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A94353 Elijah's mantle: or, The remaines of that late worthy and faithful servant of Jesus Christ, Mr. John Tillinghast. Viz. I. The conformity of a saint to the will of God. On Act. 21.14. II. The will of God and Christ concerning sinners. On Gal. 1.4. III. No condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus. On Rom. 8.1. IV. Christs love to his owne. On Joh. 13.1. V. True gospel humiliation. On Zach. 12.10. VI. The most effectual means to kill and subdue sin. On 1 Joh. 2.2 VII. The advocateship of Jesus Christ, a great ground of saints comfort and support under sins and infirmities. On 1 Joh. 2.2. VIII. The only way for saints to be delivered from the errors and evils of the times. On 1 Tim. 6.11. IX. Of the Old Covenant, from Gal. 4.30. being so farre as the author had proceeded, in a treatise of the two covenants, before his death. Published by his owne notes. Tillinghast, John, 1604-1655.; Manning, John, d. 1694. 1658 (1658) Wing T1172; Thomason E1557_1; ESTC R203796 263,858 498

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in Christ and another man ibid. Use 2. How blessed is the condition of every one that hath interest in Christ ibid. Use 3. Then how great a sinne and how much below their condition is un●●leef in the people of God p. 112 Vse 4. This casts many persons and brings most men under condemnation ibid. Vse 5. This is comfort to the Saints against the guilt of all sin whatsoever p. 114 Serm. II. Doct. That our freedome from Condemnation comes from our in-being in Jesus Christ p. 115 That Saints have in-being in Christ proved p. 115. to 118 What in-being in Christ Saints have shewed p. 119 120 That by in-being in Christ Saints are freed from Condemnation proved p. 121 122 Object But I fear I have no in-being in Christ for surely had I in-being in Christ I should grow and thrive more than I doe c. answered p. 123 Object But my doubt is not so much about Gifts as Grace I doe not finde my self to grow in grace and this begets all my fears answered p. 124 125 Object But I doe not only finde a want of growth in grace but I clearly finde a declining in grace both in root and branches c. answered p. 126 Vse This shews us the glorious priviledges of all those that have in-being in Christ they are freed from condemnation p. 127 Serm. III. What is meant by Flesh and what by Spirit shewed in the general p. 130. to 133. in particular p. 133. to 136 What is meant by Legal walking shewed p. 137. to 140 When a mans walk may bee said to bee such a pure Legal walking or a walking after the Law as it is a Covenant of works shewed p. 140. to 145 Serm. IV. Why Legal walking is called walking after the flesh shewed p. 147 to 150 That those persons who are freed from Condemnation doe not walk legally or after the flesh shewed p. 150. to 152 An Objection answered p. 153 154 Vse 1. This discovers to us that there are abundance of rotten-hearted Professors in the World p. 155. to 158 Vse 2. By this we may also take a scantling of our actions as well as our persons p. 159. to 161 Vse 3. How sad and pittiful is the condition of Legal walkers they walk after the flesh p. 162 Serm. V. What Gospel-walking is shewed p. 164. to 166 That the Moral Law in Gospel-times is a rule to Beleevers proved by eight Arguments p. 167. to 172 That it is a rule only as it is in the hands of Christ proved by several particulars p. 172. to 174 Quest But how or in what way are wee to conceive of the Law as it comes in the hands of Christ answered p. 174. to 178 That to yeeld obedience to the Law as it is in the hands of Christ is Gospel-walking proved p. 178 179 Two great mistakes corrected p. 180 181 Serm. VI. When a mans walk may be said to be a Gospel walk or a walking after the Gospel p. 182 What is the Gospel Principle p. 183 Quest How shall I know whether the Spirit is the principle of my obedience answered p. 184 What are Gospel Motives p. 185. to 193 What are Gospel ends p. 193. to 201 Why Gospel walking is called walking after the Spirit p. 201 202 That all those that are freed from Condemnation walk after the Gospel p. 203 204 Serm. VII Vse 1. Hence we may learn the excellency of a Gospel walk p. 205 206 Vse 2. This shews us why there is such a mystery in Gospel walking that a meer Natural man cannot conceive what manner of walk a Gospel walk is p. 207. to 209 Vse 3. This truth it a touch-stone to try mens persons and actions by p. 210 Vse 4. Hence let us learn not to put too much in any outward forme p. 211 212 Quest But when may a man bee said to put too much in an outward form answered p. 213. to 218 Vse 5. Then you which are Gospel Saints follow the Spirit ibid. Quest But how shall I come to this to follow the Spirit answered p. 219 Quest But put the case the Spirit of God goes before me and I doe not know the same how shall I come to know it answered p. 220 221 4 Christs love to his owne On Joh. 13.1 The Text opened p. 222 223 Doct. Christs love to his owne is a choyse and an everlasting love p. 224 Who are meant by Christs owne ibid In what respects Beleevers are called Christs owne p. 225. to 231 That Christ hath a love to his own proved p. 232 That this love of Christ to his owne is a choyse and an everlasting love p. 233 234 The Application 1 Christ will not see his owne want p. 234 2 Let wicked men take heed how they wrong Beleevers p. 235 3 Let not Saints injure one another ibid. The second part of the Application 1 A Saint can never fall from the love of Christ p. 236 2 How blessed is the condition of the poorest Beleever ibid. 3 How then doe the Saints injure Jesus Christ c. ibid. 4 Take heed of sinning against this love p. 237 5 Serve God freely and without fear ibid. 6 Labour to get a portion of this love ibid. 5 True Gospel Humiliation On Zach. 12.10 The Text opened p. 240 to 251 Obs 1. That the pouring out of the Spirit upon any soul is the proper and peculiar work of God p. 252 Obs 2. In the last day 's the pouring out of the Spirit shall be very general p. 253 Obs 3. All grace is from the Spirit of God the spirit of grace ibid. Obs 4. The gift of the Spirit is the gift of Free Grace p. 254 Obs 5. One maine and special work that the Spirit of God puts souls upon where it is is the work of Supplication or Prayer ibid. Obs 6. In the last dayes there shall bee a greater pouring forth of the Spirit than or dinary p. 255 Obs 7. The sins of Beleevers doe pierce Jesus Christ p. 256 Obs 8. Christ must be looked upon as pierced by us before we can mourn ibid. Obs 9. When Christ is looked upon as pierced by us then we shall mourn ibid. Obs 10. That mourning which ariseth from the beholding of a pierced Christ is a very bitter and grievous mourning ibid. Obs 11. None can thus look upon Christ or mourn for him but only those upon whom God pours his Spirit ibid. Obs True Gospel Humiliation doth arise from a looking upon a pierced Christ ibid. That it doth not arise from any other thing and doth from this proved p. 257 What manner of looking upon Christ this is p. 258 How this looking upon Christ as pierced for sin begets this true Gospel Humiliation p. 260. to 264 6 The most effectual means to kill and subdue Sin On 1 Joh. 2.2 The Text opened p. 265 Obs 1. That the end of Gospel revelation is to keep men from sin p. 266 That this must needs be the end of Gospel
is usual in Scripture-language to give the name of Flesh to the one and Spirit to the other The Law is called Flesh Rom. 4.1 compared with 2. What shall wee say then that Abraham our Father as pertaining to the Flesh hath found for if Abraham were justified by works hee hath whereof to glory but not before God Phil. 3.4 Though I might also have confidence in the flesh if any other man thinketh that hee hath whereof he might trust in the flesh I more Comp. with the 6. v. concerning zeal persecuting the Church touching the righteousnesse which is in the Law blamelesse The Gospel is called a Spirit 2 Cor. 3.6 Who also hath made us able Ministers of the New Testament not of the letter but of the Spirit Both are together under these names or titles Gal. 3.2 3. This onely would I learn of you received yee the Spirit by the works of the Law or by the hearing of faith Are yee so foolish having begun in the Spirit are yee now made perfect by the flesh What hee calls works of the Law and hearing of faith in vers 2. hee calls Flesh and Spirit in the third Again the old man is called Flesh Gal. 5.19 Now the works of the Flesh are manifest which are these adultery fornication uncleanness lasciviousnesse c. compared with Rom. 6.6 Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might bee destroyed that henceforth wee should not serve sin The new man is called Spirit Ezek. 36.26 A new heart also will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you c. both together are under these names Rom. 7. last So then with the minde I my selfe serve the Law of God but with the Flesh the Law of sin Gal. 5.17 For the Flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the Flesh Matth. ●6 41 The spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak Now that there is good reason why wee should take both these and not one to hee here meant I think the scope shews us for the Apostle having spoken of both these things in the former Chapter and proceeding onwards to a glorious triumph in this hee takes the rise of this triumph from the consideration of the premises and that of both of them for one alone as may by good reason be made to appear had not been a sufficient bottome for such a triumph as if hee should say These things being so that through Jesus Christ as hath been cleared wee are delivered from the dominion of the Law and also from the tyranny of the old man in us there being now no longer any reigning Law over us nor reigning old man in us I therefore do conclude That there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus there being no enemy that can do it the Law without and the old man within which onely were able to do it having now no condemning power over them which persons that hee might give an infallible note and character of hee still keeping the scope describes them to bee such Who walke not after the flesh but after the spirit i.e. They are such persons who being by Christ set free from the Dominion of the Law and Tyranny of the old man do not walk after the one or the other and on the other side being by Christ brought under the power of the Gospel and regiment of the new man they do now walk as becomes in some measure Gospel Saints and new creatures These things being laid down and premised wee are to understand the words thus Walking after the Flesh i.e. Either first Legal walking to walk after or according to the Law Or secondly Corrupt walking i. e. to bee wholly and constantly swayed ruled or lead by the principles dictates or motions of the old man or unregenerate part Walking after the Spirit i.e. Either first Gospel-walking to walk after or according to the Gospel of Jesus Christ Or secondly Renewed walking to walk according to the rule principle motions and dictates of the new man or regenerate part in a Saint Now in saying that these two are to be understood by Flesh and Spirit I do not exclude any of those laid down in the general explication of the words no I do think that by Flesh the Apostle may mean all those viz. mans wisdome reason understanding outward priviledges c. and the contrary to these by Spirit But I name these two onely with their contraries because I think that although the other are included in Flesh and Spirit as general termes yet here these are chiefly intended being most agreeable to the Apostles scope and what hee had said in the former Chapter which gives rise to this verse I shall therefore begin with the words as they lye in the first sense to bee understood of Legal and Gospel-walking and so wee have in them two Propositions 1 Legal-walking is walking according to the Flesh 2 Gospel-walking is walking according to the Spirit 1 Legal-walking is walking according to the Flesh In the opening of this I shall shew 1 What I mean by Legal-walking or what it is to walk Legally 2 When a mans walk may bee said to bee such that is a pure Legal-walk 3 Why Legal-walking is called Flesh or walking according to the Flesh 4 That those persons who are freed from condemnation for such our Text imports do not walk Legally or after the Flesh in this sense 5 Answer an Objection and Lastly conclude with Application Of the first viz. What I mean by Legal-walking or what it is for a man or woman to walk legally Answ Legal-walking in the sense wee are now to speak to it is this To make the Law as the same is a Covenant of works the rule of our lives and actions and the alone touchstone to try our conditions by To walke after the Law or according to the Law as the Law is a Covenant of works that is Legal-walking That so wee are to understand here I prove thus because Legal-walking is here called Flesh and the Law is no where in Scripture called Flesh but as the same is considered under this notion as it is a Covenant of works If you take the Law in its self that is for the matter of it the substance of those things the Law requires so the Apostle saith the contrary of the Law Rom. 7.14 The Law is spiritual the matter or substance of the Law is spiritual injoyning spiritual duties requiring spiritual performance and designing to make the creature spiritual so that the Law in its selfe is not Flesh but rather it is a spiritual and an everlasting rule of righteousness But now look upon the Law whensoever it is spoken of under this notion as it is the old Covenant or a Covenant of works and then it is called Flesh I will give you but a few places in Gal. 3.2 3. before quoted when the Galathians were gone from the Gospel to the Law
