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A96093 The beatitudes: or A discourse upon part of Christs famous Sermon on the Mount. Wherunto is added Christs various fulnesse. The preciousnesse of the soul. The souls malady and cure. The beauty of grace. The spiritual watch. The heavenly race. The sacred anchor. The trees of righteousnesse. The perfume of love. The good practitioner. By Thomas Watson, minister of the word at Stephens Walbrook in the city of London. Watson, Thomas, d. 1686. 1660 (1660) Wing W1107; Thomason E1031_1; ESTC R15025 429,795 677

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the children of God present Christ in the Arms of their Faith 2. The prayers of Gods children indited by the Spirit are ardent prayers Ye have received the Spirit whereby we cry Abba Father Rom. 8.15 Father that implies Faith we cry that implies fervency The incense was to be laid upon burning coals Lev. 16.12 The incense was a type of prayer the burning coals of ardency in prayer Elias prayed earnestly Jam. 5.17 In the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Verbis addita verbalia apud Hebraeus vehementiam significant Grot. IN PRAYING HE PRAYED that is he did it with vehemency † in prayer the heart must boyle over with heat of affection Prayer is compared to groans unutterable * Rom. 8.26 it alludes to a woman that is in pangs We should be in pangs when we are travelling for mercy such prayer commands God himself Isa 45.11 3. The prayers of Gods children are heart-cleansing prayers they purge out sin many pray against sin and sin against prayer Gods children do not only pray against sin but pray down sin 3. The Spirit of God hath a witnessing work in the heart Gods children have not only the influence of the Spirit but the witness Rom. 8.16 The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit that we are the children of God There is a three-fold witness a child of God hath the witness of the Word the witness of Conscience the witness of the Spirit the Word makes the major Proposition He who is in such a manner qualified is a childe of God Conscience makes the minor but Thou art so divinely qualified the Spirit makes the conclusion therefore Thou art a child of God The Spirit joyns with the witness of Conscience Rom. 8.16 The Spirit witnesseth with our spirits The Spirit teacheth Conscience to search the Records of Scripture and finde its evidences for heaven it helps conscience to spell out its name in a promise it bears witness with our spirit Quest Quest But how shall I know the witness of the Spirit from a delusion Answ Answ The Spirit of God always witnesseth according to the Word as the Eccho answers the voyce Enthusiasts speak much of the Spirit but they leave the Word That inspiration which is either without the Word or against it is an imposture The Spirit of God did indite the Word 2 Pet. 1.21 Now if the Sp●rit should witness otherwise than according to the Word the Spirit should be divided against it self it should be a spirit of contradiction witnessing one thing for a truth in the Word and another thing different from it in a mans conscience 4. The fourth sign of Gods children is Zeal for God they are zealous for his Day his Truth his Glory they who are born of God are impatient of his dishonour Moses was cool in his own cause but hot in Gods when the people of Israel had wrought folly in the golden Calf he breaks the Tables When Saint Paul saw the people of Athens given to Idolatry his spirit was stirred in him Acts 17.16 In the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his spirit was imbittered or as the word may signifie he was in a Paroxysme or burning fit of zeal He could not contain but with this fire of zeal dischargeth against their sin As we shall answer for idle words so for sinful silence it is dangerous in this sense to be possessed with a dumb Divel David saith the zeal of Gods house had eaten him up Psal 69.9 Many Christians whose zeal once had almost eaten them up now they have eaten up their zeal they are grown tepid and neutral the breath of preferment blowing upon them hath cooled their heat I can never believe that he hath the heart of a childe in him that can be patient when Gods glory suffers Can an ingenuous childe endure to hear his father reproached though we should be silent under Gods displeasure yet not under his dishonour When there is an holy fire kindled in the heart it will break forth at the lips zeal tempered with holiness is the white and sanguine which gives the foul its best complexion Of all others let Ministers be impatient when Gods glory is impeached and eclipsed A Minister without zeal is like salt that hath lost its savour Zeal will make men take injuries done to God as done to themselves It is reported of Chrysostom that he reproved any sin against God as if he himself had received a personal wrong * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let not Ministers be either shaken with fear or seduced with flattery God never made Ministers to be as false glasses to make bad faces look fair for want of this fire of zeal they are in danger of another fire even the burning lake Rev. 21.8 into which the fearful shall be cast 5. Those who are Gods children and are born of God are of a more noble and celestial spirit than men of the world they minde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things above * Col. 3.2 1 John 5.4 Whatsoever is born of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 overcometh the world The children of God live in an higher Region they are compared to Eagles Isa 40.31 in regard of their sublimeness and heavenly-mindedness their souls are fled aloft Christ is in their heart Col. 1.27 and the world is under their feet Rev. 12.1 Men of the world are ever tumbling in thick clay they are terrae filii not Eagles but Earth-worms the Saints are of another spirit they are born of God and walk with God as the childe walks with the father Noah walked with God Gen. 6.9 Gods children shew their high Pedigree in their heavenly Conversation Phil. 3.21 6. Another sign of Adoption is love to them that are children Gods children are knit together with the bond of love as all the members of the body are knit together by several nerves and ligaments If we are born of God then we love the brotherhood 1 Pet. 2.17 Idem est motus animae in imaginem rem he that loves the person loves the picture The children of God are his walking pictures and if we are of God we love those who have his Effigies and Pourtraiture drawn upon their souls If we are born of God we love the Saints notwithstanding their infirmities Children love one another though they have some imperfections of nature a squint-eye or a crooked back We love gold in the Oar though it have some drossiness in it the best Saints have their blemishes We read of the spot of Gods children Deutr. 32.5 A Saint in this life is like a fair face with a scar in it If we are born of God we love his children though they are poor we love to see the image and picture of our father though hung in never so poor a Frame we love to see a rich Christ in a poor man And if we are children of the Highest we shew our love to Gods children 1. By prizing their persons
