonds asunder c. His Scepter is too strict too severe c. Let all that are offended with Christ any way know that these are groundlesse offences They are Scand●la accepta not scandala data For Christ comes down not as poison to destroy men but as the raine to preserve and nourish men Take heed therefore of being offended at Christ remember he comes down both in his Doctrine and Government not for the ruine but for the salvation of men Christ hath all the good properties of the raine but none of the bad properties Whosoever is offended at him is offended at his own mercy 4. Lay your hearts open to receive the distillations of Christ. When any of this raine descends let the vessels of your souls be set wide open to receive it When Christ drops in his Doctrine when Christ distils upon you by his Spirit let your hearts be in a readinesse to drink it in The raine doth no good unless it be taken in All the drops of Christ will do you no good if you do not take them in When men are beleaguered in a City and want water they set out all their vessels when a shower comes that no drop may be lost Gods children are in this world as in a besieged City you want raine O let not one drop of Christ fall besides you Open your mouths wide that you may take in yea take down all the pleasant drops of Christ Two things are necessary for those that would have this raine First they must get under the cloud The publick Ministery is the cloud by which the raine droppeth Esay 5. 6. abide where you see these clouds gathering thickest And when Christ drops down thorough these clouds be sure your vessels be set out uncovered to receive what-ever falls 5. What a miserable condition is it to be without Christ It 's made the top of all misery Eph. 2. 12. He that is without Christ is as parched land without raine The Scripture threatens with holding of raine as a sore judgement Amos 4. 7. I have with-holden the raine from you when there were yet three moneths to the harvest 'T is threatned as a judgement against them that came not up to keep the feast of Tabernacles that on them there shall be no raine Zech. 14. 17. If it be so sore a judgement to want the natural raine what is it to want this spiritual raine Pity such as want Christ more then you pity those that want other raine 6. When ever you see a shower fall down upon the earth meditate on Jesus Christ For this reason doth Christ resemble himself to all these things that we might have remembrancers every where to put us in minde of him Let every drop of raine be a natural preacher to put some serious thought of Christ into your hearts 1 PET. 2. 6. Behold I lay in Sion a chief corner XVIII SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon. Decem. 19. 1652. stone elect and precious THe Apostle at the second verse of this Chapter doth earnestly intreat the scattered Jewes to whom he writes this Epistle that they would as new borne babes receive the sincere milk of the Doctrine of the Gospel He presseth this by many Arguments As 1. God had appointed this to be the
is not in him God will set such men down not for the prizers but for the despisers of Christ Thus much for examination 3. For Exhortation This may commend several duties to us all 1. Blesse God for this precious stone The more excellent Christ is the more should our hearts he enlarged to blesse God for him How exceeding great is his love to his Church that hath laid for their foundation such a precious stone as Christ is had he not greatly and dearly loved you he would not have parted with this precious stone out of his bosome He had given you nothing if he had not not given you Christ and now you have Christ he will not deny you any thing The Apostle argues strongly Rom. 8. 32. He that spared not his own Sonne c. how shall he not together with him also freely give us all things God hath taken away all ground of questioning other things from them to whom he hath given Christ He that gives a man freely his best jewel will not stick with him for a few common stones Let not a day go over your heads without praises to God for Jesus Christ 2. Let this encourage every one to build on him We have encouragement enough to build on him because he is elected of God and encouragement also because he is so precious Build not your salvation on those rotten stones of merit or free-will c. but upon this precious stone Jesus Christ He undoes himself who leaves this precious corner-stone for any meane coner-stone which God hath never designed He is an unwise Christian that refuseth a foundation of precious stone to build on a sandy foundation 3. Whatever hath reference to Christ let it be precious The Apostle speaks of precious faith 2 Pet. 1. 1. Faith is precious because it layes hold on so precious a Christ and on so precious promises and because it works such precious effects c. We should have a care that that faith which hath to do with Christ be actively precious 'T is precious when it s right bred and when it 's active when it 's of the best sort So love Christ with a precious love not with ordinary but with choice affection Fear Christ with a precious feare Obey Christ with a precious obedience that is obedience of the best kinde Worship Christ with precious worship It will be another character that Christ is precious to us when we have a care that every thing that refers to him be choice and precious Cursed is the deceiver saith the Prophet Ma● 1. 14. that hath a male in his flock and sacrificeth to God a corrupt thing for I am a great King that 's the reason rendred Gods greatnesse should make men offer of the best they have Christ is a very precious stone Whatever relates to him its fit should be precious as he is precious 4. Esteeme more highly of him then you have done Let your thoughts of him be raised and sublimate Consider three things 1. The more you prize him the faster you will stick to him He is easily seduced from Christ that hath low thoughts of Christ High appreciations will help us much against seduction 2. The more you prize him the better you will obey him The esteem of a person maketh service done with more freedom of Spirit and readinesse of minde 3. The more you prize him the more cheerfully will you suffer for him respect of the person for whom we suffer makes hard and heavy burthens light Amor meus crucifixus No reproaches will damp that soule to whom Christ is precious 1 PET. 2. 8. A stone of stumbling and a rock XXIII SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon. March 13. 