Grace say to him goe but he goes come but he comes doe this avoyd that but he doth the one and avoyds the other The Law doth not put such a Principle of ingenuity in a man and therefore persons under the same one day they are threatned another day they feele the Whip and Rod for their sins another while they resolve vow and covenant they will sin no more and yet still they goe in the old track they sin and vow and vow and sin and all because there is not a spiritual ingenuity wrought in them as Grace works in all those that hear and receive the same but now Grace that makes a man so ingenuous that considering what God hath done for poore Sinners what Christ hath suffered to take away sin how free and willing God is to receive him make him a Son and Heir here give him Heaven and glory hereafter he would not now lye swilling and sweltering in his old sins and lusts though hee might the Soul needs not now to vow and covenant a twelve month together against such and such sins it is addicted unto no but it hears the voyce of Gods grace telling it what Christ hath done for it how willing God is to pardon all his sins and bidding it doe this avoyd that and presently it is made inclinable to obey the voyce of Gods grace what saith Paul Rom. 6.1 Shall we sin because grave doth abound no God forbid we have more ingenuity in us than to doe thus because God loves us and is willing to pardon cur sins here and to glorifie us hereafter shall we therefore doe what we can to grieve him to offend and trouble him no God forbid we are more ingenuous than so nay we cannot doe it our very hearts are against it and our souls hate and abhorre the thoughts of it we would not for a world bee found to require the Lord thus So 2 Cor. 5.13 14 15. For whether we be besides our selves it is to God or whether we be sober it is for your Cause for the love of Christ constraineth us because we thus judge that if one dyed for all then were all dead and that he dyed for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him which dyed for them and rose again As to say whether we be mad or sober judge of us as you please yet have wee so much ingenuity as to judge thus that if Jesus Christ dyed for us we should now live to him if he came and purchased an everlasting life for us our ingenuity makes us reason that it is a fit thing that we should live this our temporal life to him and consecrate it wholly to his service What is the reason that many a poor Soul sits all the week long at the Ale-pot Sweares and Whores and yet now and then he vowes and resolves against such courses and yet cannot for his heart and bloud as we say leave them but the Law when hee hath done such things whips and stings him and this hardens him whereas did but such a poor Soul see that he is by Jesus Christ delivered from wrath to come freed from the Law Sin and Satan did but God let him to see the hope of his calling and what a happy and blessed estate hee is by Christ brought into there would bee such an ingenuity wrought within him that hee needs not vow and covenant to bee Drunk and Swear and Whore no more no but his heart would abhor to deal so basely and unworthily with a God so infinite rich in love and abounding in Grace and mercy towards him 2 Because the grace of God it hath more full and clear precepts to holinesse than the Law hath the Law that hath ten Commands but the grace of God that hath many hundred Spiritual commands wherein it injoynes spiritual obedience and newness of life and then the commands of grace they are as more so of a more spiritual nature whatsoever the Law commands Natures light teacheth and a man may by Natures light convince a man of these things but now the precepts of grace are spiritual and supernatural such as a Natural man by Natures light cannot perceive The precepts of grace are called the things of the Spirit l Cor. 2. Which the Natural man cannot perceive but they are foolishnesse unto him because they are spiritually discerned Where the grace of God is preached and received there doth the Spirit of God goe who is a teaching Spirit and teacheth the Soul infinite more commands and with more clearness and demonstration doth it discover truth than any Natural or Moral man by his Natural light or study of the Law can ever finde out the Law discovers to a man the outward actions of sin and forbids these but when grace comes with its precepts it makes discovery of the first risings motions stirrings and concupiscence of these things in the Soul and forbids these and hence by reason that the grace of God or the Doctrine of the Gospel for that I understand by the grace of God all along hath more full higher and more Spiritual instructions than any the Law hath makes further discoveries of sin than the Law barely considered can doe it comes to passe that it is the most effectual means of killing and subduing sin 3 Because there is a power in grace for the subduing and killing of sin The Apostle tells us 2 Cor. 3. that the Law it is a killing letter that is it is only a bare letter without any power bidding us to doe this and avoyd that but contributes no assistance to us yet tells us if wee doe not obey it we shall be damned and so it is a killing letter that is to us it kills us instead of killing our sins but now the Gospel gives life that doth not only command but giveth power to doe and so is a word of life So Heb. 12. hee calls the Law a voyce of words for the same reason because it did command and forbid things under the penalty of Death and Damnation and it saw the poor Creature to bee weak and altogether unable to doe either the one or the other and yet gave him no power at all and so was only a terrible voyce of words to him The Law as one saith it doth teach just as the Commandements written upon the walls doe a poor man comes in and reads them over and yet his heart is never the warmer never the more fit to obey any of them because he reads them there but now the Gospel on the grace of God that brings power along with it a poor Soul which before lived in sins and thought it impossible that ever hee should leave them or have them subdued now findes a power within him killing and subduing those sins of his hence it is called The power of God unto salvation Rom. 1.16 4 Because a Soul never comes to see sin in its proper colours until the grace
is reiterated over and over every new manifestation being as it were a new application 3 By Christs Advocateship Satan our enemy hath his mouth stopped above The Devil is busie in accusing of Saints but now Christ comes and saith hee Lord this is an enemy what hee speaks is false and hee speaks it out of malice Just as wee see it sometimes at Sessions or Assizes such a one comes and layes an accusation against such a one but in comes some Councellor that is very great and inward with the Judge and saith May it please you my Lord such a one is a very honest man I know him well and yonder is a base fellow that accuseth him out of spleen and what hee saith I will evidence to bee false and hereupon the man hath his mouth stopped Lastly What wee may learn hence as our duty 1 Come to Christ poor soul not withstanding all thy sins and infirmities Thou hast committed such and such sins against Christ and therefore art afraid to come to him Consider Christ is an Advocate on purpose for the comfort and incouragement of thy foul against sin the Apostle layes down Christs Advocateship here as a refuge against sin Come Christ will sue thee out a pardon I do not say that this is all Christ is an Advocate for to deliver from the guilt of sin no Christ is an Advocate too to plead for all grace for thee But I say this is one special end of Christs being an Advocate and the great end laid down here in the Text to secure thee from guilt The ability of Jesus Christ to save to the uttermost Heb. 7. is put upon this Office of being an Advocate Object O but I fear Christ doth not intercede for mee were I sure of that I should come Answ Hee intercedes for those that come and therefore come and thou mayest bee sure hee intercedes for thee 2 Doest thou finde at any time the Spirit inabling thee to poure out thy soul with groans here below then assuredly Christ prayes for thee above Object But though Christ intercede for mee yet will hee continue to intercede Will not my sin make him give over interceding Answ Hee intercede alwayes hee ever lives to make intercession it is the work as I may say hee lives in heaven to do it is his calling and Christ should bee out of his calling should hee not do it Intercession is as much his work in heaven as dying was on earth Object 3. But I eye my own salvation much in coming to Christ will hee intercede for such a comer Answ Hee intercedes for those that come to him for salvation Hee lives to make intercession for them 2 Duty Let us hold fast our profession Heb. 4.14 Seeing then that wee have a great High Priest that is passed into the Heavens Jesus the Son of God let us hold fast our profession And Chap. 10. vers 23. Let us hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering for he is faithful that promised Doth Christ own us above before his Father let us own him before men 3 Duty Let us love Christ more and minde his glory more Is his love such as that he here on earth did lay out himself for us and in Heaven hee is laying out himself for us Then let us love him more and minde his glory and his honour more 4 Duty Let us bee frequent in our addresses to God by Christ 1 Let us come with more boldness seeing wee have such a one to speak for us 2 Let us come with more confidence 5 And lastly Let us improve this Intercession of Christ First Improve it in all our wants Secondly In all our doubts and fears Thirdly In all our duties Fourthly In all our falls Fifthly In all our temptations Sixthly In the busling of all our corruptions And in it Let us improve first The continuance of it i.e. There is no time wherein Christ doth not intercede Secondly The perfection of it Thirdly The prevalency of it Fourthly The continual acceptance of it The onely way for Saints to bee delivered from the Errors and Evils of the Times IN Two SERMONS on 1 Tim. 6.11 But thou O man of God flee these things and follow after righteousness godliness faith love patience meekness IN the former verses the Apostle discovers and condemns the evil practices and opinions of sundry false reachers crept in amongst the Churches in his dayes In this hee warnes Timothy and in him all Christians for the words are not spoken to Timothy as a Minister onely but also as a Christian it being the duty of all Christians though of those in such place more especially to shun and avoid these men their principles and practices But thou O man of God flee these things which that they might do hee sets them about work of another nature Follow after righteousness godliness c. What is the meaning of this I shall not explain the several termes and things onely this learn they are all spiritual things and of another nature to those things the false teachers cryed up So that in general the meaning is Follow spiritual things Wouldest thou escape the Errors and Evills of these men Then do not as they do stand doting about empty questions but follow after pursue high and spiritual things make it thy work and business to minde and speak such things I shall speak only of the latter part of the words and of them only as they are a direction though more is in them given to Timothy and all beleevers how they may escape the Errors and Evills of false teachers Follow after righteousness Doct. The only and special way for a Saint to be delivered from the Errors and Evills of the Times hee lives in is to have his heart as much as may bee taken up with and his spirit exercised about high and spiritual things I shall prove this point from 1 Tim. 4. Where the Apostle having foretold the dangerous errors of the latter times vers 1.2 3. presently mindes Timothy of spiritual things as the onely preservatives against distempers of this nature Vers 7. and 12. Exercise thy self rather unto godliness Bee thou an example of the beleevers in word in conversation in charity in spirit in faith in purity 2 Tim. 2.22 But follow righteousnesse faith charity peace with them that call on the Lord out of a pure heart Having certified Timothy of the dangerous errors and fearful miscarriage of Hymenaeus and Philetus hee straightway gives him in charge to minde spiritual things as if hee had said Had Hymenaeus and Philetus laid aside their vain bablings and minded these things more they would never have miscarried as they have done So 2 Tim. 3. Having foretold of those perillous times which should bee in the last dayes vers 1 2. and given Timothy to understand that some there were already abroad whose temper and manners were like them which in after times should arise yers 6 8. hee presently mindes
sin removed which brings under condemnation and another to have the being and acting of sin removed Paul had the guilt removed yet not the being or acting Rom. 7. 2 It is one thing to be under sin as sins captive another as sins servant Thou art under sin but is thy will against it The evil that thou doest doest thou hate and count it thy burden and hell desiring as earnestly the mortification as pardon of it thou art then not under sin as sins servant but onely as its captive as Paul was Rom. 7.24 and yet hee triumphs There is no condemnation Object O but were I freed from condemnation I should have more life in Duties Ordinances than I have Answ 1. There is a difference betwixt the having of life and the feeling of it do not say because thou doest not feel life therefore thou hast none 2 Thy feeling the contrary to wit a want of life argues thou hast it for a dead man feels nothing Use 1. See then what a vast difference there is betwixt the condition of one that hath interest in Christ and another mans the one is freed from condemnation the other is under it There is as much difference as is betwixt one man going up the gallowes to bee hanged and another going from the gallows with a pardon in his hand to the Court there to sit at the Princes Table 2 How blessed then is the condition of every soul interessed in Christ Such are freed from condemnation David Psal 32. saith Blessed is hee whose iniquities are forgiven Why because such a one is freed from condemnation take away the cause you remove the effects so take away sin and condemnation ceaseth the blessedness therefore lyes in this that such are freed from condemnation O who would not then seek an interest in Christ what Drunkard Swearer in this Congregation but would do it when the condition of such is so blessed A man when frantick or mad though condemned to dye yet hee thinks his condition as good as the best but when hee comes to himself and sees where hee is then hee cryes out O that I were in the condition of such a one and such a one So when men are mad after their lusts and besotted with them they think their condition good though under a sentence of condemnation but when such shall at the houre of death or judgement come to themselves and see where they are then shall they cry out O that I were in such a ones condition and such a ones Balaam when hee came to dye would dye the death of the righteous So when men come to dye O then that I were such a one whom if they could they would have hanged while they lived 3 Then how great a sin and how much below their condition is unbeleef in the people of God Soul hath Christ freed thee from condemnation and wilt thou distrust him for salvation And doth Christ say as much to thee and wilt thou by unbeleefe give Christ the lye Deale not thus O soule by thy loving Saviour 4 This casts many persons and brings most men in the Countries Towns and Parishes of the world under condemnation Why they have not interest in Christ and such and onely such are freed therefore all others are under it still 1 Art thou one who livest and walkest in prophane courses a Drunkard Swearer unclean person c. thou art one cast by this doctrine for as yet thou hast not interest in Christ 1 Joh. 1.6 If wee say that wee have fellowship with him and walke in darkness wee lye and do not the truth If such have not fellowship with Christ then no actual interest in him communion flows from union if it bee a lye to say they have communion much more to say they have actual interest and consequently union 2 Art thou a moral man and restest here thou also hast as yet no interest in Christ Heathens many of them did excel in Morality yet knew not Christ The Scribes and Pharisees came behinde none of our Moralists yet hear what Christ saith to them Matth. 