Basil calls anger drunkennesse and Hierom saith there are more drunken with passion than with wine Seneca calls anger brevis insania a short fit of madnesse sometimes it suspends the use of reason in the best things we are coole enough in Religion we are all yce in contention all fire How unbeseeming is rash anger how doth it disguise and disfigure Homer saith of Agamemnon that when he did moderate his passion he resembled the gods he was like Jupiter in feature like Pallas in wisdom but when he was in his fury he was a very Tyger nothing of Jupiter did appear in him as Plato counselled the great Revellers and drinkers of his time that they should view themselves in a glasse when they were in their drunken humour and they would appear loathsome to themselves So let a man disguised with passion view himself in the glasse and sure he would ever after be out of love with himself Ora tument ira nigrescunt sanguine venae Ephes 4.26 27. Let not the Sun go down upon your wrath neither give place to the Divel Oh saith one he hath wrong'd me and I will never give place to him but better give place to him than to the Divel an hasty spirit is not a meek spirit Caution Caution Not but that we may in some cases be angry There is an holy anger that anger is without sin which is against sin meeknesse and zeal may stand together in matters of Religion a Christian must be cloathed with the spirit of Eliah and be full of the fury of the Lord Jer. 6.11 Christ was meek Mat. 11.29 yet zealous John 2.14 15. The zeal of Gods house did eat him up 2. Meekness is opposed to malice malice is the Divels picture John 8.44 Malice is mental murder 1 John 3.15 it unfits for duty How can such a man pray I have read of two men that lived in malice who being asked how they could say the Lords prayer one answered he thank'd God there were many good prayers besides The other answered when he said the Lords prayer he did leave out those words As we forgive them that trespass against us But Saint Austin brings in God replying Because thou dost not say my prayer therefore I will not hear thine * Quia tu non dicis meam ego non audiam tuam Were it not a sad judgement if all that a man did eat should turn to poyson to a malicious man all the holy Ordinances of God turn to poyson the table of the Lord is a snare he eats and drinks his own damnation a malicious spirit is not a meek spirit 3. Meekness is opposed to revenge malice is the scum of anger and revenge is malice boyling over malice is a vermin lives on blood revenge is Satans Nectar and Ambrosia * Nihil Diabolo gratius Luth. this is the savoury meat which the malicious man dresseth for the Divel the Scripture forbids revenge Rom. 12.19 Dearly Beloved avenge not your selves this is to take Gods office out of his hand who is called the God of recompences Jer. 51.56 and the God of vengeance Psal 94.1 This I urge against those who challenge one another to Duels indeed spiritual Duels are lawful it is good to fight with the Divel James 4.7 Resist the Divel 'T is good to Duel with a mans self the regenerate part against the carnal Blessed is he that seeks a revenge upon his lusts 2 Cor. 7.11 Yea what revenge but other Duels are unlawful Avenge not your selves The Turks though a barbarous people did in Ancient times burn such as went to Duel in their sides with hot coals of fire they who were in heat of revenge were punished sutably with fire Object But if I am thus meek and tame in bearing of injuries and incivilities I shall lose my credit it will be a stain to my reputation Answ 1. To pass by an injury without revenge is no Eclipse to a mans credit Solomon tells us it is the glory of a man to pass over a transgression Prov. 12.11 'T is more honour to bury an injury than revenge it and to slight it than to write it down † * Melius est injurias ignoscere quam vindicare The weakest creatures soonest turn head and sting upon every touch the Lyon a more Majestick creature is not easily provoked the Bramble tears the Oak and Cedar are more peaceable passion imports weakness a noble spirit over-looks an injury Answ 2. Suppose a mans credit should suffer an impair with those whose censure is not to be valued yet think which is worse shame or sin Wilt thou sin against God to save thy credit surely it is little wisdom for a man to adventure his blood that he may fetch back his Reputation and to run into hell to be counted valorous 1. Not but that a man may stand up in defence of himself Caution 1 when his life is endangered Some of the Anabaptists hold it unlawful to take up the sword upon any occasion though when they get the Power I would be loth to trust them their river-water often turning to blood but questionless a man may take up the sword for self-preservation else he comes under the breach of the sixth Commandment he is guilty of self-murder in taking up the sword he doth not so much seek anothers death as the safe-guard of his own life his intention is not to do hurt but prevent it self-defence is consistent with Christian meekness the Law of Nature and Religion justifie it that God who bids us put up our sword Matth. 26.51 yet will allow us a buckler in our own defence and he that will have us innocent as Doves not to offend others will have us wise as serpents in preserving our selves Caution 2 2. Though revenge be contrary to meekness yet not but that a Magistrate may revenge the quarrels of others indeed 't is not revenge in him but doing justice The Magistrate is Gods Lieutenant on earth God hath put the sword in his hand and he is not to bear the sword in vain he must be in terrorem for the punishment of evil doers 1 Pet. 2.14 Though a private person must not render to any man evil for evil Rom. 12.17 yet a Magistrate may the evil of punishment for the evil of offence this rendring of evil is good Private men must put their sword into the sheath but the Magistrate sins if he doth not draw it out As his sword must not surfeit through cruelty so neither must it rust through partiality Too much lenity in a Magistrate is not meekness but injustice for him to indulge offences and say with a gentle reproof as Eli 1 Sam. 2.23 24. Why do you such things nay my sons for it is no good report that I hear This is but to shave the head that deserves to be cut off such a Magistrate makes himself guilty 4. Meekness is opposed to evil-speaking Eph. 4.31 Let all evil-speaking be