1652. of offence THe Apostle having in the former Verse declared what Christ is to beleevers doth in this verse proceed to shew what he is to unbeleevers he is to them a corner-stone sanctified and appointed of God to support and bear them up against all shakings from within and assaults from without he is to these through their disobedience and incredulity a stone of stumbling and rock of offence upon which they dash themselves to pieces without recovery Here are two words used but they denote one and the same thing onely they are doubled to shew the certainty and reality of the thing threatned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do not much differ in this place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may denote a single stone 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a multitude of stones And then for the other words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Though they do something differ in their Etymologies yet as to the sense and meaning in this place they do not differ as is well observed by Estius and other learned men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to dash against a thing it signifieth a stone or any other impediment cast in a mans way against which he dasheth his foot and so stumbleth or falleth And then for the other word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it comes from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to halt and is used for any thing which is an occasion of raine Stephanus observes that it is a word peculiar to Scripture never used in any prophane Author It signifies properly as learned men observe the bridge in the trap which by its falling down catches the creature in the snare and so ruines it and from thence is used to denote any thing which is occasion to others of stumbling or falling in the wayes of God Now offence or scandal is twofold It is either Scandalum Datum or Acceptum Activè or Passivè Offence given or offence taken 1. Offence given or Active scandal is when the errour or fault is on his part which layes the scandal This is twofold Scandalum Contristationis Or Lapsus Scandalum Contristationis An offence or scandal of grief when any thing is done or said which gives just occasion of sorrow unto our brethren Of this the Apostle speaks Rom. 14. 21. and v. 15. Scandalum lapsus An offence or scandal of falling is when any thing is spoken or done whereby an occasion of sinning is given to our brethren Of this the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 8. 9 10 11. This is done either by evil counsel Mat. 16. 23. Rom. 16. 18. Rev. 2. 14. By evil example Esay 9. 16. Mat. 15. 14. Or by abuse of Christian liberty in the use of things indifferent Rom. 14. and 1 Cor 8. 2. Offence taken or passive scandal is when things or words which are both good and seasonable are by sinister and perverse malignity of minde made an occasion of offence Thus the doctrine of Christs crucifying was an offence and scandal to the Jewes 1 Cor. 1. 23. It was foolishnesse to the wise self-conceited Greeks and it was a stumbling block to the malignant Jews Now when the Apostle saith Christ is a stone of stumbling and rock of offence We are to understand it passively not Actively
faint when the Sun beat upon the head of Jonah he fainted Ch. 4. 8. 3. The fruits of the earth are many times scorched and withered to nothing by the violent heat of the Sunne Mat. 13. 6. If God do withhold the raine and send out the burning heat of the Sunne the fruits of the earth mourn and languish But now Jesus Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse hath no hurtful quality his beames neither make the face black nor the spirits faint He ripens the fruits of grace in the soul but he never withers them his beames are destructive to none but to such as will not suffer him to shine upon them Those fruits that have no root Christ withers but where there is root and ●p the beams of Christ are never prejudicial The Sunne hath a hardning vertue but Christ never hardens any unlesse it be by accident because they will not suffer his beames to enter into their hearts 'T is rather the want of Christs beames then the presence of them that occasions hardning in any heart 4. The natural Sunne is the creature of this Sunne of righteousnesse Jesus Christ as he is God made this Sunne that shines in the Firmament and put into it all the glory which is in it For the Evangelist tells us that all things were made by him and without him was not made any thing that was made Joh. 1. 3. He gave it both the light and heat which it gives to us He hath set and appointed it the course which it runs and which it hath run since its creation and he doth by his providence order its setting and rising for the good of the world He is the light of all that light which the Sunne hath He is the fountain both of the being and preservation of all that influence which the Sunne doth cause to descend upon the world The dependence of the Sunne of righteousnesse is upon himself but the dependence of the natural Sunne is upon him 5. The natural Sunne doth communicate his light and heat equally to all He shines as much upon the house and lands of the wicked as he doth upon the righteous He doth impart and dispense his influences alike to all in the same manner and in the same measure This our Saviour notes as an act of the bounty of God Mat. 5. 45. But now it is not so with Jesus Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse He gives light and heat to one and not to another Though all that live under the shining of the Ordinances do receive so much from Jesus Christ as is sufficient to leave them without excuse yet doth he cause peculiar beames to fall upon the hearts of some which do not fall upon another He shines upon one only to conviction on another to conversion He shines only upon the eares of some He lets down hot gleames into the very hearts of others 2 Cor. 4. 6. We have an instance of this in Paul and those that were in company with him Act. 9. 6 7. They saw the light and heard a voice too a confused voice which they did not understand and therefore chap. 22. 9. Paul saith they heard not the voice of him that spake They heard an inarticulate sound or a confused voice but they knew neither who spake nor what was spoken therefore they heard the voice and yet heard it not but now Paul both heard the voice and understood it and was converted by it which we do not finde recorded of any of the rest Some common beames doth Christ cast forth upon all but his special beames and influences are imparted to none but the Elect Nor is this any derogation to the freeness of the grace of Christ or to the fulnesse of it The fulnesse and freenesse of grace consists more in the greatnesse of that he bestowes then in the multitude of them that enjoy what he gives them Read of hidden Manna of a white stone and a new name which Christ gives to some and not to others Rev. 2. 17. This Sunne of righteness shines sometimes on one in a house and leavs the rest still in darknesse 6. The natural Sunne is an inanimate thing Though it be in some sence called the fountaine of life yet it is in it self without life It hath neither the rational nor the sensitive nor the vegetative life And in this respect the least-living creature is more glorious then the Sunne a living dog is better then an inanimate jewel But now Jesus Christ is a living Sunne This Sunne of righteousnesse hath life as well as light and heat Joh. 1. 4. All that spiritual life which is in the soul is communicated from Christ and preserved by Christ the soul is dead till it be imbreathened by Jesus Christ And hence it is that Christ is so often in Scripture called our life as Col. 3. 3 4. because he gives and maintaines both the natural and spiritual life Yea the brightest beame the soul ever had from Christ here is but a little glimpse in respect of what shall be in heaven There he shall shine 1. Perpendicularly 2. In all his strength 3. Without over-casting 7. The natural Sunne is the servant of men It is called Shemesh in the Hebrew from a root that signifieth to minister because it is the great servant of the world in giving light But now Jesus Christ is not our servant but our Lord whom men and Angels must worship It is grosse Idolatry to worship the natural Sunne Job vindicates himself from it chap. 31. 26. Josiah demolished all Sunne worship in his reformation 2 King 23. 5. It s idolatry to worship the Sunne but its grosse impiety not to worship Christ the very Angels of heaven are commanded to worship him Heb. 1. 6. 8. The natural Sunne is onely useful for the time and state of this life Whether the heavens shall be abolished and annihilated at the day of judgement or only renewed is a great question amongst learned men If they shall be only renewed as they probably will be yet they shall not be useful to men in that way they now are The glorified bodies of the Saints have no need in heaven of the light of the Sunne to shine upon them as now they have Rev. 2● 5. The Saints in heaven shall be above the shining of Ordinances and above the shining of the natural Sunne Every glorified body shall shine as the Sunne in the Kingdome of their Father They shall be farther above the Sunne then the Sunne is now above them But the Sunne of righteousnesse is useful in heaven the Saints shall have the benefit of Christs shining upon them for ever and ever This Sunne of righteousnesse shall cast his beames upon the soul and body glorified for ever Rev. 7. 17. All the glory of heaven is communicated to the Saints through the Lord Jesus Christ The uses of these are Information Exhortation Consolation 1. For Information It teacheth us these foure lessons 1. Behold from hence the glory of