5.20 For I say unto you that except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees yee shall in no case enter into the Kingdome of Heaven 3 Art thou a Religious man or an outward Professor resting here in thy outward Profession and the performance of some external duties Stand thou by too thou hast not as yet interest in Christ Rom. 2.28 29. For hee is not a Jew which is one outwardly neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh but hee is a Jew which is one inwardly and circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit and not in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God Object But though I have not interest in Christ is there no hope for a soule in this condition Answ No continuing in it but mistake not hope there is thou mayest yet come to Christ and so come out of it and so although for the present thou hast not interest in Christ yet possibly coming to Christ thou mayest have it and then there is hope for thee I say soul which soever of these conditions is thine there is hope thou mayest come to Christ and in this way there is hope for thee Art thou a prophane sinner a persecutor read 1 Tim. 1.15 This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners of whom I am chief Mark 3.28 Verily I say unto you All sins shall bee forgiven unto the sons of men and blasphemies wherewithsoever they shall blaspheme Art thou a moral man so was Nicodemus Joh. 3. Art thou an outward professor only and so an hypocrite indeed read Isa 65. vers 2. with 5. I have spread out my hands all the day unto a rebellious people which walketh in a way which was not good after their own thoughts which say Stand by thy self come not near to mee for I am holier than thou these are a smoak in my nose a fire that burneth all the day 5 And lastly This is comfort to the Saints against the guilt of all sin whatsoever Are souls in Christ freed from condemnation Then poor soul thy sins shall never condemn thee they may rob thee of thy peace and comfort here but shall never of thy Crown and glory hereafter they may bring corrections upon thee but never condemnation for thou art freed from that Amen SERMON II. ROM 8.1 There is therefore now no Condemnation THree Observations I have raised from these words 1 That it is a Saints priviledge to be freed from Condemnation 2 This comes from our in-being in Christ 3 Those who are freed from Condemnation are such who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit I handled the First the last day now for the Second viz. Doct. That our freedome from Condemnation comes from our in-being in Jesus Christ In the
the performance of some external duties stand thou by too thou hast not in-being in Christ Rom. 2.28 29. For hee is not a Jew which is one outwardly neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh but hee is a Jew which is one inwardly and circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit and not in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God Object But though I have not in-being in Christ Is there no hope for a soul in this condition Answ No there is no hope for thee in this condition that is continuing in this condition but mistake not there is hope thou mayest yet come to Christ and so come out of this condition and so though for the present thou hast not in-being in Christ yet possibly by coming to Christ thou mayest have it and then there is hope for thee I say Soul which soever of these conditions is thine there is hope thou mayest come to Christ and then there is hope Art thou a prophane sinner read 1 Tim. 1.15 Mark 3.28 Art thou a persecutor so was Paul Art thou a moral man so was Nicodemus Art thou an outward professor onely and so an hypocrite indeed read Isa 65. vers 2. compared with the 5. Therefore I say poor soul though there is no hope for thee in this condition thou hast not at present in-being in Christ and so art under condemnation yet hope there is thou mayest come out of it and bee freed from condemnation What Legal walking is SERMON III. Rom. 8.1 Who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit HAving already spoken from this Text to the Saints priviledges viz. Freedome from condemnation and the rise thereof viz. In-being in Christ I now come to the last and principal thing contained in the words and that which moved mee to choose them for the subject of my Discourse having hastened over the other thing that I might come to this and that is the distinguishing character of those persons who enjoy this priviledge to bee freed from condemnation and that is Walking not after the flesh but after the Spirit Not a man nor woman in the world hath any right unto or do enjoy this blessed priviledge but those who have this character upon them of walking not after the flesh but after the Spirit There is abundance more in these words than at the first blush there seems to bee in them the marrow and sweetness of these words lyes in the breaking of the bone or in the explication of the termes what is meant by FLESH and what by SPIRIT FLESH and SPIRIT are very general termes and of a large extent in holy Scripture taking in betwixt them both all the motions actions thoughts inclinations wisdome reasoning doing of man-kinde all being either flesh or spirit there is not a thought nor an inclination nor a reasoning nor an action good or bad but it is one of these two either Flesh or Spirit In which large extent FLESH comprehends whatsoever is contrary unto or is not of the Spirit of God Whatsoever thought reasoning or action whether it be a good moral action or an evill sinful action that is contrary unto that is not of springs not from the Spirit of God that is Flesh Again SPIRIT comprehends whatsoever is contrary unto and is not of the Flesh Whatsoever imaginations inclinations wisdome reasoning righteousness that is contrary unto that is not of the Flesh that is Spirit Or as a Godly man Mr. Cradocke upon Rom. 8.4 as it seems to mee doth better express it though in substance the same with what is spoken thus Flesh saith hee that takes in whatsoever is of old Adam Spirit whatsoever is of new Adam These two Adams being as hee saith the two roots beginnings beings or principles from whence all the motions proceedings actions wisdome righteousnesses of mankinde do flow and further as hee saith as two springs in a hill do convey their streams to two Rivers so these are the springs from whence arise all the thoughts purposes reasonings doings of mankinde good or bad all coming from one of these two which two were the onely publick persons that ever were in the world either Adam in Paradise natural Adam or the Lord Jesus Christ the spiritual Adam So that by Flesh is meant whatsoever is or comes of old Adam whether that natural or moral good which hee had before his fall some reliques of which wee partake of or that sin which hee drew upon himself and all his by the fall all is but Flesh well his natural moral wisdome and righteousness as his sin and unrighteousness is but Flesh so that all the thoughts intents reasonings wisdome doings of old Adam whether natural moral or sinfull are flesh and comprehended under the word Flesh By Spirit is meant whatsoever comes and springs from the new Adam Jesus Christ or the Spirit of Christ within what ever motion purpose thought inclination wisdome reasoning righteousness doing comes from Christ grows upon the root of Jesse that is Spirit Onely here I would exclude from Flesh and Spirit in the general sense it hath been laid down all those motions and actions which are purely natural having neither any thing of Religion nor sin in them but are in their own proper nature neither good nor evill as for mee to think or resolve whether I will do such a thing to day or to morrow there being nothing which doth necessitate or require mee to do it now rather than then or then than now to resolve whether I wil sit or stand go out of the door or stay within these and such like motions and actions in a simple consideration have neither good nor evill in them and therefore are not in the sense of the Apostle here used either Flesh or Spirit The upshot or conclusion of the matter in general is this To walk after the flesh is when a mans thoughts motions reasonings his wisdome righteousness his wayes proceedings practises run all in the very path and footsteps of old Adam either Adam in Paradise or faln Adam And to walk after the Spirit is when all these go in the path-way or steps of the new Adam Jesus Christ Thus much in the general now for a more particular inquiry into the meaning of these words of FLESH and SPIRIT I do conceive they have some reference unto what the Apostle had discoursed of in the foregoing Chapter Two things hee had been speaking of first Of the Law and Gospel shewing a beleevers liberation or freedome from the one and present station by vertue of Christs death and his marriage to Christ under the other Secondly Of the old and new man shewing that great and continual conflict that is betwixt these two in every beleever and the happy victory which beleevers in the end through the strength of Christ get over the old man the discourse of which hee continues to the very end of the Chapter Now as touching either of these it
his tears his fastings his humiliations his lamentations his leaving of sin and doing of good stands engaged as it were to give him Heaven and Salvation he then walks legally when the course and stream of his life and actions runs this way that all his prayers humiliations resolutions covenants resisting of sin c. is to this very end that God hereby would be moved to pardon his sins justifie him give him Heaven and eternal life which had hee not some hope to procure by these things hee would neither pray nor hear nor mourn for sin nor doe any thing else he then most certainly walks legally after the flesh 3 When a man in his obedience hath altogether respect to the external or outward part of the Law contenting himself if that be but done never looking to the internal or spiritual part thereof his walking is legal and after the flesh In this manner did the Scribes and Pharisees those great Legalists apply themselves to the keeping of the Law by a litteral observance of what it required accounting it kept when the external works which the Law required should be done was performed or the outward act of sin shunned which the Law willed them to forbear Upon which ground according to the principles and practices of the Pharisees Paul saith of himself that hee whilst hee continued a Pharisee was touching the righteousness of the Law blameless Phil. 3.6 upon this ground likewise doe the Papists assert their Opus operatum the work done as sufficient to Justification and Salvation never regarding how the same is done Now whensoever a man in Prayer hearing the Word or any other Duty hath only respect to the external part contenting himself with that if that bee done never looking to the spiritual performance thereof he walks legally 4 When a man blesseth himself in his obedience and pronounceth himself happy because of that he walks legally Thus Paul whilst hee was a Pharisee did blesse himself in his way Rom. 7.9 I was alive without the law once i. e. so long as I gave up my self to an outward observance of the law being without the law in respect of the true spiritual meaning thereof I was alive in my owne conceit I thought all was well with me and that I was a happy man Thus likewise the proud Pharisee Luke 18.11 12. The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself God I thank thee that I am not as other men are extortioners unjust adulterers or even as this Publican I fast twice in the week I give tithes of all that I possesse how doth hee blesse himself in his way of works and crow it over the poor Publican because hee was a Sinner and had no works When therefore a man blesseth himself in his obedience and thinks himself some body pronouncing himself happy because of this as many men will say I thank God all is well with me I have no doubt about my Salvation I am not nor never was I a Drunkard or Swearer c. I was never given to cheat or cousen as others my Neighbours will doe but I pray and read good Books and hear good Sermons c. a man then walks legally after the flesh 5 When a man performes his obedience ever and altogether in his owne strength the law as a covenant of works it calls for obedience but it gives a man no strength but what he hath of his owne to doe it Hence it is called a voyce of words Heb. 12. and a killing letter 2 Cor. 3. because it requires obedience under penalty of death and knowes the creature hath no strength to obey and yet gives him none and so by its very command it kills all those that are under it Now when a man sets himself to keep the law in his owne strength neither finding nor knowing nor feeling nor looking after nor desiring any other strength to enable him to doe his duty then his owne he then walks legally after the Flesh and all his obedience is obedience to a covenant of works Thus much of the Second particular what remaines I leave unto the next opportunity Why Legal walking is walking after the Flesh SERMON IV. Rom. 8.1 Who walk not after the flesh WEe are now upon the Character of those Persons who are freed from Condemnation they are such who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit Flesh and Spirit in this place by the acception of the termes in other places and the consideration of the scope of the Apostle in this are as I told you the last day to be understood either of the Law and the Gospel or the old and new man Walking after the flesh that is either legal walking or walking after the corrupt principles of the old man Walking after the Spirit that is either Gospel walking or walking after the renewed principle of the new man I began with the words in the first acceptation as they hold forth Legal and Gospel walking and so I laid downe these Propositions viz That Legal walking is walking after the flesh Gospel walking is walking after the Spirit Concerning the first I have shewed 1 What I mean by Legal walking 2 When a man's walk is a Legal walk I now proceed to the third 3 Why Legal walking is called walking after the flesh Ans 1. Because there is nothing of the Spirit of God that goes along with a legal walk The Spirit was not given by the Covenant of works and therefore so long as a man walks in the way of that Covenant there is nothing of the Spirit of God that goes along with him Now we usually call that flesh that hath not Spirit in it take a man when he is dead wee say hee is flesh nothing but flesh because the Soul and Spirit is gone so take a legal Walker hee is flesh his walking is flesh because there is nothing of the Spirit of God in him nor his walking hee praies but there is nothing of the Spirit of God in his prayers and therefore though hee pray dayes and weeks and months together all is but flesh he mourns and humbles himself for sin resolves vowes and strives against it but doing all this in a legal manner there is nothing of the Spirit of God in all this and so all is but flesh 2 Because Legal walking is walking in the way of Nature the Covenant of works was given to Adam as out common person and sois in the Nature of every man Rom. 2.14 15. For when the Gentiles which have not the law doe by nature the things contained in the law these having not the law are a law unto themselves which shew the work of the law written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witness and their thoughts the meane while accusing or else excusing one another Now in Scripture phrase Nature is called flesh Joh. 3.6 That which is borne of the flesh is flesh i.e. that which is borne of meer Nature can be no more but