dangerous and their hearts are ready to despond It will not be amiss therefore to set the Crown of blessedness before them to animate their courage and to inflame their zeal How many Scriptures bring this Olive-branch in their mouth the tydings of blessedness to believers Matth. 24.46 Blessed is that servant whom his Lord when he cometh shall find so doing Mat. 25.34 Come ye blessed of my Father Blessedness is the perfection of a rational creature it is the whet-stone of a Christians industry the heighth of his ambition the flower of his joy blessedness is the desire of all men Aquinas calls it the ultimus finis this is the White every man aims to hit to this Center all the lines are drawn Quest Wherein doth blessedness consist Answ Millions of men mistake both the nature of blessedness and the way thither Some of the Learned have set down two hundred eighty eight several opinions about blessedness * Austin and all have shot wide of the mark I shall shew wherein it doth not consist and then wherein it doth consist SECT 1. 1. WHerein blessedness doth not consist It doth not lie in the acquisition of worldly things happiness cannot by any Art of Chymistry be extracted here Christ doth not say Blessed are the Rich or blessed are the Noble yet too many Idolize these things Man by the fall hath not only lost his Crown but his Head-piece How ready is he to terminate his happiness in extrinsecals which makes me call to mind that definition which some of the Heathen Philosophers gave of blessedness * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that it was to have a sufficiency of subsistence and to thrive well in the World And are there not many who go for Christians that seem to be of this Philosophical opinion if they have but worldly accommodations they are ready to sing a requiem to their souls and say with that brutish fool in the Gospel Soul thou hast much goods laid up for many years take thy ease Luk. 12.19 Quid turpius quam bonum rationalis animi ex irrationalibus nectere * Seneca Alas the Tree of blessedness doth not grow in an earthly Paradise Hath not God cursed the ground for sin Gen. 3.17 yet many are digging for felicity here as if they would fetch a blessing out of a curse a man may as well think to extract oyle out of a flint or fire out of water as blessedness out of these terrestial things King Solomon arrived at more than any man he was the most magnificent Prince that ever held the Scepter 1. For his Parentage he sprang from the Royal Line not only that Line of which many Kings came but of which Christ himself came Jesus Christ was of Solomons Line and Race so that for Heraldry and Nobility none could shew a fairer Coat of Arms. 2. For the situation of his Palace it was in Hierusalem the Princess and Paragon of the earth Hierusalem for its Renown was called the City of God it was the most famous Metropolis in the World Whither the Tribes go up the Tribes of the Lord Psal 122.4 3. For Wealth his Crown was hung full of Jewels he had treasures of gold and pearle and gave silver as stones 1 Kings 10.27 4. For worldly joy he had the flower and quintessence of all delights sumptuous Fare stately Edifices Vineyards Fish-ponds all sorts of Musick to inchant and ravish the senses with joy if there were any Rarity it was a Present for King Solomons Court thus did he bath himself in the perfumed waters of pleasure 5. For Wisdome he was the Oracle of his time when the Queen of Sheba came to pose him with hard questions he gave a solution to all her doubts 1 Kings 10.3 He had a key of knowledge to unlock Natures dark Cabinet so that if wisdome had been lost it might have been found here and the whole world might have lighted their understanding at Solomons Lamp He was an earthly Angel so that a carnal eye surveying his glory would have been ready to imagine that Solomon had entred into that Paradise out of which Adam was once driven or that he had found another as good never did the World cast a more smiling aspect upon any man yet when he comes to give in his impartial verdict he tells us that the World hath vanity written upon its Frontispiece and all those golden delights he enjoyed were but a painted felicity a glorious misery Eccles 2.8 And behold all was vanity Blessedness is too noble and delicate a Plant to dwell in Natures soile That blessedness doth not lie in Externals I shall prove by these five Demonstrations 1. Those things which are not commensurate to the desires of the soul can never make a man blessed but transitory things are not commensurate to the desires of the soul therefore they cannot render him blessed nothing on earth can satisfie Eccles 5.10 He that loveth silver shall not be satisfied with silver Riches are unsatisfying 1. Because they are not real the world is called a fashion 1 Cor. 7.31 The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a Mathematical Figure sometimes a shew or apparition Riches are but tin'd over * Bracteata faelicitas Sen. they are like Alchymy which glisters a little in our eyes but at death all this Alchymy will be worn off Riches are but sugred lyes pleasant impostures like a gilded Cover which hath not one leaf of true comfort bound up in it 2. Because they are not sutable The soul is a spiritual thing riches are of an earthly extract * Effodiuntur opes and how can these fill a spiritual substance a man may as well fill his Chest with grace as his heart with gold if a man were crowned with all the delights of the world nay if God should build him an house among the Stars yet the restless eye of his unsatisfied mind would be looking still higher he would be prying beyond the heavens for some hidden rarities which he thinks he hath not yet attained to so unquenchable is the thirst of the soul till it come to bath in the River of life and to center upon true blessedness 2. That which cannot quiet the heart in a storme cannot intitle a man to blessedness but earthly things accumulated cannot rock the troubled heart quiet therefore they cannot make one blessed If the Spirit be wounded can the creature poure in wine and oyle into these wounds if God sets on conscience and it flies in a mans face can worldly comforts take off this angry fury Is there any Harp to drive away the evil Spirit outward things can no more cure the agony of conscience than a silken stockin can cure a gouty leg When Saul was sore distressed 1 Sam. 28.15 could all the Jewels of his Crown comfort him if God be angry whose fury is poured out like fire and the Rocks are thrown down by him Nahum 1.6 can a wedge of gold be