an abstersive vertue it did help to get wrinkles out of the skin and so to beautifie the face and make it bright Naomi therefore bids Ruth when she sends her to Boaz to anoint her self Ruth 3. 3. And David speaking of oyle saith it makes the face to shine Psal 104. 15. Warriors of old that they might make their armour glister and so render themselves formidable to their enemies used to anoint them with oyle the Prophet alludes to this Esay 21. 5. Arise ye Princes and anoint the shield The Lord Jesus Christ hath a brightning vertue As he is bright and beautiful in his own person Psal 45. ● so he makes his people beauti●ul Christ is very bright in his own person There is no scar no spot no deformity in him That which was said of Absolom is much more true of Christ 2 S●m 14. 25. Though men that are blinde see no beauty in him as the Prophet complain'd long since Esay 53 2. yet in the eyes of God in the eyes of the Angels in the eyes of the Saints he is singularly beautiful And as he is bright in himself so doth he beautifie others All the wrinkles of sinne all the spots of the soul are done away by means of this oyntment This oyntment if it ●e spread upon the soul turnes black●mores into Nazarites All the brightness of the Saints is from hence Ezek. 16. 14. Thou wast comely through my comelinesse which I put upon thee Hereby the old wrinkles of original sin which are as so many deep furrowes 〈◊〉 the soul hereby the latter spots of actual sin are taken away as if they had not been you may read much of the brightnesse and beauty of the Saints Cant. 4. init Cant. 7. init All this beauty i● acquired by the application of this beautifying ointment Jesus Christ is the Churches Golden anointing-pot he that would have his spots removed must daily drop this ointment upon his soul This ointment if it be applyed by faith will fetch off the red spots of cruelty the black spots of discontent the blew spots of envy the heat spots of passion it will put a shining luster upon the soul 5. Ointment hath a healing vertue the Samaritan poured into the wounded man wine and oile Luk. 10. 34. Wine for cleansing and Oile for healing your Chyrurgions make much use of ointment search the Dispensatory for the truth of this Jesus Christ hath a healing vertue If the spiritual wounds of the soul though they have been of long continuance be anointed with this ointment they are in a short time finely healed Christ himself was that Samaritan his blood was the wine that cleansed and the Oile that healed those desperate wounds There is no other balme in Gilead besides this ointment that can cure the least sore upon the inward man without the application of this ointment you will certainly dye in your sins 2. For the second Christ is compared to ointment poured forth in three respects 1. To shew his communicativenesse Jesus Christ is ready to make distributions unto his people of all that grace and goodnesse which is in him he doth not keep his grace and vertue within himself but lets it drop down upon his members the ●o● of ointment stands continually open that his Elect may take out of it according as they stand in need the ointment which was poured upon the head of Aaron at his Consecration ran down to the very skirts of his cloathing Psal 133. 2. This was to typifie the communicativenesse of Christ Jesus Christ hath received the ointment of the Spirit not for himself but that he might anoint al his members and he is very mindful of the trust reposed in h●m he received for his members and he is willing they should receive from him Joh. 1. 6. Many are willing to have the patrimony of others poured into their treasury but they care not to poure out againe but Christ as he was willing God should poure out grace into him so is he as willing to poure it out upon us 2. To shew his exceeding fulnesse Christ hath so much that he can spare for others 'T is poured out and yet it doth not decay there is in Christ an undecayable fulnesse he is like the widowes cruse of oile 2 Kings 4. 6. never leaves running till the soul want a vessel to receive him 3. He is compared to ointment poured forth because the fragrancy and other excellent vertues of ointment are best discovered in the pouring of it forth Ointment in the vessel doth neither smell nor shine so as when it s poured out the excellency of Christ lies in the using of him when we come to poure out his graces then and not till then do we finde the sweetnesse of them Taste and see that the Lord is gracious Psal 34. 8. the graciousness of Christ is not apprehended till it come to be casted 3. For the third how Christ is 〈…〉 The great and ordinary way of 〈…〉 this name of Christ which is ●● ointment 〈…〉 Ordinances which he hath appoi●ted Preach●●g Prayer Sacraments these are the means ●f ●●●●ing forth Christ the Ordinances are as the ●●blaster Box wherein this precious ointment is kept you read in Zech. 4. Of a golden Candlestick with two Olive-trees standing by it c. the Olive-tree is Christ the Candlestick is the Church the Lamps are the several members of Christ the pipes which convey the Oyle to the Lamps are the Ordinances of grace Christ fills the pipes and the pipes carry the Oyle to the Lamps The Ordinances are the Golden Cruse in which the Oyle is kept and by which it is defused to every particular Saint as he hath need The preaching of the Gospel is called the bearing of his Name before the Gentiles Acts 9. 15. When the Gospel is preached and the Ordinances dispensed then is the ointment poured forth The Apostle gives testimony to this 2 Cor. 2. 14. Thanks be unto God which maketh manifest the savour of his knowledge by us in every place He that would smell the savour of Christs ointment must wait conscionably upon the Ordinances The Ordinances are the consecrated pipes through which the Oyl runs 'T is true the Spirit of Christ fills these pipes and makes them effectuall to them that are saved but yet the Ordinances are the instrumental Every Prayer every Sermon every Sacrament conveys a drop of this ointment to the soul He that turnes away his face from the Ordinances makes himself uncapable of tasting the ointments of Christ CANT 1. 3. Christ is as an ointment poured forth XXVIII SERM. at Mary Wolnoth Lon. May 22. 1653. FOurthly for the fourth how Christ excels other oyntments I shall open that in these five particulars 1. He excels all other oyntments in worth and value Some oyntments are of great value but none ar● comparable to Christ That oyntment which 〈◊〉 poured upon t●e head of Christ is said to 〈◊〉 ●●ry costly John 12.