and worke and worke but to beleeve on Christ who hath purchased salvation for poor sinners and gives it out freely without any merit or desert of theirs they make this use of it to throw off all If God will save them which is all they have a care for they will do nothing now for God or the glory of God As it is with young trees in the transplanting of them usually most of them wither and come to nothing So take a company of Legal walkers and go about to transplant them bring them from the Law to the Gospel and there are but few of them that will not miscarry and come to nothing in the removing When the Law is gone and the fear of Hell is off their hearts they will do nothing for the love of God or the glory of God I have read of a man that was so exact in duty that hee would never go forth in the morning but hee would first go to prayer by himself and when hee had prayed hee would say to himself Now Devil do thy worst and all the day long would haunt the Ale-houses Taverns and Whore-houses and come home again at night and go to pray Take the generation of Professors throughout the world and their Religion is such a kinde of Religion as this mans was though I will not say they are so prophane as hee every legal conscience is not so large yet usually they go on in a track of duties They will serve God morning and evening and if this bee done though the world and Devil have their hearts all the day besides yet they thinke all is well and that by their morning and evening prayers they make God amends for all their sin their pride their worldlinesse wantonnesse uncleannesse all the day besides There are some Papists they say that alwayes carry a Crucifix about with them and when they have been drunk or unclean or blasphemed God c. Their manner is to take their Crucifix and kiss that and howle over it a while and when they have so done they will return to their sin again So there are many Professors who though they have not their Crucifixes yet somewhat they have which serves them instead thereof which ordinarily is some outward duty and when they have committed any sin they run to their duty and there lick themselves whole and having so done back from their duty to their sin again You therefore that are Professors look to your selves I say look to your selves for as a godly man saith there are many hundred Professors which bear forth a broad profession and make a glorious shew in the eyes of the world who will bee found to bee sons of Ishmael at the last day bare Legal Professors And with this kinde of Profession a man may and many there are which do go bravely through the world with top and top gallant up carrying the applause of Town and Country where they dwell for men of excelling godliness and honesty and yet bee strangers to Jesus Christ and true Gospel-holiness for all this In good earnest therefore look to your selves Professors and consider seriously the ground you stand upon whether it bee Legal or Gospel-ground lest after you have travelled many miles as you come heaven-ward you are found to be nearer hell then when you first set out Use 2. By this wee may also take a scantling of our actions as well as our persons Wee may know what they are and what worth they have in them To know the worth of our actions wee are not to judge by the outward plausibleness of them but the principle whence they flow if the principle bee a Gospel-principle though the action bee ever so poor weake and mean in it self and despicable in the eyes of others yet the action is good and accepted of God If the Law bee the principle though the action bee ever so glorious yet it is Flesh and abominable to God Why doth the Apostle Heb. 11. so highly commend the works of the godly Patriarchs many of which for the outward act were poor and low and mean but because the principle whence they did flow was a Gospel-principle they sprang from faith the worthiness of the principle makes the action though ever so poor and low in it self worthy And why are the howlings of Cain the tears of Esau the humiliations of Ahab the confessions and repentance of Judas so branded in Scripture but because the principle whence they did flow was Legal the principle being Flesh though ever so shining and glorious otherwise to bee filthy and abominable to God The Apostle tells us Rom. 8. Those that are in the flesh cannot please God So let mee say There is never an action which is an action of the Flesh as every pure Legal action is that either is or can be pleasing to God Yea the actions of Saints themselves having Flesh in them would bee abhorring to God did not Christ the High Priest of the Saints seperate between the precious and the vile in their actions and present onely the precious to his Father So displeasing is Flesh to God that even the actions of those whom hee loves as the apple of his eye would bee a stinking smell to him were there any thing of Flesh in them when they come before him Why is it said of Paul at his conversion Behold hee prayeth why then hee prayed before hee was a Pharisee and the Pharisees used to make long prayers they made a trade of praying why because though hee prayed before yet so long as hee was a Pharisee and walked Legally all his praying was but a little of the Flesh and God will not own it by the name of praying But now when there was a beam of Gospel-light darted into his soul and a little of the Spirit of God in his prayer God streightway owns it Behold hee prayeth Paul made many prayers before whilst hee was a Legalist and God will not own one of them and now he makes but one with a little of the Spirit and God streightway owns that So there is many a man and woman that sayes over a prayer sometimes and thinks God indebted to him when alas poor soul when the reckoning day comes wherein hee expects his reward for his worke hee shall finde to his woe that God will not owne any of these his prayers but God will say to him as to those hypocritical fasters the Prophet speaks of When yee fasted fasted yee at all to mee even to mee saith the Lord So will God say Man woman thou hast prayed but didst thou pray to mee at all to mee were not all thy prayers because thou wast afraid of hell or because thy conscience whipped thee to it or thou hadst a design hereby to get credit amongst thy friends and neighbours c. Is this praying to mee Or will God say to them as Christ said to those Mat. 7. who come to him with Lord Lord in their mouthes wee have
prophesied in thy Name wee have done thus and thus for thee but what saith Christ Depart from mee I know you not yee workers of iniquity So it may bee thou wilt come one day with thy crowd of Legal works to Christ Lord behold at such a time I prayed at such a time did such a duty at another time resisted such a sin Away will Christ say I know you not I know none of your works neither will I own them yee did nothing for mee your works are works of iniquity and you are workers of iniquity and therefore away bee gone here is no room for you nor your works Depart from mee yee workers of iniquity How came it about that the poor Publican who could speak but one word was accepted whereas the proud Pharisee which made a long Oration of his own doing worth and excellency was sent going as hee came but onely hence The poor Publican though hee could speak but one word yet it was a Gospel-word and so there was Spirit in it the proud Pharisee though hee spake many words yet all were Legal and so but Flesh Now there may bee many a poor soul in the world who like the poor Publican when hee comes to a duty can hardly speak ten words to God yet because there is in that little he speaks somewhat of the Gospel and Spirit it therefore is well-pleasing to God and again there are others who can come and make a brave flourish for an hour two or three houres together and yet all being but the fruit of the Law or natural abilities both which are Flesh is odious to God It concerns us therfore to look to our actions whether the root or rise of what wee do be the Law or Gospel Flesh or Spirit Use 3. and last How sad and pitiful is the condition of Legal walkers they walke after the Flesh and what is the doom of Flesh Why this Flesh and blood shall not inherit the Kingdome of God They walk after the Flesh and so are under condemnation as there is no condemnation to those who walk after the Spirit so on the other side most certainly there is to those who walke after the Flesh It is a peremptory sentence of Paul Row 8. If yee live after the Flesh yee shall dye As a condemned Theef or Traytor hath no way but to the Gallows so there is no way with the Fleshly walker hee who lives and dyes such a one but to Hell Quest But put case I have heen a Legal Fleshly walker is there no hope for such Answ Yes renouncing the way of the Law and imbracing the Gospel renouncing thine own righteousness and closing with Christs Paul was as great a Legalist as any who for his zeale to that way persecuted the Churches of God and the way of the Gospel yet saith hee I obtained mercy and so mayest thou O make a close with Christ this day poor soul and then thy disobedience and the sin of thy Legal obedience all shall bee done away and thou shalt bee blessed for ever Amen What Gospel walking is SERMON V. Rom. 8.1 Who walk not after the flesh but after the Sprit THe Phrases here used of Walking after the Flesh and after the Spirit I told you the last day that they hold forth one of these two either 1 Walking after the Law or after the Gospel Or 2 Walking after the old or new man I have begun with the words in the first sense as they hold forth Legal and Gospel-walking and so the Propositions I laid down were Legal walking is walking after the Flesh Gospel walking is walking after the Spirit I have spoken to the first Now I come to the second viz. Gospel walking is walking after the Spirit Here our first Question will bee Quest What Gospel walking is Answ Gospel walking is to yeeld obedience to the Commands of God as they are handed to us by Jesus Christ or To make the Law of God as it is the Law of Christ the rule of our lives and actions By Law I understand the Moral Law taking in the spiritual exposition thereof by Christ and his Apostles in the Gospel for those precepts to holiness that wee read of throughout the New Testament are but the spiritual exposition of the Moral Law as is clear from Matth. 5. where Christ himself in expounding the Moral Law layes down many Spiritual and Evangelical duties yea all the commands of the New Testament may bee summed up under these two heads Either loving God or our neighbour as our selves both which in the spirituality of the performance are required in the Moral Law as Christ teacheth Mat. 22.37 to the 41. The Moral Law is as it were the Text the Doctrine of Christ and the Apostles the explication and opening of it The Moral Law is the basis or foundation of all duties of holiness the teaching of Christ and the Apostles the structure or rather the compleating and filling up of the building So that by Law I do not understand another Law distinct in matter or substance from the Moral Law but the Moral Law it selfe for the matter and substance thereof Now the Moral Law comes under a double consideration either as it is the matter or substance of Moses's Law what Moses commanded and so the substance of the old Covenant or else as it is the matter and substance of Christs Law what Christ in the Gospel or new Covenant requires of Beleevers Hence in reference to the first part of the distinction it is frequently in Scripture called the Law of Moses beleevers are said not to bee under the same Rom. 6.14 For sin shall not have dominion over you for you are not under the Law but under grace Gal. 5.18 But if yee bee lead of the Spirit yee are not under the Law yea to bee dead to it and delivered from it Rom. 7.4.16 Wherefore my brethren yee are also become dead to the Law by the body of Christ c. but now wee are delivered from the Law c. it s said to gender to bondage Gal. 4.24 Which things are an Allegory for these are the two Covenants the one from the Mount Sinai which gendereth to bondage which is Agar In reference to the second it s called the Law of Christ Gal. 6.2 Bear yee one anothers burdens and so fulfill the Law of Christ Bearing one anothers burden is a spiritual duty which comes under the second Table of the Law of loving our neighbours as our selves and this is called a part of Christs Law Beleevers are said to bee under it 1 Cor. 9.21 To them that are without Law as without Law being not without Law to God but under the Law to Christ c. It is called a Law of liberty Jam. 2.12 So speake yee and so do as they that shall bee judged by the Law of liberty And the Apostle speaks plainly there of the Moral Law as from the verses above appears It is called the Royal
his hand if we look into Scripture it tells us three things concerning it 1 It came with bare commands It had commands Do this and live and these commands were bare commands commands without any life or power and therefore it is called a voyce of words Heb. 12. 2 It came with fearful threatnings and terrible denunciations of wrath to the disobedient to scare men from sin Gal. 