God Wilt thou repine and be sad when thou art blessed Esau wept because he wanted the blessing Gen. 27.38 Bless me even me also O my Father and Esau lift up his voice and wept But shall a child of God be immoderately cast down when he hath the blessing Adam sin'd in the midst of Paradise how evil is it to be blessed and yet murmure Branch 4 Branch 4. What an encouragement is this to godliness we are all ambitious of a blessing then let us espouse Religion Psal 112.1 Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord. But you will say this way is everywhere spoken against 't is no matter seeing this is the way to get a blessing Suppose a Rich man should adopt another for his heir and others should reproach him he cares not as long as he is heir to the Estate So what though others may reproach thee for thy Religion as long as it entails a blessing upon thee the same day thou becomest godly thou becomest blessed CHAP. IV. MATTH 5. ● Blessed are the Poor in Spirit HAving spoken of the general notion of blessedness I come next to consider the Subjects of this blessedness and these our Saviour hath decyphered to be the Poor in Spirit the mourners c. But before I touch upon these I shall a little Preface or Paraphrase upon this Sermon of the Beatitudes 1. Observe the Divinity in this Sermon which goes beyond all Philosophy The Philosophers use to say contrarium contrarium expellit one contrary expels another but here one contrary begets another poverty useth to expel riches but here poverty begets riches for how rich are they that have a Kingdom mourning useth to expel joy but behold here mourning begets joy They shall be comforted Water useth to quench the flame but the water of tears kindles the flame of joy Persecution useth to expel happiness but here it makes happy Blessed are they that are persecuted These are the sacred Paradoxes in our Saviours Sermon * Evangelicam Philosophiam à Parado●is inchoavit Dominus ●nd Cl●● 2. Observe how Christs Doctrine and the opinion of carnal men differ They think beati divites blessed are the rich The world would count him blessed who could have Midas wish that all he touch'd might be turn'd into gold But Christ saith Beati pauperes blessed are the poor in spirit The world thinks Blessed are they on the Pinacle but Christ pronounceth them blessed who are in the Valley Christs reckonings and the worlds do not agree 3. Observe the nature of true Religion Poverty leads the Van and Persecution brings up the Reare Christianus quasi Crucianus Every true Saint saith Luther is heire to the Crosse Some there are who would be thought religious displaying Christs Colours by a glorious profession but to be poor in spirit and persecuted durus hic sermo they cannot take down this bitter pill they would weare Christs Jewels but wave his Crosse these are strangers to Religion 4. Observe the certain connexion between grace and its reward they who are poor in spirit shall have the kingdom of God They are as sure to go to heaven as if they were in heaven already Our Saviour would encourage men to Religion by sweetning Commands with Promises he ties duty and reward together As in the body the veines carry the blood and the arteries the spirits so one part of these Verses carries Duty and the other part carries reward As that Scholar of Apelles painted Helena richly drawn in costly and glorious apparel hung all over with orient pearl and precious stones So our Lord Christ having set down several qualifications of a Christian poor in spirit pure in heart c. draws these heavenly vertues in their fair colours of blessednesse and sets the magnificent crown of reward upon them that by this oriency he might the more set forth their unparallel'd beauty and entice holy love 5. Observe hence the concatenation of the graces poor in spirit meek merciful c. where there is one grace there is all As they say of the Cardinal vertues virtutes sunt inter se connexae the vertues are chained together so we may say of the graces of the Spirit they are link'd and chain'd together he that hath poverty of Spirit is a mourner he that is a mourner is meek he that is meek is merciful c. The Spirit of God plants in the heart an habit of all the graces the new creature hath all the parts and lineaments as in the body there is a composition of all the Elements and a mixture of all the humours The graces of the Spirit are like a Row of pearl which hang together upon the string of Religion and serve to adorn Christs Bride This I note to shew you a difference between an hypocrite and a true child of God The hypocrite flatters himself with a pretence of grace but in the mean time he hath not an habit of all the graces he hath not poverty of spirit nor purity of heart whereas a child of God hath all the graces in his heart at least radically though not gradually These things being premised I come in particular to those heavenly dispositions of soul to which Christ hath affixed blessedness And the first is POVERTY of SPIRIT Blessed are the Poor in Spirit Chrysostom and Theophylact are of opinion that this was the first Sermon that ever Christ made therefore it may challenge our best attention Blessed are the Poor in Spirit Our Lord Christ being to raise an high and stately Fabrick of blessedness lays the foundation of it low in poverty of Spirit but all poverty is not blessed * Non omnis paupertas beata B●ugensis I shall use a four-fold distinction 1. I distinguish between Poor in Estate and Poor in Spirit there are the Divels poor poor and wicked whose cloaths are not more torn than their conscience There