Iohn 13. 10. he that is washed needeth not to wash save his feet He that hath the least measure of this oyntment shall as certainly finde all the effects of it as if he had the whose vessel poured upon him 5. He excels all other oyntments in the manner of composition All other oyntments are compounded and made by men they are called the oyntments of the Apothecary Eccles 10. 1. God created the materials and he it is that hath given man skil and understanding how to make use of them but the composition is made by men But this precious oyntment is not made by men but by God It is he that hath compounded this golden box of oyntment It was God that anointed Christ with the holy unction of the Spirit Psal 45. 7. and it is he that hath designed him to be oyntment unto others Yea the truth is this oyntment is God himself Though the humanity be a creature yet the Divinity is the Creator Christ is not only unguentum Dei the oyntment of God but unguentum Deus that oyntment which is God himself The Uses These I shall draw 1. From the general Doctrine 2. From the particular resemblances First In general We may take notice of 1. The excellency of Christ He is compared in Scripture to all things that are necessary and to all things that are pleasant and delightful One great piece of the study of Christians in this life is to search into the excellency of Christ To know what Christ is in himself and what he is to us comprehends a very great part of a Christians study in this life Paul desired to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2. 2. This one resemblance shews him to be a precious one he is so excellent that all the choice things in nature are made use of to shadow out his glory His Name saith the Prophet shall be called wonderful Esay 9 6. how wonderful is that Name which is com●●sed of so many excellent things 2. This should draw our hearts exceedingly towards the Lord Iesus It should beget in us desire after him and delight in him Precious oyntment draw the affections of men towards them The best oyntment is but a drug to Jesus Christ If we be not enamoured with him we do despise him He that looks on him as oyntment cannot but be greatly delighted in him It follows in the text Therefore do the virgins love thee draw me we will runne after thee That man doth not value Christ as oyntment that doth not love him and desire to be drawn after him 3. The excellency of grace 'T is the graces of the Spirit in Christ that makes him compared to ointment his sweet oyntments are his meeknesse patience holinesse and the rest of those heavenly graces True grace is a choise thing the Scrip●ure compares it to the choisest things in all the world Cant. 4 13 14. Next to God and Christ and the Spirit there 's nothing in heaven or earth comparable to Christ 4. That the grace of Christ is not a thing common to all His common graces are communicated to all his special grace is more confined His Name is oyntment The holy oyntment in the Law was poured upon none but upon consecrated things and persons Exod. 30. 2● 24 25 30. It must not be poured on mans fl●sh v. 32. Christ is compared here to this oyntment A select number the Elect of God onely those that are spiritual Priests these and these onely ●e made partakers of Christ and his graces Thu● much for the general doctrine Secondly particularly First from the fragrancy of Christ 〈◊〉 may learne four thing 1. How unsavoury they are that want Christ Wicked men have animam pro sal● their soules keep their bodies sweet but what have they then to keep their soules sweet the holy Ghost compares men that are in the state of nature to that which is most unsavory Psal 14. 3. They are unsavory both in their persons and in services that want this oyntment A heart unanointed casts the worst smell of any corrupt thing in the world 2. Acknowledge from whence it is that all your fragrancy proceeds If there be any good smell upon your souls it is because this oyntment hath been poured forth upon you Jesus Christ mentions the sweet smell of his Spouse Cant. 4 10 11. and indeed every beleever is a sweet savour unto God The precious oyntment of the graces of Christ poured upon your head at your conversion is the onely reason of this good savour 't is great pride and ingratitude not to own it 3. This teacheth us all how to make and keep the soul sweet Satan labours to make it musty by breathing the ill ayre of sinne into it and if you would have it smell sweetly you must anoint it with this oyntment every day Drop but every day a drop of this oyntment upon it by prayer meditation or some other holy duty and it will preserved sweet notwithstanding the thick fogs of sinne and temptation Carry Christ in your bosome and you will smell very sweet in every company 4. When ever you smell any sweet savour think on Christ The best use which we can make of perfumes and oyntments is to make them remembrancers to put us in mind of him who perfumes both earth and heaven And then Secondly from the cheering vertue of this oyntment learne two things 1. Whither to go for heart reviving When you finde your spirits dull and melancholy when your hearts are tired out and your souls languish smell to this precious oyntment and it will revive you It 's Christs work to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite The smell of the oyntment either of Christs satisfaction or of his promises or of his intercession is the speediest and surest way to be rid from the power of spiritual heavinesse 2. Let them that have this oyntment maintaine spiritual cheerfulnesse God calls for spiritual gladnesse as well as spiritual sorrow Phil. 3. 1. A well grounded cheerfulnesse honours religion as much as holinesse The Scripture was written for consolation as well as for conversion John 15. 11. Rom. 15. 4. The Spirit is a comforter as well as a sanctifier John 15. 26. You that have this oyntment maintaine a holy light-heartednesse There is a vaine mirth and there is a sinful and sensual mirth avoid these but the holy mirth must be kept up It s a disparagement to the holy oyntment to see anointed ones droop in the blackest seasons And then Thirdly from the mollifying vertue of this oyntment learn two things 1. The Scripture remedy against hardnesse of heart It 's a disease the best are troubled with lesse or more chafe this suppling oyntment 〈◊〉 to it and it will grow soft This oyntment was never used aright but it did in time remove the spiritu●l hardnesse of the soul 2. Ascribe all heart softnesse to Christ Had not this