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the Booke of the Law to do them 3 It came with alluring promises of life and salvation to the obedient Rom. 5. For Moses describeth the righteousnesse which is of the Law that the man which doth those things shall live by them Thus the Law came as it came in the hand of Moses and was the Rule of a Covenant of works but now as it comes in the hands of Christ and is our Gospel Rule I mean the Rule of Saints under the Gospel for to other men the Law still remains in force as it was given by Moses to it comes without either of these 1 It doth not come with bare commands as Moses his Law did it hath commands and more spiritual than the Law had in the hands of Moses but these are not bare commands commands without any life or power no but there is a power and efficacy that goes forth with every command of the Law as it is in the hands of Christ there is an exceeding aptness of power inabling the soul to do what it commands so that a poor soul receiving the Law from the hands of Christ is not left lame and dead unable to follow the voyce of the Law but it findes life and power coming in with the command It bids the soul pray and gives the Spirit to inable to cry Abba Father it bids it avoid evill and do good and inables it to do the one and the other Thus the soul is not left liveless and strengthless it doth not go about wishing and woulding O that I could obey O that I could keep the Law O that I could leave sin bee more holy c. and finde no strength to any of these no but it findes inward life and strength so that it no sooner hears the voyce of the Law but it findes some power to yeeld obedience to that voyce Thus I say though Christs Law as well as Moses's hath commands yet these are not bare commands a voyce of words but commands with power the word and the power going together 2 It doth not come with terrible threatnings and denunciations of wrath it doth not say Man Woman do this or thou art damned avoid that or thou art damned it hath no such language But the Law as it is in the hands of Christ it saith thus O thou beleeving soul here is work for thee I come to bid thee work thou must pray read and meditate of the word of God love God with all thy heart love thy neighbour as thy selfe do good to all as thou hast opportunity avoid all sin c. but I do not tell thee that put case thou failest either in neglecting any thing I command thee or doing any thing I forbid thee that thou shalt be damned I tell thee not so but know the contrary that though through weaknes and infirmity thou shouldest fail in the one or the other yet thou shalt never be damned damnation is gone Christ hath delivered thee from that thou shalt never bee damned But yet I say unto thee do as I bid thee because thy Father takes pleasure to see his childe which thou art dutiful and obedient and it will grieve him shouldest thou do otherwise yet however though thou failest which yet take heed of because of grieving thy Father yet know this thou shalt never bee damned my curse shall never light upon thee for it hath been already upon the head of Christ thy Surety who hath born it All therefore I have to say to thee is to shew thee what thou shouldest do and how thou shouldest walk but I have no curse for thee I cannot curse thee though I would 3 It doth not come with alluring promises of life and salvation to the obedient The Law in the hand of Christ it doth not come with a voyce Do this and live It doth not say Soul if thou wilt obey mee thou shalt have heaven But saith the Law thou poor sinner who hast closed with Christ know for certain Heaven is thine already salvation is sure to thee thou hadst the grant of this and it was made sure to thee by an unchangeable deed of gift from thy Father upon thy beleeving day and therefore should I promise thee this in case thou wouldest hearken to my voice I should promise thee nothing at all because I should promise thee no more than what thou hast already and none can ever deprive thee of for all this is thine yea as I cannot promise thee this in case thou shouldest obey mee so needest thou not fear losing of this if through thine own weakness or the prevalency of thy corruption thou shouldest fall and disobey mee But this is that I am thee Messenger of there is another viz. the Gospel which hath been before mee and assured thee heaven is thine but that I am the Messenger of is onely to tell thee how it becomes thee being a childe of God and an heir of heaven to walke and how thou shouldest express thy thankfulness to thy Father for his unspeakable love which thou shalt abundantly do if thou wilt endeavour in all things to observe mee and therefore poor soul bee thou now an obedient childe do thy Fathers will because hee hath proclaimed to thee in the word of his grace that hee hath given heaven to thee O therefore serve him and behold here I shew unto thee and point out the way in which hee would have thee do it Thus the Law as it comes in the hands of Christ it hath not bare commands nor threatnings nor curse no promises of life and salvation in it but it comes without any of these 3 That to yeeld obedience to the Law as it is in the hands of Christ is Gospel-walking 1 To walke in the way of the New Covenant is Gospel-walking for the Gospel and New Covenant are the same But to yeeld obedience to the Law as it is in the hands of Christ is to walke in the way of the New Covenant for the Law as it is in the hands of Christ is a part of the New Covenant the thing that the Law as such requires of beleevers being there promised and given to them therefore it is a part of the New Covenant 2 To serve God without fear and from love is Gospel-walking Luke 1.74 75. 2 Tim. 1.7 2 Cor. 5.14 But to yeeld obedience to the Law it is in the hands of Christ is such for what is there in the Law to cause fear if wee look upon it in the
hands of Christ there are no terrors threatnings no curse no noise of death hell and damnation though I break the same all these things being gone And on the other side is there not much to cause love heaven eternal life is given before ever I strike a stroak do one action that the Law requires of mee set one step in a way of obedience all my sins are pardoned in Christ and through him before ever I commit them is not here much to beget love and to make mee out of love to yeeld obedience to the holy Law of God who hath pardoned my sins made mee an heire of life eternal and all without my merit or desert therefore I say this obedience having not slavish fear in it but arising from love must needs bee Gospel-walking 3 That obedience which is the fruit and effect of the working of Gods holy Spirit in us is Gospel-walking for not the Law but the Gospel or New Covenant gives the Spirit which helps us to obey But now all obedience to the Law as it is in the hands of Christ is such for to such as take the Law of Christ Christ first gives his Spirit then his Law as Ezek. 36.27 I will put my Spirit within you What then And I will cause you to walk in my wayes First the Spirit to inable to obedience then the Law and they do obey it Therefore all such obedience is Gospel-walking Other Questions there are behinde which I cannot reach at present I shall onely minde you of this that what hath been before spoken serves to correct two great mistakes 1 A MISTAKE of some men of the one hand who are so much for the Gospel and do so cry it up that they throw the Moral Law quite out of doors as though there were no room for that in the Gospel Temple They think that grace and good works are so inconsistent one with the other that they can never stand together and therefore that grace may bee all the Law and good works shall bee nothing at all whose mistake is corrected from what hath been said and proved that the Moral Law remaines a Rule to Saints in Gospel-times 2 A MISTAKE of some others on the other hand who out of zeal for the Moral Law do hand over head urge and press the same as the Rule of Saints never considering how or in what sense the same remaines a Rule and by so doing they bring the glorious Sons of Sion the free-born Saints of the Gospel under the power and commands of a Covenant of Workes ere they are aware Whose mistake is corrected by distinguishing of commands as they are Moses's and Christs In the first sense the Law is not a Saints Rule and it is dangerous so to make it in the latter it is and it is sweet and comfortable so to receive it Therefore you that are Saints and Beleevers hence learn two things I Not to reject the Moral Law as a Rule to order your lives and conversations by but with love delight and chearfulness approve of imbrace and obey the same 2 Not to take the Moral Law for your Rule as it comes out of Moses his hand for then you bring your selves under the power of a Covenant of Workes and your soules will bee continually filled with terror fear and trembling covered over with darknesse lying under apprehensions of wrath and altogether weake and unable to do what is commanded But take it out of the hands of Christ and then with Paul you will say The Law if holy just and good I consent to the Law that it is good I delight in the Law of God after the inner man yea with my minde I my selfe do serve the Law of God Which Gospel-walking the Lord bring you and I daily more and more unto Amen When a mans walk may bee said to bee a Gospel walk SERMON VI. Rom. 8.1 Who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit BY this time you know the meaning of these Phrases which you have oft heard to bee meant either of Legal or Gospel walking Walking after the Old or New man I have spoken or Legal walking and am now upon Gospel walking The last day I shewed you what Gospel walking is I now proceed to another Question viz. 2 Quest When may a mans walk bee said to bee a Gospel walke or a walking after the Gospel I answer I. When the Rule of a mans obedience is a Gospel Rule i.e. the Law as it is in the hands of Christ. Of this having spoken at large the last day I shall wholly wave it now 2 When the principle of a mans obedience or walking is a Gospel principle Quest But what is the Gospel principle Answ This Gospel holds forth two great things viz. a crucified Christ to bee beleeved on and the Powring out of the Spirit of Christ into the hearts of beleevers The first respects our Justification the latter our Sanctification or our obedience and walking Now as Christ crucified is the great Principle in the business of our Justification whence alone that flows from the knowing and beleeving on a Crucified Christ so the Spirit of Christ in the hearts of Saints is the great Principle in the matter of our obedience whence that flows Hence Rom. 8. the Sons of God are said to bee lead by the Spirit of God i.e. the Spirit doth not onely teach a beleever what is his duty but doth as it were take him by the hand and lead him to it help and guide him in it There is more held forth in the word leading than in teaching I teach another when I write him a copy and lay it before him and tell him how hee should hold his pen and order and guide his hand but now when I do not onely do this but take his hand in mine and write therewith I may bee better said to guide or lead him So the Spirit of God teacheth a beleever when it makes discovery of any truth to him hee was ignorant of before and shows him what duty that truth calls for from him but when it doth not onely do this but also inables the soul to receive this truth and to walk up to what this truth calls for conforming the soul to the truth or will of God then doth it exercise its leading power in the soule And therefore Ezek. 36.27 God saith I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walke in my wayes c. In the Gospel or New Covenant the Spirit of God put into a beleever is the causing constraining principle to obedience and holy walking As in the Old Covenant though the fruit seem never so glorious yet the principle or root of all obedience is Flesh So in the New Covenant though the outward fruit seem never so mean and weak yet the principle or root is the Spirit All Gospel graces and works are fruits of the Spirit as Gal. 5.22 23. But the fruit of the Spirit is love joy
bring me under wrath for I am delivered from it What slavish fear is here 2 Here is no working for Heaven or the reward for how can a Soul be said to work for Heaven when he knowes and firmly beleeves that Heaven is his before he works If a Father make over his Estate to his Son by Deed of gift and put him in possession thereof and the Son after he is possessed of his Fathers Estate doth more for his Father than ever before will you say he doth it that his Farther might give him the inheritance No that he hath and his Father cannot now take it from him therefore all that now he doth is from ingenuity That Holinesse therefore which ariseth from this motive must needs bee Gospel-walking because it is free of those qualifications which are necessary to a legal work and legalwalk 4 And lastly When our ends in our obedience are Gospel-ends Quest What are Gospel-ends Ans Such as these That I might testifie my thank fulnesse to God for his love towards me What shall I render to the Lord saith David for all his benefits towards me Psal 116.12 God hath done great things for me O what shall I doe for God again This is the language of a Gospel-soul What shall I render to the Lord I was under such a Temptation desertion God hath delivered me O what shall I render to the Lerd I wanted such a Mercy and sought God and he gave it me O what shall I render to the Lord I was some months years agoe in a sore outward affliction and God delivered mee O what shall I render to the Lord Not long agoe my condition was such as that I thought as certainly Hell was my portion as ever it was Judases or the portion of any of the Damned there and I went about crying out I am undone I am Damned for ever and now God hath not only freed me from these Horrours which made my life a burden and earth a Hell to me but also filled my soul with joy unspeakable by shewing me that he hath loved me in his Son with an everlasting love and that nothing shall ever be able to separate mee from his love but come life come death come what will come come what can come all shall further my eternal good O what shall I render to the Lord O what shall I render to tht Lord How shall I ever walk worthy so great love what shall I doe for this God who hath done so worthily and gloriously for my soul 2 That I might recover the Image of God againe The first man lost the Image of God by his disobedience this Image of God wee recover againe in Christ our second Adam who was obedient now the more inlightned any soul is the beleeving and holy the more doth he recover of this Image of God which consists in knowledge righteousnesse and true holinesse Now saith the beleeving Soul my intent is to recover the Image of God which the first man lost by his disobedience and therefore doe I seek to know and in all things to obey the Gospel because in conforming my self hereunto I shall recover the Image of God for as I lost this Image by partaking of the disobedience and pollution of the first Adam so shall I recover the same by partaking of the obedience and holiness of the second Adam which obedience the Gospel holds forth unto me Hence I exercise my self in duties of Holiness because I know the more holy I am the more shall I bee like God who is Holy and Holinesse it selfe and the more shall I recover of this Image which consists in perfect Holinesse 3 That I might imitate Jesus Christ Christ in the Gospel proposeth his Holiness to beleevers as the pattern of theirs Learne of me for I am meek and lowly in heart Love one another at I have loved you Now the beleeving Soul reading these things over saith to himself it is my duty as much as may be to imitate Christ to walk as he hath walked when hee was here upon earth Now how did Christ walk why Christ was humble meek lowly he prayed to his Father was thankful to his Father went about doing good was full of compassion to poor Sinners denyed himself in his reputation and honour with men and willingly took up the Cross the shame and reproach of the World was in all things submissive to his Fathers will contenting himself therewith was not impatient in his Sufferings but took all well and in good part from his Father was not revengeful towards Instruments for when he was reviled he reviled not again being falsly accused buffeted condemned nayled to the Cross he threatned not but committed all to him that judgeth righteously being persecuted cursed he returned blessings for cursings and prayers for persecutions yea hee fulfilled all the righteousness of the Law Now saith the soul It is my duty to follow Christ and to draw out my life by the copy of his and therefore to the end I might imitate Christ and bee like him I obey and love God for I know Christ did so love my enemies and pray for them because Christ did so do good to all as I have opportunity because Christ did so despise the honor and reputation of the world because Christ did so continue in prayer because Christ did so desire of God humility patience meekness thankfulness submissiveness to the will of God and contentedness therewith because I finde all this was in Christ strive to be holy in all manner of conversation and if it were possible to bee perfect because I know Christ was so All this I press after to the end I might bee like Christ that if it were possible there might bee nothing in mee but what was in Christ nothing done by mee but what Christ would have done nor left undone by mee but what Christ would have left undone 4 That I might keep up my communion with God Although the union which Saints have with God by means of Christ depends wholly upon that which is without viz. their being married to Christ and cloathed with his righteousness yet the communion which Saints have with God by meanes of the Spirit hath much dependence upon a Saints walking So that let a Saint walke carnally and loosely though hee shall not break the mariage knot and loose his union yet hee shall grieve the Spirit and loose his communion And on the other side let a Saint walke spiritually and as becomes the Gospel as his union remaines so shall his communion also bee kept up fresh and in the life and sweetness of it hee shall feel the same in his own soul Yea experience tells a Saint that when as at any time hee hath walked as an obedient childe observing and doing with delight and in simplicity his Fathers will hee hath then held up much sweet communion with God and contrariwise when hee hath been vain and wanton and given too much liberty to his