are some whose poverty is their sin who through Improvidence or Excess have brought themselves to want these may be poor in Estate but not poor in Spirit 2. I distinguish between spiritually Poor and Poor in spirit he who is without grace is spiritually poor but he is not poor in Spirit he knows not his own beggery Rev. 3.17 Thou knowest not that thou art Poor He is in the worst sense poor who hath no sense of his poverty 3. I distinguish between Poor-spirited and Poor in spirit They are said to be poor-spirited who have mean base spirits who act below themselves 1. As they are men such are those Misers which having great Estates yet can hardly afford themselves bread who live sneakingly and are ready to wish their own throats cut because they are forced to spend something in satisfying Natures demands This Solomon calls an evil under the Sun Eccles 6.2 There is an evil which I have seen under the Sun a man to whom God hath given Riches so that he wants nothing for his soul of all that he desireth yet
God giveth him not power to eat thereof Religion makes no man a Niggard though it teacheth prudence yet not sordidness 2. Who act below themselves as they are Christians while they sinfully comply and prostitute themselves to the humours of others a base kind of mettle that will take any stamp they will for a piece of silver part with the jewel of a good conscience they will be of the State-Religion they will dance to the Divels Pipe if their Superiour commands them These are Poor-spirited but not Poor in Spirit 4. I distinguish between Poor in an Evangelical sense and in a Popish sense the Papists give a wrong gloss upon the Text by Poor in spirit they understand those who renouncing their Estates vow a voluntary poverty living retiredly in their Monasteries * Monasteriis Caenobii● Pauperes Bellarm. but Christ never meant these he doth not pronounce them blessed who make themselves poor leaving their Estates and their Callings but such as are Evangelically poor Well then what are we to understand by Poor in spirit the Greek word for Poor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not only taken in a strict sense for those who live upon Alms * Ad extremam inopiam reducti Beza quibus nihil superest but in a more large sense for those who are destitute as well of inward as outward comfort Poor in spirit then signifies those who are brought to the sense of their sins and seeing no goodness in themselves despair in themselves and sue wholly to the mercy of God in Christ * Qui serio cordis affectu pauperiem suam agnoscunt spem fiduciam in una miserecordia Dei propter Christum repositam habent Paraeus Poverty of spirit is a kind of self-annihilation such an expression I find in Calvin The poor in spirit saith he are they who see nothing in themselves but flie to mercy for Sanctuary such an one was the Publican Luk. 18.13 God be merciful to me a sinner of this temper was Saint Paul Phil. 3.9 That I may he found in Christ not having mine own righteousness these are the poor which are invited as Guests to Wisdoms Banquet Prov. 7.3 4. Here several Questions may be propounded 1. Why doth Christ here begin with poverty of spirit Quest 1 why is this put in the fore-front I answer Answ Christ doth it to shew that poverty of spirit is the very basis and foundation of all the other graces that follow * Totius a ●ificii fundamen Avendanus You may as well expect fruit to grow without a root as the other graces without this till a man be Poor in spirit he cannot mourn Poverty of spirit is like the fire under the Still which makes the water drop from the eyes when a man sees his own defects and deformities and looks upon himself as undone then he mourns after Christ the springs run in the vallies Psal 104.10 When the heart becomes a valley and lies low by poverty of spirit now the springs of holy mourning run there Till a man be Poor in spirit he cannot hunger and thirst after righteousness he must first be sensible of want before he can hunger therefore Christ begins with poverty of spirit because this ushers in all the rest Quest 2 2. The second Question is What is the difference between poverty of spirit and humility Answ These are so like that they have been taken one for the other Chrysostom by poverty of spirit understands humility * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost in loc yet I think there is some difference they differ as the cause and the effect Tertullian saith none are poor in spirit but the humble * Nulli pauperes spiritu nisi hamiles Tert. he seems to make humility the cause of poverty of spirit I rather think poverty of spirit is the cause of humility for when a man sees his want of Christ and how he lives on the Alms of free-grace this makes him humble he that is sensible of his own vacuity and indigence with the Violet hangs down his head in humility humility is the sweet spice that grows from poverty of spirit Quest 3 3. What is the difference between poverty of spirit and self-denial I answer in some things they agree in some things they differ In some things they agree for the Poor in spirit is an absolute self-denier he renounceth all opinion of himself he acknowledgeth his dependance on Christ and free-grace but in some things they differ the self-denier parts with the world for Christ the poor in spirit parts with himself for Christ i. e. his own righteousness the poor in spirit sees himself nothing without Christ the self-denier will leave himself nothing for Christ And thus I have shewed what poverty of spirit is The words thus opened present us with this truth Doctr. That Christians must be poor in spirit or thus Doctr. Poverty of spirit is the jewel which Christians must wear As the best creature was made out of nothing namely light so when a man sees himself nothing out of this nothing God makes a most beautiful creature it is Gods usual method to make a man poor in spirit and then fill him with the graces of the Spirit as we deal with a Watch we take it first in pieces and then set all the wheels and pins in order So the Lord doth first take a man all in pieces shews him his undone condition and then sets him in frame The Reasons are 1. Till we are poor in spirit we are not capable of receiving Reason 1 grace he who is swell'd with an opinion of self-excellency and self-sufficiency is not fit for Christ he is full already intus existens prohibet extraneum if the hand be full of pebbles it cannot