every 〈◊〉 beleever doth very much resemble Jacob 〈◊〉 that 1. In regard of their godly simplicity It was the commendation of Jacob that he was a plain man Gen. 25. 27. It relates not so much to his outward condition as to the inward frame of his heart Beleevers are a single hearted generation That which our Saviour saith of Nathaniel is true of them at least in desire and affection they are not only without gall but even without guile John 1. 47. they study plainnesse rather then greatnesse they put away deceit far from their Tabernacles 2. In regard of their holy zeal Jacob was a man full of the fire of heavenly zeal How earnest was he in reforming his family Gen 35. 2 3. Here is true zeal it begins reformation at home all true beleevers have sparks of this coelestial fire in their bosomes Tit. 2. 14. They desire that they and theirs may be reformed who ever walk disorderly They resolve as Joshuah I and my house will serve the Lord Joshuah 24. 15. 3. In regard of their wrestlings with God Jacob had the Name of Israel given him because of his violent wrestlings with God by prayer Gen. 32. 28. The Prophet doth fully interpret what this wrestling was Hosea 12. 3 4. His prayers and teares were the two armes by which he wrestled with God Every true beleever is frequent in this exercise I give my self to prayer saith David Psal 109. 4. he that hath true grace loves no exercise better then this of holy wrestling with God Epaphias is described by his frequency in these holy wrastlings with God both for himself and others Col. 4 12. In all holy vertues true beleevers are like Israel and therefore may well be called by his name 2. For the second Christ is the consolation of Israel in two respects By way of purchase By way of conveyance First By way of purch●se and merit Whatsoever is an ingredient or cause of true consolation is by the purchase and procurement of Jesus Christ The Scripture makes mention of many grounds of spiritual consolation To instance some particulars 1. Reconciliation with God There can be no true comfort till God and the sinner be made one Reconciliation is the first bottom of Consolation Rom. 5. 2. The begining of his Prodigals joy was the reconciliation of his father to him Luke 15. latter end Now the Scripture tells us that reconciliation is the purchase of Christs blood he is the only atonement of the soule Col. 1. 21 22. There had never been any pacification between heaven and earth if Jesus Christ had not interposed himself He was contented that the Father should make war with him that his fury towards us might cease He is our peace-offering by whom we have peace with God and with our selves 2. The work of grace in the heart Sanctification is one ground of consolation The Kingdom of God is righteousnesse and peace and joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. That comfort which is true is builded upon righteousnesse The effect of righteousnesse shall be peace and the fruit of righteousnesse quietnesse and assurance for 〈◊〉 Esay 32. 17. Now all our holinesse and grace is the purchase of Jesus Christ The shedding of his blood doth not onely procure for us glory hereafter but grace here The conscience is purified by the streames of his blood Heb. 9. 14. He is as properly our sanctification as our salvation 3. The pardon of sinne Remission is an inlet of Consolation Esay 40. 1 2. Comfort ye comfort ye my people tell them that their iniquity is forgiven Sence of pardon is the true ground of spiritual laughter Our Saviours usual receipt for the working of comfort is this Be of good cheer thy sinnes are forgiven So he saith to the para●ytick Mat. 9. 2. the heart may be light in heavinesse when sinne is once remitted Now we know Christs blood is the meritorious cause of the remission of sinne 'T is he that hath expiated our sinnes Col. 2. 13 14. He that will be forgiven any other way shall never be forgiven His blood is the onely bath for the washing away of sin Eph. 1. 7. 4. Right to the promises The promises of the Gospel are the wells of true Comfort The Apostle makes mention of the comfort of the Scriptures Rom. 15. 4. If there be any comfort in the Scriptures it is in the promises Precepts are written for direction threatnings for terror promises chiefly for consolation The Prophet mentions the breasts of the Churches consolation Esay 66. 11. The promises of the Gospel are the breasts of the Churches consolation by sucking at these breasts the heart is made glad Now who but Christ purchased the promises The Apostle saith that all the promises of God are in Christ 2 Cor. 1. 20. They are in him as the procuring and meritorious cause of them all The Covenant of grace which is nothing else but a bundle of rich promises is the purchase of Christs blood The world had never heard of a promise of any good if it had not been for Jesus Christ 5. Hope of salvation Hope is the door of consolation We rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God saith the Apostle Rom. 5. 2. There 's more cause of rejoycing in this then in being able to cast out devils Luke 10. 20 Now we know that it was none but Jesus Christ that did or could unlock the way to heaven He is the way to heaven He is the purchaser ●f heaven God hath given us eternal life and this life is in his Sonne 1 John 5. 11. He is called the salvation of God in this song v. ●0 There would have been no entrance for any of Adams lost seed into glory if Christ had not set the door open it is be that opened the Kingdome of heaven to all beleevers 6. The gift of the Spirit The holy Ghost is called the Comforter John 14. 26. His office is to work consolation ●●●he hearts of Gods people Spiritual comfort is therefore called joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. because the holy Ghost doth create it in the soul Now we know the in-dwelling of the holy Ghost in us is the purchase of Christ John 15. 26. When the comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father The third person had never been our comforter if the second person had not been our Redeemer There is nothing can be thought on which hath any causality or efficiency in our consolation but it is of Christs procurement This is the first Secondly By way of conveyance As all our grace is communicated and conveyed unto us from Christ so is also our consolation Jesus Christ doth by his Spirit in the Ordinances of grace actually convey comfort unto his people as he sees them stand in need of it The Apostle speaks of the beleevers consolation abounding by Christ 2 Cor. 1. 5. All comfort is in Christ as a fountaine in him God hath put it