own heart therein though it may bee at that time hee could through faith say notwithstanding all my sin I am the childe of God yet hath hee not felt in himselfe that sweet and spiritual communion hee had with his Father at another time and good reason for it hee hath walked at a distance from God and therefore though God loves him still and acknowledgeth him for his childe yet to the end hee may better learn to know himselfe and to know his Father God will for a time walke at a distance from him As when a childe hath been stubborn and disobedient to his Father though his Father loves him still as his childe and will not dis-inherit him for all this yet the Father to make the childe know himself and know his Father will carry it at a distance for a while and hee will not bee so loving in his look and familiar in his discourse with his childe as at other times So when a Saint walks loosely and unsaintlike not as a childe to his Father though God loves him still yet hee shall not have those smiles and loving looks and lappings and dandlings and sweet imbraces and familiar discourses that hee had with his Father at another time Now how sweet this communion is appears if wee consider the esteem a Saint hath of it when hee feels it and the price hee puts upon it in want thereof What high language doth the Spouse in the Canticles speak of her Beloved and the ravishments of her heart by his love whilst shee found and felt this her communion and mutual imbraces and love-songs and change of voyces passed between her and her beloved and how sorrowfully doth shee speak and how mournfully doth shee walk when as any thing did interpose between her and her beloved and hinder those mutual imbraces and kisses of love The sweetness of this communion made a heavenly * Galeacius Carracciolus the Italian Marquess man which had great preferments and vast sums of mony offered him to forsake the Gospel say Let their mony perish with them who esteem all the wealth in the world worth one hours communion with Jesus Christ Now this being so that the communion a Saint hath with God is so unspeakably sweet as there is nothing like it and this having much dependance upon a Saints walking that accordingly as hee demeans himself towards God either in a way of duty or disobedience hee shall have more or lesse thereof hence he labours to walk as a Saint should for saith the Soul though I know my sin shall never deprive mee of Heaven hereafter yet if I walke carnally I shall loose my communion with God and that is my heaven here 5 The profiting of others is another Gospel-end which runs along in the stream of their obedience who walke after the Gospel Now the gracious walking of a Saint may bee profitable to others two wayes 1 To those without by way of convincement Let there bee a whole Parish made up of Drunkards and Swearers c. and let but a spiritual holy-walking Saint come amongst them and he by his holy walking wil convince them and make their conscience condemn them all Therefore Christ exhorts his Matth. 5. to let their light shine before men that they may see their good works and Paul bids the Thessalonians walk honestly towards them without 2 To those that are within by way of provocation Heb. 12.24 And to Jesus the Mediator of the New Covenant and to the blood of sprinkling that speaketh better things than that of Abel 2 Cor. 9.2 For I know the forwardness of your minde for which I boast of you to them of Macedonia that Achaia was ready a year agoe and your zeal hath provoked very many When a poor soul that hath been for a great while very carnal and dead comes into the presence of another spiritual Saint that is lively and active for God and hears him speak and sees his walking hee is hereby provoked He thinks with himself O what a block am I what abundance of life hath such a one and O what a block am I and this making him ashamed of himself sets him on work and so becomes a means to put life into that heart which was dead carnal cold and frozen many dayes weeks and months before And truly this is a blessed provocation and a Saint who indeed labours and endeavours to walke with God making it his design to bee holy both may and shall do God much service in this way 6 And lastly The beating down of the body and bringing it into subjection Idleness we say is the mother of all iniquity We know by experience when a man is idle and not imployed in spiritual things the flesh through that natural depravation that is in the whole man will incline and draw a man into evill and rebellion against God When the Spirit is not acting in that which is good and bringing the flesh under the flesh will take advantage to act in those things that are evill and so bring the the Spirit under Now a Saint knowing and feeling that natural depravation that is in him and the pronenesse of the flesh in case it bee not held under to captivate him thereby hee exerciseth himself in those duties of holiness which concern his general and particular calling knowing that by keeping a yoak upon the neck of this Rebel hee shall in time weaken him and make him the more unable to doe him an injury at least deprive him of his advantage to do it The flesh is like an unruly Beast which through rest and idleness grows wilde and Masterless and there is no way to tame him but by working him hard so the way to hold the body under is to keep up the soule as much as may bee in the exercise of Holiness This seems to have been Pauls practice and to bee the meaning of that place 1 Cor. 9 last But I keep under my body and bring it into subjection lest that by any means when I have preached to others I my selfe should bee a cast-away 3 Quest But why is Gospel-walking called Walking after the Spirit Answ 1. Reason is because The Spirit of God hath a principal hand in all the actings and walkings of a Gospel Saint I mean such as are according to the Gospel doth hee pray the Spirit of God helpes his infirmities in prayer Rom. 8.26 is sin mortified in him the Spirit of God doth it Rom. 8.13 is hee quickned the Spirit doth that Joh. 6.63 The Spirit of God is all in all in his walking and in his working 2 Because of the spiritualness of a Gospel-walke above a Legal-walk Every thing in the Gospel hath more spirituality in it than under the Law Ordinances are more spiritual under the Law they had abundance of Ordinances and Institutions but the Apostle calls them Carnal Ordinances Heb. 9.10 and Carnal Commandements Chap. 7.16 and Beggerly Elelements Gal. 4.9 Wee under the Gospel
Gentiles and they gave him audience unto this word and then lift up their voyces and said away with such a fellow from the earth for it is not fit that hee should live vers 21.22 This because it did derogate from their outward priviledges and their way of a National Church that now the Gospel should goe from them unto the Gentiles they can bear no longer but passionately cry out Away with such a fellow from the earth for it is not fit that he should live 4 When a mans glorying and boasting lyes chiefly in that when a man makes this the great matter of his glorying and boasting that hee is in such or such a way as many poor souls will do they boast of this that they are for or of such a way of those that hold such an opinion c. When a man makes any outward thing the matter of his glorying hee puts too much in that This Paul would not do and therefore when the false Apostles made a glorying in outward things as Circumcision c. hee saith Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should glory save in the crosse of the Lord Jesus Christ by whom the world is crucified to mee and I unto the world hee makes spiritual things as the Cross of Christ the Death of Christ and his being crucified with Christ and dying with Christ and that in opposition to outward things as Circumcision c. which the false Apostles gloried in the only matter of his glory shewing us that when we make our greatest boast and glorying of outward things we put too much in those things and also that the great glorying of a Christian should bee in inward things his being crucified with Christ being like Christ c. Yea such glorying in outward things hee calls a glorying after the Flesh 2 Cor. 11.18 Seeing that many glory after the flesh I will glory also the best of outward things when we come to glory in these and make our boast of these our glorying and boasting will be found but a carnal fleshly boasting 5 When a man likes that truth which otherwise he loves the worse because it comes not to him fully in his owne way it argues he puts too much in that outward way As suppose two godly men deliver the same Truth one in an Independent as they say the other a Presbyter and put the case I were a Presbyter I dislike the Truth because it is an Independent one of another way speaks it another is an Independent hee dislikes because a Presbyter speaks it both these shew that they put too much in their owne way because they love the Truth which only is to be loved and embraced for it self the better or the worse because it comes in or out of their way Truth was truth in Apollos his mouth and Aquila and Priscilla heard him when hee preached in the Synagogue yet it is said that hee knew only the Baptisme of John and had but a dark and confused not a perfect knowledge in the way of the Lord till afterwards Aquila and Priscilla took him and expounded the way of God to him more perfectly Acts 24.25 26. From which instance I conclude this that a man may and it was the practise of Primitive Saints to hear those who were not Members of visible Churches but strangers to them if so be the things they taught were truth for Aquila and Priscilla Church-members hear Apollo who was either a stranger to them and if so then it was an use to hear strangers of it known to them which is most likely hee was not till afterwards then did they know that hee knew only the Baptisme of John and was not clear as yet in his principles for the way of the Lord and yet they heard him Vse 5. Then you which are Gospel Saints follow the Spirit the mistakes of the Saints doe not arise from the want of the Spirit to teach them and guide them so much as from their not observing the way of the Spirit and following of it Saints have the Spirit promised to teach and lead them but they do not follow their Leader and hence grow all those mistakes and errours that are in Beleevers from their not following their Leader Had wee but so much heavenly wisdome and grace as observe the goings of the Spirit and to follow him in his owne way or path we should not misse the will of God so frequently as wee doe seldome doth a Saint mistake but he shall finde if he doe but look back where his mistake began that there he did cease to follow his Leader either he did turne aside to pride curiosity or somewhat which he should not have done and there the Spirit which before sensibly went along with him left him so that he went about groping after that truth which before he saw by another inward secret light only by the light of his owne reason and natural understanding so that sometimes a Soul which is taught by the Spirit can say here and here I left to follow my Leader and ever since I have been in the dark whilst I went along humbly seeking after truth and the will of God as God should make out the same to me I saw thingsclear and with much evidence and inward light things were made out to me but at such a time I remember after I had got a little light into such a truth I grew proud and self-conceited and wanton with what I had attained and there I sensibly found the Spirit left me and ever since I have been seeking after that truth but have not had that inward light to direct me nor than evidence nor clearness concerning the things I have found out as before I had Quest But how shall I come to this to follow the Spirit Answ 1. Observe when the Spirit of God goes before thee either in the discoverie of any truth or helping thee in any thing that concerns thy practise sometimes the Spirit of God goes so manifestly with a Beleever either in the helping of him in the knowledge of some truth or performance of some duty that a Beleever can say Now I know of a truth that the Spirit of God is with me and here and here he hath helped me Hee beholds himself to see things with another light than at other times he hath done and such a light as though hee would give a world for the same yet can he not attaint it when hee would and he feels himself to bee helped and assisted by another strength so as that he can say I know now I have light from the Spirit and strength from it the Spirit of God is with mee goes before me hitherto it hath helped me Now observe such times as these are when the Spirit of God goes before thee Quest But put the case the Spirit of God goes before me and I doe not know the same how shall I come to know it Answ There are three things or three waies by