receive gold the glass is first emptied before you poure in wine God doth first empty a man of himself before he poures in the precious wine of his grace none but the poor in spirit are within Christs Commission Isa 61.1 The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me he hath sent me to bind up the broken-hearted that is such as are broken in the sense of their unworthiness 2. Till we are poor in spirit Christ is never precious Reason 2 before we see our own wants we never see Christs worth poverty of spirit is sal condimentum the sawce which makes Christ relish sweet to the soul mercy is most welcome to the poor in spirit he who sees himself clad in filthy rags Zach. 3.4 5. what will he give for change of rayment the righteousness of Christ what will he give to have the fair Mitre of salvation set upon his head when a man sees himself almost wounded to death how precious will the balm of Christs blood be to him when he sees himself deep in Arrears with God and is so far from paying the debt that he cannot sum up the debt how glad would he be of a surety the Pearle
of price is only precious to the poor in spirit he that wants bread and is ready to starve will have it whatever it cost he will lay his garment to pledge bread he must have or he is undone So to him that is Poor in spirit that sees his want of Christ how precious is a Saviour Christ is Christ and grace is grace to him he will do any thing for the bread of life therefore will God have the soul thus qualified to raise the price of his Market to inhance the value and estimate of the Lord Jesus Reason 3 3. Till we are Poor in spirit we cannot go to heaven Theirs is the Kingdom of heaven this doth tune and prepare us for heaven By nature a man is big with self-confidence and the gate of heaven is so strait that he cannot enter now poverty of spirit doth minorare animam it doth lessen the soul it pares off its superfluity and now he is fit to enter in at the strait gate The great Cable cannot go through the eye of the Needle but let it be untwisted and made into small threads and then it may Poverty of spirit untwists the great Cable it makes a man little in his own eyes and now an entrance shall be made unto him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Richly into the Everlasting Kingdom 2 Pet. 1.11 Through this Temple of Poverty we must go into the Temple of Glory SECT 1. Use 1 Use 1 IT shews wherein a Christians riches do consist namely in poverty of spirit Some think if they can fill their bags with gold then they are rich but they who are poor in spirit are the rich men they are rich in poverty This poverty entitles them to a Kingdom How poor are they that think themselves rich how rich are they that see themselves poor I call it the Jewel of poverty There are some Paradoxes in Religion that the world cannot understand for a man to become a fool that he may be wise 1 Cor. 3.18 to save his life by losing it Matth. 16.25 and by being poor to be rich Reason laughs at it but blessed are the poor for theirs is the Kingdom Then this poverty is to be striven for more than all riches under these rags is hid cloth of gold out of this carcasse comes hony SECT 2. Use 2 IF blessed are the poor in spirit then by the rule of contraries Cursed are the proud in spirit Prov. 16.5 There is a generation of men who do commit idolatry with themselves no such idol as self They admire their own parts moralities self-righteousnesse and upon this stock graft the hope of their salvation There are many are too good to go to heaven they have commodities enough of their own growth and they scorne to live upon the borrow or be beholding to Christ These bladders the Divel hath blown up with pride and they are swell'd in their own conceit but it is like the swelling of a dropsie-man whose bignesse is his disease thus it was with that proud Justiciary Luke 18.11 The Pharisee stood and prayed 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 tythes c. Here was a man setting up the top-sail of pride but the Publican who was poor in spirit he stood a far off and would not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven but smot upon his brest saying God be merciful to me a sinner This man carried away the Garland I tell you saith Christ this man went down to his house justified rather than the other Saint Paul before his conversion thought himself in a very good condition Touching the Law blamelesse Phil. 3.6 He thought to have built a Tower of his own righteousnesse the top whereof should have reached to heaven but at last God shewed him there was a crack in the foundation and then he gets into the Rock of ages Phil. 3.9 That I may be found in him There is not a more dangerous praecipice than self-righteousnesse this was Laodicea's temper Rev. 3.17 because thou sayest I am rich and have need of nothing and knowest not that thou art wretched and miserable c. She thought she wanted nothing when indeed she had nothing How many doth this damne we see some ships that have scaped the rocks yet are cast away upon the sands so some who have scaped the rocks of grosse sins yet are cast away upon the sands of self-righteousnesse and how hard is it to convince such men of their danger they will not believe but they may be help'd out of the Dungeon with these rotten rags they cannot be perswaded their case is so bad as others would make it Christ tells them they are blind but they are like Seneca's maid who was born blind but she would not beleeve it Ait domum esse coecam The house saith she is dark but I am not blind Christ tells them they are naked and offers his white robes to cover them but they are of a different perswasion and because they are blind they cannot see themselves naked how many have perished by being their own saviours O that this might drive the proud sinner out of himself a man never comes to himself till he comes out of himself and no man can come out till first Christ come in SECT 3. Use 3 IF poverty of spirit be so necessary Trial. How shall I Use 3 know that I am poor in spirit Answ By the blessed effects of this Poverty which are 1. He that is poor in spirit is weaned from himself Psalm 131.2 My soul is even as a weaned child 't is hard for a man to be weaned from himself The Vine catcheth hold of every thing that is near to stay it self upon There is some bough or other a man would be catching hold of to rest upon how hard is it to be brought quite off himself The poor in spirit are divorced from themselves they see they must to hell without Christ My soul is even as a weaned child 2. He that is poor in spirit is a Christ-admirer he hath high thoughts of Christ he sees himself naked and flies to Christ that in his garments he may obtaine the blessing He sees himself wounded and as the wounded Deere runs to the water so he thirsts for Christs blood the water of life Lord saith he give me Christ or I die conscience is turned into a fiery Serpent and hath stung him now all the world for a brazen serpent he sees himself in a state of death and how precious is one leaf of the tree of life which is both for food and medicine The poor in spirit sees all his riches lye in Christ wisdome righteousnesse sanctification c. In every exigence he flies to this magazine and store-house he adores the all-fulnesse in Christ They say of the oyle in Rhemes though they are continually almost spending it yet it never wasts