was risen Had not Christ been alive our comfort had bin for ever dead That speech of the Church in another case is truly applicable to this case Lam. 1. 16. Jesus Christ is he that is the only Reli●ver of the soul and therefore if the beleevers eyes runne do●n with water when he is withdrawn there is no cause of wondering unlesse at this that every tear is not an Ocean 4. That a Christians consolation is a must rich and deare bought consolation What the Apostle saith of our redemption we may well say of our consolation 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. You that are beleevers ye are not comforted with corruptible things but with Jesus Christ himself Your consolation is not bottom'd upon any outward thing but upon Jesus Christ himself Nay consider it Christ became a man of sorrow that he might be made to you a God of comfort He drank up the cup of his Fathers wrath that he might purchase for you a cup of consolation Jesus Christ did willingly power out his own precious blood that he might mingle a cup of strong consolation for the reviving of thy soul The God of consolation hath gone the most costly way infinite wisdome could devise to provide comfort for his Elect. 2. For Exhortation or Instruction This commends many duties to the people of God viz. these six 1. Take heed of bottoming your consolation on any worldly thing It is not unlawful to take moderate contentment in outward comforts God hath given us these things for delight as well as for necessity and we are allowed to rejoyce in them Eccles 5 18 19. But great care is to be taken that we do not place our chiefe consolation in any worldly enjoyment Most men build their comfort on riches honour pleasure or some such thing Gods own children are but too apt to offend in this kinde I might say many things to beat off the heart from seeking comfort in these things As That they are fading consolations The best of earthly comforts is a dying comfort riches honours pleasures friends children are short-lived comforts the soul will live when these are not That they are insufficient consolations They comfort but the lowest part of man What joy can the soul which is a Spirit take in any sensual comfort That they are common and ordinary consolations The bad have as great nay many ●●mes a greater portion of all these things then the good That they are distressing consolations The bitternesse that is in them is more then the sweet that is in them Iobs bed which he thought should shave been a place of comfort was a place of terrifying Chap. 7. 13 14. There is no comfort in this life but it may and many times doth prove a discomfort Many other things I might say to this purpose but I shall onely say this God hath made none of these things a Christians maine consolation 1 It s a disparagement to Gods wisdome To bottom thy comfort on any wordly thing 'T is as if thou shouldest say the infinitely wise God wanted judgement to chuse the fittest consolation 2 It 's an undervaluing of Christ himself As if he had not enough of all manner of consolations in himself Are the consolations of God small to thee Iob 15. 11. To bottome the great comfort of thy heart on any worldly comfort is to say the consolation of Christ is small to thee 3 It s the way to lose thy worldly comforts Jesus Christ cannot but in honour either strip thee of that comfort or else turne it into a crosse which thou placest thy consolation more upon then upon himself 2. Let the Israel of God live comfortably It is often commanded in Scripture to the children of God to live as a comforted people Psal 33. 1. Phil. 4. 4. The same God which bids you mourne for sinne bids you glory and rejoyce in him Much might be said to presse this duty 1. It is one end why the Scriptures were written John 15. 11. As precepts were given for direction so were promises for consolation 2 It tends greatly to the honour of Religion A mournful sad life dispa●●geth godlinesse as well as a profane life it makes men think there is nothing but sowernesse in Gods wayes 3 It 's a wrong to the Spirit of God It denies one of his works He is given for a Comforter as well as for a ●anct●fier Iohn 15. 26. 4 It doth much indispose the soul for the duties of godlinesse An habitual heavinesse of heart makes duties tiresome and unpleasing A melancholy heart is almost as unfit for the service of God as a frothy heart 5 It creates m●ny j●alousies and sinful surmisings in the soul against God The soule that is continually clouded with melanch●ly cannot so heartily close with G●d or co●mend his service to others as he might do M●ch might be said to presse this duty on beleevers but ● shall keep to the t●x● ●hrist i● the cons●lation of Israel and i●s some kind●●f disp●●agemen●●o him to walk ●ncheerfully ●t makes men t●●k there is not enough in Ch●●st to ●●eer you ●ou are bound to honour Christ as well in this Name The consol●●ion of Israel as in his other ●●es As you h●r● in Christ many foundations o● real comfort so let it ●e your care to preserve and increase actual comfort As it is a sinne to look for comfort more then grace so it is ●npleasing to Christ to be so covetous after grace as to throw aside comfort Your comfortable life honours Christ as well as your holy life 3. Take heed of slighting the consolations of the Gospel We are very apt to look upon the duties of the Gospel as very hard and very prone are we to judge the comforts of the Gospel very mean It was that which Eliphaz charges Iob withal chap. 15. 11. It ariseth from the pride of our hearts We think we deserve great things from God hence we reckon our comforts and encouragements as low things Now amongst many other considerations which do exceedingly greaten Gospel comforts this is one That they are bottomed upon Christ himself To slight the comforts of the Gospel is to slight Christ our consolation Though others perhaps enjoy a greater portion of consolation then thou yet thou enjoyest more then thou deservest yea the comforts which thou accountest small cost Jesus Christ as much sweat and s●●row as theirs did who enjoy the greatest mea●●re of comforts Saith Moses to Korah and his aff●●●ates 〈…〉 it a small thing that God ●hath s●par●ted 〈◊〉 from the Congregation c Numb 1● 〈…〉 is just God should remove all 〈…〉 as look upon any consolation received from Christ as a small thing 4. Acknowledge 〈◊〉 the fou●●●●ion of all your consolation When an● beam● of comfort is let fall upon the soul how apt are we to neglect the true fountaine of it we look perhaps at our own graces and duties as if our comfort sprung from thence Or else we look onely at the