from the seventh that the first glorious appearing of God at this time it shall bee amongst the common people the tents of Judah as vers 7. i.e. such as have not sumptuous Pallaces to dwell in but are right Jacobs plain men dwelling in Tents poor people or the meaner sort of people not the poorest of all who have no Tents no place of habitation but are very vagrants and beggars nor the richest who have their Pallaces and royal houses but a middle sort of people living in a plain but an honourable and comely way as the way of living in Tents was these shall God first gloriously appear amongst and the reason seems to bee given in the seventh verse That the glory of the house of David i.e. that such as are of Princely and noble blood dwelling in Courts and sumptuous Pallaces or depending upon such places may not magnifie themselves against i.e. may not as all along from the beginning of the world to this time it hath been an usual custome for noble men great men learned men to magnifie themselves against and despise others exalt themselves above poor meaner ignoble unlearned men thinking themselves better than they and despising of the other in their eyes no but that they may clearly see that what these want in other things which they have God hath over and above made up to them in his glorious appearances amongst them and discoveries of himself to them Now I say God shall first begin to work not upon the Governours themselves but upon the common people or the middle sort of people which shall bee under their rule and government Gods first glorious appearances shall bee amongst these which shall dwell in Tents and the Governours they seeing this how wonderfully God doth appear for this people and owns them shattering all that do but lift up a hand against them to peeces and brings all plots and counsels against them to nothing they shall bee so strangely convinced that they shall say in their hearts i. e. privately it may bee either for shame or for some other carnal by-respect they shall not own them publickly any farther than as they are Magistrates to use means for their defence or as they clearly see them to bee loyal subjects so to allow them as subjects their liberty to serve and worship God according as they are convinced his will is and they ought to do but yet they shall say in their hearts the inhabitants of Jerusalem my strength for this shall bee is but put into the Text in the Lord of Hosts their God as to say Well now wee plainly see where our strength lyes this is the very people wee must own and stick too or assuredly wee go down for this wee clearly behold that the Lord of Hosts is their God and if wee do but stick to this people wee shall have their God going along with us and therefore without any longer controversie here lyes our strength wee stand or fall in owning or disowning this people Again vers 7. Wee have somewhat more spoken concerning the Governours of Judah by way of Prophesie and that is Gods glorious appearance for them and in their behalf they no sooner come to own the people of God though it bee but secretly to say surely these are Gods people here lyes our strength wee will therefore stick to these but presently God sticks to them and appears for them and makes them terrible to all theirs and his peoples adversaries no sooner doth any state own Gods people but hee owns them Now what is it is spoken of the Governours of Judah Why this I will make the Governours of Judah like a hearth of fire You know take ever so much wood and lay it on a hearth of fire and the hearth of fire makes away with it and it is consumed And take a sheaf or stack of corn though ever so great and put but a torch into it and that will consume it all immediately so saith God shall the Governours of Judab bee they shall consume and devoure all the people on the right hand and on the left c. wee see here by the by what is the way to make a state or a Kingdome happy to make them prosperous and terrible to all Gods enemies why to own the people of God In vers 8. Wee have a precious Prophetical promise made to the Inhabitants of Jerusalem as of Gods protection over them In that day shall the Lord defend So likewise of his wonderful blessing that shall in the last dayes bee upon them in the abundant increase of their gifts and graces God will not onely preserve their bodies from the rage and fury of wicked men but hee will exceedingly inrich their soules with the heavenly blessings of his Grace and Spirit He that is feeble among them at that day shall be as David that is poor weak feeble Saints shall at this time have as much knowledge and grace as David i.e. as the most eminent of all informer ages for David was the most eminent in his age And the house of David shall be as God that is such as before were eminent in gifts and grace shall now have their gifts and graces so exceedingly increased that they shall seem rather like Angels than men In the following verses to the end of the Chapter wee have a repetition of what went before in which that which had been more largely treated of in the foregoing verses viz. Gods preservation his people from their enemies and ruining of his enemies is but briefly touched vers 9. and that which had been but touched before viz. of the powring out of the Spirit in vers 8. is now more fully opened and handled in the verse of the Text and the following verses And I will pour upon the house of David The Text as the whole Chapter is a glorious Prophesie made to the last times In it wee have 1 A promise of a gracious effusion or pouring forth of the Spirit wherein wee have 1 Who poures and that is God I will poure 2 Upon whom i.e. The house of David by which may bee understood men of a higher ranke the house of David was the Royal house and those that came there of were of the Blood-royal And the inhabitants of Jerusalem i.e. men of a lower ranke the meaning is God will in these dayes poure out his Spirit upon all sorts high and low Prince and people as Joel saith Chap. 2. end All flesh These words litterally they are spoken of the Jewes when they shall bee converted spiritually they belong to Christians 3 What he poures the Spirit which hath here two things attributed to it or two titles given it First A Spirit of grace so called either because it is the original or begetter of all grace in us or because it is given us of grace The gift of the Spirit is a gift of free grace I rather incline to this than the former because so it is more distinct
from the next of supplications because prayer or supplication is one special grace of the Spirit which if wee take the first the Spirit of Grace that is so called because it begets grace then the latter viz. Supplications which is one special grace begotten by the Spirit in the hearts of Saints is included in it unless we shall take the first of grace for the habits of grace which are first wrought in the Soule by the Spirit and the latter or Supplications for the actings of those graces one Spiritual work wherein much grace is exercised being put for the exercise of all grace 4 When hee pours this though it bee out of the text yet it is a necessary question and it is answered in the fore-going verse where the time in which God will doe this is called that day It is a phrase which is much used in the Prophets no lesse than forty times as I take it in Isaiah and near twenty in this Prophet and it is called that day for eminency sake because this time when it shall come it shall be a very eminent and remarkable time such a time for peace joy plenty and prosperity glory and liberty to the Saints and bondage and captivity to the enemies of Gods people as the World never saw and therefore it is called that day 1 Noting an eminent glorious day farre excelling all daies that ever had gone before it and when it is called a day we are not to understand it a Natural day i. e. consisting of twenty four hours nor of an ordinary Prophetical day that is a day for a year but of an extraordinary day such a day as Peter speaks of 2 Epist 3. One day is with the Lord as a thousand years and a thousand years as one day Now the time which is set forth in Scripture by this phrase of speech that day is sometimes taken for a larger sometimes for a stricter time sometimes it is taken so strictly that it may containe not much more time if so much as a meer Natural day and so we have the day of that great Battel of Armageddon often called where it is spoken of that day Rev. 16.14 and Ioel 3. and other places sometimes it is taken strictly but not so strictly and then it is put for the whole time of Christs Kingdome here on earth from the time that he sets up his Kingdome to the end and this is so frequently spoken of in the Prophets that I need name no place only I will turne you to one because not farre from the text Zach. 14.6 7 8 9. And it shall come to passe in that day that the light shall not be clear nor dark But it shall be one day which shall bee known to the Lord not day nor night but it shall come to passe that at evening time it shall be light and it shall be in that day that living waters shall goe out from Jerusalem halfe of them toward the former Sea and half of them toward the hinder Sea in summer and in winter shall it be and the Lord shall be King over all the earth in that day shall there bee one Lord and his name one Here we have Christs Kingdome set up and the whole time of it is but one day and that one day is all along called that day sometimes it is taken more largely not only for the time of Christs Kingdome after hee sets the same up but for the last dayes also the dayes immediately before that time wherein many glorious things as the spreading of the Gospel the ruine of Antichrist and the call of the Iewes which if it be not before yet it shall be just upon Christs setting up of his Kingdome and so may have reference to the time before or after the last dayes or the time of Christs Kingdome and in this sense it is here to be taken as I conceive for the time just upon Christs setting up his Kingdome when Gods peoples enemies shall be ruined the Iewes called and mourn as here we read of 2 A glorious effect following this effusion or pouring forth of the Spirit which is twofold 1 Upon the Senses They shall look upon mee whom they have peirced which words litterally are spoken of the Iewes who at the time of their Call shall behold that Jesus Christ whom their Nation have peirced Spiritually it is true of all Beleevers looking upon that Christ by faith whom their sins have peirced 2 Upon the Affections They shall mourn which mourning is set forth by the greatnesse of it it shall be such a mourning as when a man mourns for his only Son no grief or sorrow goes so near as grief for losse of an only Childe Ah! will a man say had I lost of my estate it would never have troubled mee but it is my Son my only Son I have never another and then it shall be bitternesse you know the nature of bitter things things which are bitter the taste of them will remaine a great while it sticks by a man but now bitternesse that is more and denotes a higher degree than bitter as the abstract is more than the concret so that this expression shewes that it shall bee an exceeding great mourning and that so too as it shall stick by them it shall not lightly passe off their spirits and glide away and so be forgotten and there is no more of it as other sorrow doth but it shall bee an exceeding great and a remaining mourning of which more is spoken in the next verses The words thus opened yeeld us several useful observations Obs 1. That the pouring out of the Spirit upon any soul is the proper and peculiar work of God it is not Men nor means nor Ordinances that can effect this but God alone and therefore it is still attributed to him Ioel 2.28 And it shall come to passe afterward that I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh c. Isa 32.15 until the Spirit bee poured upon us from on high c. Christ himself as a Man had the Spirit poured upon him by the Father Isa 42.1 Behold my servant whom I uphold mine elect in whom my soul delighteth I have put my Spirit upon him he shall bring forth judgement to the Gentiles How many poor Souls are there that have good education godly friends and Parents sit under means and Ordinances and yet are strangers to the Spirit many there are who all the year long come hither and hear the Word and there is no change in them they were Drunkards Swearers c. at the beginning of the year and so they are still God hath not poured down of his Spirit upon them O poor Souls would you ever have the Spirit begge it of God Obs 2. In the last dayes the pouring out of the Spirit shall be very general on the house of David inhabitants of Ierusalem high and low Ioel saith all flesh chap. 2. end Sons Daughters Young men Old men In the
times of the Law God gave his Spirit but only to some few extraordinary men as Prophets c. in the beginning of the Gospel God poured it downe upon many more upon Apostles and many Brethren but not all but now in the last daies upon all flesh for I take it that this Prophesie of Ioel relates to the last daies though in the beginnings of it it was fulfilled in the Apostles time add so Ierem. 31.34 And they shall teach no more every man his Neighbour and every man his brother saying Know the Lord for they shall shall know me from the least of them unto the greatest of them saith the Lord speaking of the last daies it is said They shall all know me So Isa 65.20 The childe shall dye an hundred years old i. e. in knowledge very Children shall have the Spirit poured downe upon them O what a glorious time will this be when all the Saints shall be filled with the Spirit when you cannot goe to a Saint but you shall finde Gods Spirit breathing in him and how should this stirre up every one of us upon whom these last daies are coming if not come to labour after the Spirit Is it not a shame that the nearer this time comes the more Carnal instead of Spiritual we should be Obs 3. All grace it from the Spirit of God the spirit of grace we have no grace in our Nature but all is from the Spirit as the fruits thereof Gal. 5.22 23. But the fruit of the Spirit is love joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith meeknesse temperance Obs 4. The gift of the Spirit is the gift of Free Grace This is taken from those words the Spirit of Grace interpreted in the latter sense Obs 5. One maine and special work that the Spirit of God puts Souls upon where it is is the work of Supplication or Prayer and Supplications the Spirit coming from God it loves much to be carrying out those Souls where it is to God Prayer it is a Natural work to that Soul where the Spirit is and as the Spirit of God puts Souls upon Prayer so the Spirit of God acts the Saints in Prayer or as the Apostle saith Rom. 8. Prayes in them sometimes by enabling them with words sometimes by filling them with groanes unutterable i. e. a Soul that prayes by the Spirit hee hath inward groanings for many things more than hee can utter it may be he speaks one Petition and at that instant groanes for twenty the groanings of the spirits in the Saints hearts whilst they are in prayer being farre more large and extensive than the expressions of the mouth are or can bee and which may bee a matter of abundant comfort to us the answer of God is not according to the expressions of our mouth but the desires and groanings of his owne Spirit O would we know then how to pray as we should let us labour for the Spirit we shall never pray without it perhaps we may speak good words and fine expressions as many can who yet never prayed in their lives and know no more what Prayer means than I know the way to Rome but alas prayer doth not lye in these things in speaking good Language and putting up fine Petitions if that be all no Prayer is another thing it is the breathings of the Spirit in the hearts of the Saints after God and to God many times that soul prayes and that excellently powerfully who perhaps is not able to speak a word or if hee do hee is not able to speak ten words true sense together when as another which speaks fluently and orderly and that for houres together perhaps prayes not a word all that time Observ 6. In the last dayes there shall bee a greater powring forth of the Spirit than ordinary This I gather from the last thing in opening the words viz. the time when this shall bee that day Hence the word pouring is much used when the giving of the Spirit in the last dayes is spoken of denoting an abundant measure of the Spirit which