there is hope Repentance unravels sin and makes sin not to be but hardness of heart binds guilt fast upon the soul it seals a man under wrath it is not the hainousness of sin but hardness of heart that damns this makes the sin against the Holy Ghost uncapable of mercy because the sinner that hath committed it is uncapable of Repentance CHAP. VII Containing a sharp Reprehension Use 1 Use 1 THIS Doctrine draws up a Charge against several sorts Reproof Branch 1 1. Those that think themselves good Christians yet have not learned this Art of holy Mourning Luther calls Mourning Bara herba a rare herb Men have tears to shed for other things but have none to spare for their sins there are many Murmurers but few Mourners most are like the stony ground which wanted moisture Matth. 13. We have many cry out of hard times but are not sensible of hard hearts hot and dry is the worst temper of the body sure I am to be hot in sin and to be so dry as to have no tears is the worst temper of the soul How many are like Gideons dry Fleece and like the Mountains of Gilboa there is no dew upon them Did Christ bleed for sin and canst not thou weep if Gods bottle be not filled with tears his Vial will be filled with wrath We have many sinners in Sion but few mourners in Sion It is with most people as with a man on the top of a Mast the Winds blow and the Waves beat and the ship is in danger of shipwrack and he is fast asleep so when the Waves of sin have even covered men and the stormy wind of Gods Wrath blows and is ready to blow them into hell yet they are asleep in security 2. It reproves them who instead of weeping for sin Branch 2 spend their dayes in mirth and jollity instead of Mourners we have Ranters they take the Timbrel and Harp they spend their dayes in wealth Job 21.13 Vitam agunt Sybariticam * Luther they do not lugere animo but indulgere genio they live Epicures and dye Atheists St. James bids us turn our laughter to Mourning Jam. 4.9 But they turn their Mourning to laughter Sampson was brought forth to make the Philistines sport Judg. 16.26 The jovial sinner doth make the Divel sport it is a saying of Theophylact It is one of the worst sights to see a sinner go laughing to hell How unseasonable is it to take the Harp and Viol when God is taking the Sword Ezek. 21.9 10. A sword a sword is sharpned and also furbished should we then make mirth this is a sin that enrageth God Isa 22.12 13. In that day did the Lord of Hosts call to weeping and to mourning and behold joy and gladness slaying Oxen and killing sheep eating flesh and drinking wine and it was revealed in mine ears by the Lord of Hosts Surely this iniquity shall not be purged from you till you dye saith the Lord God of Hosts That is this your sin shall not be done away by any expiatory sacrifice but vengeance shall pursue you for ever 3. It reproves those who instead of mourning for sin Branch 3 rejoyce in sin Prov. 2.14 2 Thess 2.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who take pleasure in iniquity Wicked men are worse in this sense than the damned in hell for I dare say they take little pleasure in their sins there are some so impudently profane that they will make themselves and others merry with their sins sin is a soul-sickness Luke 5.31 Will a man make merry with his disease ah wretch did Christ bleed for sin and dost thou laugh at sin is that thy mirthwhich grieves the Spirit * Tantis in malis laetari diesque jocis choreis consumere nonne est eos imitari qui phrenesi laborant qui dum carnes proprias laccrant ridem Isid Clar. is it a time for a man to break jests when he is upon the Scaffold and his head is to be stricken off thou that laughest at sin now the time is coming when God will laugh at thy calamity Prov. 1.26 Branch 4 4. It reproves those that cry down mourning for sin they are like the Philistines who stopped the Wells Gen. 26.15 These would stop the Wells of godly sorrow Antimonians say this is a legal Doctrine but Christ here preacheth it Blessed are they that mourn and the Apostles preached it Mark 6.11 And they went out and preached that men should repent Holy ingenuity will put us upon mourning for sin he that hath the heart of a child cannot but weep for his unkindness against God Mourning for sin is the very fruit and product of the Spirit of grace Zach. 12.10 Such as cry down Repentance cry down the Spirit of grace mourning for sin is the only way to keep off wrath from us such as with Sampson would break this Pillar go about to pull down the vengeance of God upon the Land To all such I say as Peter to Simon Magus Acts 8.22 Repent therefore of this thy wickedness and pray God if perhaps the thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee O sinner Repent that thou hast cryed down Repentance CHAP. VIII Motives to holy mourning 2. LET me exhort Christians to holy Mourning Use 2 Exhort I now perswade such a Mourning as will prepare the soul for blessedness Oh that our hearts were spiritual limbicks distilling the water of holy tears Christs Doves weep Ezek. 7.16 They that escape shall be like Doves of the Vallies all of them mourning every one for his iniquity There are several Divine Motives to holy Mourning 1. Tears cannot be put to a better use if you weep Motive 1 for outward losses you lose your tears 't is like a showre upon a Rock which doth no good but tears for sin are blessed tears Blessed are they that mourn These poyson our corruptions salt-water kills the worms the brinish water of repenting tears will help to kill that worm of sin which would gnaw the conscience 2. Gospel-Mourning is an evidence of grace Zach. Motive 2 12.10 I will poure upon the house of David and the Inhabitants of Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and they shall mourn c. The Holy Ghost descended on Christ like a Dove Matth. 