recover himselfe so as to beleeve without staggering yet there was at present some kinde of vacillation in his heart He that is overhasty with God gives occasion to men to think that he doth not receive the promise without some distrust To suspect God never so little is a great sin 4 It argues much impati●nce of heart He that would have a promise before Gods time doth bewray a secret discontent of heart because the time was not set sooner It implies dissatisfaction with what God hath done as if it might have been done in a better time The soul that would have the promise brought to passe before its time doth in effect say God hath not chosen the best time Now to disparage Gods choice is a great sinne He that saith any thing might have been done after a better manner or in a better time then that wherein God hath done it doth deny God to be God onely wise Thus you see the sinne is great in being too hasty with God I might adde one thing more 5 'T is a denyal of our selves to be beggars We say beggars must not be chusers To be two hasty to have promises made good is as if we should say Gods promises are not acts of grace but due debts This is the first Consideration 2. 'T is a weak thing as well as si●ful 'T is Christian wisdome to pray for the fulfilling of promises but ' ●is more then brutish folly to be impatiently eager for the accomplishment of promises The folly of it appears in these foure particulars 1 We shall obtaine it never the sooner for our impatience No man ever did no man ever shall wrest a promise out of Gods hand by impetuous violence I the Lord will hasten it in his time Esay 60. 22. Our willingnesse to wait for a promise shall not keep us without it one hour longer our impatience shall not produce it one moment sooner then the set and appointed time Waiting patiently is the best way to ripen promises impatient wrangling with God is the way to set back the promises God loves the force of faith but he doth exceedingly loath the force of impatience 2 If we could through over much eagernesse hasten a promise before its time it would prove hurtful to us An unripe promise is like unripe fruit it doth not tend to nourishment but to diseases An abortive birth is neither so beautiful nor so strong as that which is brought forth in its full time A promise is then sweet when it 's brought to passe in its due season He hath made every thing beautiful in his time Eccl. 3. 11. 'T is as true of promises as of providences Grace hath its maturity as well as nature Promises grow to perfection by tract of time When the set day is come then and not till then it hath ful shape and proportion That which is observed by our Saviour concerning the fruits of the earth is true concerning the promises Mark 4. 28. The earth bringeth forth fruit first the blade then the ear after that the full co●n in the eare God in the producing of promises useth the same method first the blade springs up then the ear shoots out after that the full corn in the eare and so in processe of time it s fully ripe If a man should reap his field in the blade or in the shooting he might possibly have straw but he would have no corn Should God permit the impatient Christian to reap the promises when they are but in the blade or in the eare he would lose all the benefit and vertue of them It 's mercy to the beleever that God gives him in the promised good in the just season of it If they should stay never so little beyond the season if they should be performed never so little before the season the whole benefit of them would be lost We shall when we come to heaven blesse God as much for the timing of his promises as for the making of his promises The foolish childe is ●ager for green fruit the father will not give it him till it be fully ripe because he knows it would then be prejudicial when it 's ripe then he gives it him The foolish Christian longs for a promise when its green his heavenly Father knows it would be to his disadvantage to have it at that time he will have him stay till it be ripened then ●e shall enjoy it A promise before its time is like bread half baked or like meat half rosted it doth n●ither feed nor nourish Our wise Father loves his children too well to feed them with raw mea● 3 Impatient ●astening of a promise deprives us of much of the comfort of the promise The promises of God lay a foundation of present comfort The great comfort of the promise is in the fulfilling of it but it yields some comfort as soone as ever it is made to the soul Even to day do I declare saith God that I will render double unto thee Zech. 9. 12. It 's a promise of return to the captiv●d Jews Now assoon as ever the promise was made they had a ground of comfort that God would p●t an end to their misery and restore to them double what they had lost by their long bondage Assoone as ever God hath made a promise to a soule that soule is sure 1. That God will never do it hurt 2. That God will in due time perform what he hath promised The husbandman though he do not reap presently upon the sowing of his ●eed yet he hath some ground of comfort assoone as the seed is sowne he hath the comfort of hope that harvest will come when he shall reap what he hath sowne Now a violent and impatient eagernesse of spirit drinks up all the comfort which the soul might receive from the promise The promise is most to such a soul as if it had never been made His wearinesse in tarrying breeds more torment then the promise doth comfort to his soul 4 It renders the heart lesse thankful to God for the making of the promise It is the duty of the children of God to be very thankful for every promise of God That God that did not owe us any thing should so strongly binde himself to us by the cords of a promise this is worthy our heartiest thankfulnesse All the good we expect from God is by vertue of his promise Grace and glory are both wrapt up in promises He that is not thankful for a promise deserves justly the edge of the threatning Now the heart that is too hasty to have the promise fulfilled will never be so thankful as is meet that the promise was made The anguish of his Spirit in being delayed will weaken if not quite destroy the thankfulnesse of his spirit A tumultuous wrangling Christian can never be a thankful Christian Discontentment of heart in tarrying for a promise will certainly hinder that thankfulnesse of heart which should be given to God for