shall at this time bee given forth for what was formerly wherein God did as it were drop his Spirit now hee poures it forth and the reasons are because God hath greater works to do in the last dayes and the Church comes nearer to mans estate and the people of God have more and greater enemies to incounter with than in former times they had and therefore God gives them more of the Spirit what a mercy then is it to be brought forth and to live in the last dayes And how doth it call upon us all the nearer these times draw on to bee the more spiritual Thus much for the Observations from the first part of the words I come now to the second the effects of this powring forth of the Spirit They shall look on him whom they have pierced Observ 7. The sins of beleevers do pierce Jesus Christ This is implied in that they look upon him whom they have pierced Observ 8. Christ must bee looked upon as pierced by us before wee can mourn They do not mourn nor shed a tear till then Observ 9. When Christ is looked upon as pierced by us then wee shall mourn They look on him and do mourn Observ 10. That mourning which ariseth from the beholding of a pierced Christ is a very bitter and grievous mourning And they shall mourn for him as one mourneth for his onely Son Observ 11. None can thus look upon Christ or mourn for him but only those upon whom God pours his Spirit I will poure out my Spirit and they shall look and they shall mourn I shall wave all these and pitch upon one Observation from the latter part of the words which is this viz Observ True Gospel-humiliation doth arise from a looking upon a pierced Christ In the opening of this point I shall shew 1 That it doth not arise from any other thing and doth from this 2 What manner of looking upon Jesus Christ that is which doth beget true mourning or Gospel-humiliation 3 How this Gospel-humiliation is begotten in the soul from a looking upon Jesus Christ Of the first That it doth not arise from any other thing and doth from this 1 It doth not arise from nature There is a kinde of humility in many a man by nature but this is not Gospel-humility and there is too a natural sorrow but this is not Gospel-humiliation This is an herbe that grows not in Natures garden any other humiliation saving Gospel-humiliation may grow there 2 It doth not arise from imitation of others the examples of others Some things which are not natural are done by imitation as an Ape will do many things by imitation which are not natural but this doth arise from hence seeing another humbled and imitating him 3 It doth not arise from a sense or discerning of sin in a man Many there are who see their sin and will acknowledge the same natural light
worse than the former when men doe not only study Niceties and make Lawes for themselves but when they have so done will make Lawes for their Brethren and binde their Consciences to those Lawes which they themselves have made Now wilt thou exercise thy self in things of this nature take heed then thou make not thy Conscience the rule of thy Brothers neither make Lawes over him in such things as thou canst not assure his Conscience Christ hath made them I had rather yeeld in a hundred things of this nature to a Brothers weaknesse than by an absolute Law of his making to be bound up to one Let Saints therefore be wary of tying their Brethren hand and foot in such things wherein Christ hath left them free for Saints if tied will not doe that which if they were left to their liberty they ought to doe as I remember Luther saith to the Papists about eating their meats and observing their dayes leave us saith he to our liberty wee will cat your meats observe your dayes but bind us hereto and wee will doe neither 5 And lastly Take heed thy spirit grow not hence by degrees to an affectation of novelty or new things Many there are who first take delight to pry into dark and curious questions and when they have gone on thus a while there is nothing will please them but new things and curious things they grow out of love with old truth and spiritual heart matters these are fet by and it must bee some fine new tickling question that is fit matter only for their thoughts and meditations and as for all things else they account them but low things and those that hold them and press them men of lower light and of a lower forme as they say I am almost confident of if that most of the errours this day broached or on foot in England or elsewhere doe grow out of this root viz. A neglect of exercising the heart about spiritual things and a desire to be alwaies prying into dark things from whence by degrees there creepes into the Soul a love of novelty and new matters which no sooner is in any but the heart is as prone and apt to suck in errour as a spunge water and of all spirits in searching after truth I should desire the Lord to keep me from this a spirit delighting it self in and affecting novelty and new things The Reasons of this Point with the Application I shall leave to the next opportunity The Second SERMON ON 1 Tim. 6.11 Follow after righteousness godliness c. THe last opportunity I had in this place I told you that the Apostle gives these words as a direction to his Schollar Timothy and in him to all Beleevers how to escape the dangerous errours and evils that then were or at any time should be abroad the direction is to follow after righteousnesse godlinesse c. as if hee should say employ thy self and thy heart about these things and there is no fear of receiving hurt by the other In General I told you the things he mentions are all spiritual things whence I laid before you this observation viz. Doct. That the only and special way for a Saint to bee delivered from the errours and evils of the times he lives in is to have his heart as much as may be taken up with and his spirit exercised about high and Spiritual things I proved it then unto you and also shewed you what I did meane by Spiritual things I now proceed to the Reasons why the exercising the heart about Spiritual things is such a preservative against the errours and evils of the times we live in Reas 1. Because such a heart as is exercised about Spiritual things findes not leasure to run out after those poor low things which others trifle away their time and lose themselves about Many there are in the world of whom it may be said as Pharaoh once said of the Israelites Yee are idle yee are idle who are very Idlers and doe nothing at all in Spirituals by reason whereof their hearts have a great deale of leisure which because they would be doing and finde nothing to take too they busie themselves just as Children and Boyes doe when they are idle about this toy and the other such a querk and such a query their time and thoughts are busied about and they are continually fancying and inventing new Notions and Chymaera's and this bears the Bell and is all in request to day and this to morrow and thus they strangely lose themselves running from one fancy unto another till in the end they have out-run Reason Religion and all Whereas now a Saint which hath his heart exercised about spiritual things is like a man which is in great dealings and trading which hath many weighty affairs under his hand together and is by reason hereof so full of employment that he cannot finde time to beat his braines about this querk and the other query all the time that he hath is little enough and too little to follow so as that he may not be a looser of his greater employments hee findes that had hee two dayes whereas he hath but one time would be too little for him to busie himself how hee might enjoy more communion with God understand more of the great Mysteries of Godlinesse get his heart more mortified his graces more quickned c. though hee should allow other things no time at all Because to a heart that is exercised about spiritual things other things are dry and empty such a heart neither findes relish in them nor satisfaction from them a spiritual heart delights in things and relisheth them as they are spiritual that which much relisheth a carnal heart is very dis-relishing to the Spiritual man As take a Carnal eare that loves to hear things where there is a great deale of curiosity and of the varnish of Humane wit and Wisdome but now take a Spiritual eare that delights to hear such things as have in them evidence and demonstration of the Spirit and power and findes a dis-relishing of other things So take a Carnal eye that delights to behold such things as please the Natural sense and delight the Fancy but now a Spiritual soul that delights to behold such things as may elevate the Soul and raise the affections more towards Heaven so take a Carnal heart that is well pleased when it is exercised about toyes this vaine needless question and the other but now a Spiritual heart that can take no comfortable relish in things of this nature but they are dry and empty unto it and therefore it shuns and avoyds them and so escapes the danger that comes by them 3 Because such a heart as is exercised in and taken up with Spiritual things lives as I may say in another world whither these vapours which make the braines of many men giddy and their conversation unstedfast doe not ascend he lives in the heavenly world and is
did give to Christ for man as the words compared with the following verse hold forth he being able to give it its own terms which plainly speaks that the defect lay in man not in the law he is unable to give the law its termes not the law unable to give him life So Heb. 8.7 8. hee speakes of the first Covenant as being faulty i. e. short unable to justifie or save yet to prevent mistakes he strait way in the very next words addes that the fault was not in the Old Covenant it self but in them to whom it was given for finding fault with them he saith Behold the dayes come saith the Lord the fault is found in them not in the Covenant it self So that the truth is the Old Covenant it self was ordained for life able to give it yet could it not give life because they with whom this Old Covenant was made were not able to performe the condition of it give it those termes which it must have and without which it could not dispense life Obj. But it will bee said But why did God establish the Old Covenant for life and yet hold forth this life upon such termes as that the Covenant ordained to life could give life to none This seems to be but a mockery in God Ans Not so for it must be considered what I said before that the Old Covenant was not established for life to this end that life should bee attained thereby but for other ends and designes Now God having other ends and designes in the holding forth life eternal in this Old Covenant then the giving of life which indeed was no end of Gods at all it was therefore no mockery in God for the accomplishment of those other ends to establish it as a Covenant for life eternal which was the best way it could bee established in for the attainement of those ends now the ends why it was by God established as such a Covenant were such as these 1 Because it was a thing of absolute necessity to the end that the righteousnesse of the Law or Old Covenant might bee fulfilled in us as Rom. 8.4 that the same should be perfectly obeyed either by us or by our Surety in our stead Now though God knew full well that wee could not obey it yet to the end that our Surety might stand under it as a Covenant for life and his obedience to it as such a Covenant might bee imputed to us therefore doth God institute it or ordaine it as such a Covenant And to set forth this the two-fold giving forth of the Old Covenant doth excellently accord As the Old Covenant as hath been formerly noted did consist of three parts 1 The Moral Law 2 The Ceremonial 3 The Judicial so it is a thing observable that either were twice given forth from the Lord unto Moses who was the Mediator of this Covenant FINIS Books Printed for and sold by Livewell Chapman at the Crown in Popes head-Alley MR. Greenhils Exposition on the first nineteen Chapters of Ezekiel in three Volumes Quarto Mr. Greenhils Sermons on Christs last Discovery of himself Octavo Mr. Cottons Exposition on the 13. Chapter of the Revelations Quarto Mr. Raworths Jacobs Ladder c. Octavo Mr. Can's Truth with Time proving none of the Seven last Vials are yet poured out Quarto Mr. Can's Time of the End a Treatise about the last Apostacy the Little Horn and the Beast hat slayeth the Witnesses Octavo The Holiness of Church-members Quarto By John Cotton Singing of Psalms a Gospel Ordinance quarto By John Cotton An explicite Declaration of the Testimony of Christ according to the plain sayings of the Gospel c. Quarto By Tho. Moor senior A Treatise of the Person of Christ c. Quarto By Tho. Moor senior An Antidote against the spreading Infections of the Spirit of Antichrist in these last dayes under many vizards Being a Discovery of a lying and Antichristian spirit in some of those called Quakers c. Quarto By Tho. Moor junior The Knowledge of Christ c. Wherein the Types Prophesies Genealogies Miracles Humiliation Exaltation and the Mediatorial Office of Christ are opened and applied By John Davenport of New-haven in New-England The Legislative power Christs peculiar Prerogative By William Aspinwal A Presage of sundry sad Calamities yet to come By William Aspinwal The Abrogation of the Jewish Sabbath or the Sabbath of the seventh day of the week By William Aspinwal Arrows against Babylon By John Pendarves Sigh's for Sion By John Penderves The Fear of God what it is and exhorted to a Sermon preached by John Pendarves The voice of the Spirit A Discovery what the witnessing work of the Spirit is How the Spirit witnesseth Who are capable of attaining the witnessings of the Spirit How a soul may know its injoyment of them By what means a soul may attain them By Sam. Petto A Voyce from heaven a Testimony the Remainders of Antichrist yet in England By Gualter Postlethwaite Christ and Moses Excellency A Triplex Treatise distinguishing the two Covenants By Vavasor Powell Saving Faith set forth in three Dialogues By Vavasor Powell Generation-work in three parts 1 Part shewing what Generation-work is That Saints in their several Generations have the peculiar works of their Generation That it s of great concernment for a Saint to attend to and bee industrious in it wherein the work of the present Generation lyes How a man may finde out that part of it which is properly his work How it may bee so carried on as God may bee served 2 Part being an Exposition of the seven Vials Rev. 16. 3 Part an Exposition of the Prophesie of the two Witnesses from the 11 12 and 14 Chap. of the Revelation To which is added a Key to unlock the mystical Numbers of Daniel and the Revelations By John Tillinghast Mr. Tillinghasts eight last Sermons viz. The Fifth Kingdom founded on the New Covenant The Signs of the Times Christ the only Foundation The promise of the Father The Evil of the Times Look to your aimes and ends The Idols abolished Six several Treatises viz. The promises made and fulfilled in Christ Absolute promises made to sinners as sinners The life of faith in Justification Sanctification Expectation The Saints Anchor rightly cast Christs new Command Of Offences By John Tillinghast Knowledge of the Times or a resolution of the Question how long it shall bee unto the end of Wonders By John Tillinghast FINIS