Sometimes a beleever through the neglect of his duty through surfetting upon sinne brings spiritual languishings upon himself his strength is decayed his vigour is abated his pulse beats very weakly he can scarcely creep in the wayes of God In such a case Jesus Christ recovers him repaires his breaches and renues his strength as in former times The Psalmist speaks of this Psal 23. 3. He restoreth my soul He leadeth me in the paths of righteousnesse for his Names sake The Saints have every day experience of this restoring vertue of Christ III. How this meat is eaten and received The Scripture makes mention of three things which concur to this act 1. The Ordinances These are the conduits Jesus Christ hath instituted and appointed his Ordinances to be the meanes of carrying his nourishing vertue to the soul The Ordinances are the dishes of gold upon which this heavenly meat is brought Prayer Reading Preaching Meditation holy conference the Sacrament in these Christ presents himself to the soul He that forsakes these can expect no feeding from Christ In this mountaine will the Lord of Hosts make a feast of fat things c. Esay 25. 6. The feast is made in the mountain of Gods house and the Ordinances are the dishes on which this meat is set and the knives by which it s carved out to the soul 2. Saving lively faith This is the instrument What the hand and mouth and stomack are in the corporal eating that is faith in this spiritual eating Faith is the hand that takes this meat the mouth that eats it and the stomack that digests it Yea faith is as the veines and Arteries that do disperse and carry this nourishment to every power of the soule This is abundantly cleared in this very Chapter v. 35. he that cometh to me shall never hunger he that beleeveth in me shall never thirst Cometh is expounded by beleeveth Eating and drinking are here put for believing Crede manducasti He that beleeves eats and he that eats not it is because he beleeves not Hic ed●re est credere Doct. 2. That the blood of Jesus Christ is drink indeed Blood is here put for the whole person as flesh was And it s rather his blood is drink then that He is drink because the great efficacy of all Christ did lies principally in his blood Heb. 9 22. And in the same respects as his flesh is said to be meat indeed his blood is said to be drink indeed And those three things which concurre to the act of eating his flesh concur also to this act of drinking his blood The mystical union saving faith the Ordinances I shall therefore onely open two things 1. Shew that Christs blood is drink 2. The Analogy between his blood and other drink I. That the blood of Christ is spiritual drink will appear 1. From the drink-offerings under the Law In the Law there were sundry drink-offerings appointed as well as meat-offerings The daily sacrifice which was to be offered continually every morning and evening had both a meat-offering and drink annexed to it Exod. 29. 40 41. The daily sacrifice did signifie three things 1 That Jesus Christ the true Lamb of God was available to the Church of God from the morning of the world to the evening the end of the world 2 To signifie the continual need the Church had of reconciliation by Christs blood which taketh away sinne 3 To sanctifie the morning and evening prayers of the Church by the interceding sacrifices of Christ the Mediator And the meat-offering and drink-offering added thereunto did signifie that Jesus Christ by offering himself to God becomes not onely our redemption but also meat and drink to the soul The sheaf of the first fruits appointed to be offered every year had both the meat-offering and drink-offering added thereunto Lev. 23. 10 11 12 13. The like is to be observed in other sacrifices Now as the meat-offerings Numb 15 init did represent Christ as food so the drink-offerings did set him out as our spiritual drink 2. From the water issuing out of the rock You read the story of that Numb 20. The people in the desart of Zin wanted water In their necessity as their sinful custom was they fall a murmuring v. 3 4 5. God commands Moses v. 8. to speak unto the rock to give them water that they and their cattel might drink Moses smites the rock twice which was his sinne because God only commanded him to speak to the rock and it gave forth its water in abundance v. 11. Now what the meaning of this water was the Apostle tells us 1 Cor. 10. 4. They drank of the rock that followed them and that rock was Christ The rock typisied Christ and the water of the rock of which they and their cattel drank typed out the blood of Christ our spiritual drink 3. From the cup in the Lords Supper Why is the cup added to the bread Is it not to let us know that Jesus Christ is spiritual drink as well as our spiritual bread 4. From the resemblance of the vine Our Saviour John 15. is compared to a vine Why to a vine 1. To shew the great mystery of the union of all the spiritual branches with him the root 2. To signifie that he is our spiritual drink The vine doth yield wine which is drink for the body the Lord Jesus Christ doth yield spiritual drink for all those that are his members He is the wine of God as well as the bread of God II. Quae Analogia The Analogy stands in foure things There are four properties of drink distinct from meat 1. Drink is for refreshing and cooling When the body is hot by labour or by sicknesse or travel drink doth coole and refresh it The heart panteth after the water-brooks Psalm 42. 1. The chased Hart when he is heated with hunting makes to the river and by drinking is refreshed The sweating Traveller goes to the spring and cooles himselfe by drinking of the streaming waters The blood of Jesus Christ is of a very refreshing and cooling nature When the soul is heated with temptations parched with the fiery wrath of God in the conscience when it lies sweating and sweltring under guilt one draught of Christs blood taken down by faith yea one drop of it sensibly falling upon it doth cool and refresh it again Hence he is also compared to the rivers of water in dry places Is 23. 2. Hence is that invitation Mat. 11. 28 I wil● give you rest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I will give you refreshment so 't is translated Phil. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nothing indeed can coole the parched soule but Christs blood And this will do it abundantly when 't is quite melted with wrath and burnt up with anguish 2. Drink cleanseth the body The inward parts are washed and purified as well as refreshed As the running water cleanseth the channel and carries away rubbish and filth so drink seasonably and