3. The Dove is a weeping creature where there is a Dove-like weeping it is a good sign the Spirit of God hath descended there weeping for sin is a sign of the new birth assoon as the child is born it weeps Exod. 2.3 And behold the babe wept To weep kindly for sin is a good sign we are born of God Mourning shews an heart of flesh Ezek. 36.26 A stone will not melt when the heart is in a melting frame it is a sign the heart of stone is taken away Motive 3 3. The preciousness of tears 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tears dropping from a mournful penitent eye are like the water dropping from the Roses very sweet and precious to God
mites terrâ tanquam possessione haeriditaria Ambr. The Saints title is best being members of Christ who is Lord of all Adam did not only lose his Title to Heaven when he fell but to the Earth too and till we are incorporated into Christ we do not fully recover our Title I deny not but the wicked have a civil right to the Earth which the Laws of the Land give them but not a sacred right Only the meek Christian hath a Scripture-title to his Land we count that the best title which is held in capite the Saints hold their right to the Earth in capite in their head Christ who is the Prince of the Kings of the Earth Rev. 1.5 In this sense he who hath but a foot of Land inherits more than he who hath a thousand Acres because he hath a better and more judicial right to it 2. The meek Christian is said to inherit the Earth because he inherits the blessing of the Earth the wicked man hath the Earth but not as a fruit of Gods favour he hath it as a Dog hath poysoned bread it doth him more hurt than good a wicked man lives in the Earth as one that lives in an infectious Aire he is infected by his mercies the fat of the Earth will but make him fry and blaze the more in hell so that a wicked man may be said not to have what he hath because he hath not the blessing but the meek Saint enjoys the Earth as a pledge of Gods love the curse and poyson is taken out of the Earth Psal 37.11 The meek shall inherit the Earth and shall delight themselves in the abundance of peace on which words Austin gives this gloss Wicked men saith he may delight themselves in the abundance of Cattle and Riches but the meek man delights himself in the abundance of peace what he hath he doth possess with inward serenity and quietness Caution Caution When it is said the meek shall inherit the Earth not that they shall inherit no more than the Earth they shall inherit Heaven too if they should only inherit the Earth then saith Chrysostom how could it be said Blessed are the meek the meek have the Earth only for their sojourning-house they have Heaven for their mansion-house Psal 149.4 He will beautifie the meek with salvation The meek beautifie Religion and God will beautifie them with salvation salvation is the Port we all desire to sail to 't is the Harvest and Vintage of souls the meek are they which shall reap this Harvest the meek shall wear the embroidered robe of salvation The meek are Lords of the Earth and heirs of salvation Heb. 1.14 7. The mischief of an unmeek spirit 1. There is nothing Motive 7 makes such roome for the Divel to come into the heart and take possession as wrath and anger Ephes 4.26 27. Let not the Sun go down upon your wrath neither give place to the Divel when men let forth passion they let in Satan the wrathful man hath the Divel for his bedfellow 2. Passion doth hinder peace the meek Christian hath sweet quiet and harmony in his soul but Passion puts the soul into a disorder it not only clouds reason but disturbs conscience he doth not possesse himself whom Passion possesseth it is no wonder if they have no peace of conscience who make so little conscience of peace wrathfulnesse grieves the Spirit of God Ephes 4.30 31. and if the Spirit be grieved he will be gone we care not to stay in smoaky houses the Spirit of God loves not to be in that heart which is so full of the vapours and fumes of distempered Passion 8. Another argument to coole the intemperate heat Motive 8 of our curst hearts is to consider that all the injuries and unkind usages we meet with from the world do not fall out by chance but are disposed of by the all-wise God for our good many are like the foolish Curre that snarles at the stone never looking to the hand that threw it or like the Horse who being spurred by the rider bites the snafflle did we look higher than instruments our hearts would grow meek and calm David looked beyond Shimei's rage 2 Sam. 16.11 Let him curse for the Lord hath bidden him What wisdome were it for Christians to see the hand of God in all the barbarismes and incivilities of men Job eyed God in his affliction and that meekned his spirit The Lord hath taken away blessed be the name of the Lord Job 1.21 He doth not say the Caldeans have taken away but the Lord hath taken away what made Christ so meek in his sufferings he did not look at Judas or Pilate but at his father John 18.11 The Cup which my Father hath given me when wicked men do revile and injure us they are but Gods Executioners who is angry with the executioner And as God hath an hand in all the affronts and discurtesies we receive from men for they do but hand them over to us so God will do us good by all if we belong to him 1 Sam 16.12 it may be saith David that the Lord will look upon mine affliction and will requite me good for his cursing usually when the Lord intends us some signal mercy he fits us for it by some eminent trial as Moses his hand was first leprous before it wrought salvation Exod 4 6. so God may let his people be belepered with the cursings and revilings of men before he showre down some blessing upon them It may be the Lord will requite me good for his cursing this day Motive 9 9. Want of meeknesse evidenceth want of grace true grace enflames love and moderates anger grace is like the file which smoths the rough iron it files off the ruggednesse of a mans spirit grace saith to the heart as Christ did to the angry Sea Mark 4.39 Peace be still So where there is grace in the heart it stills the raging of passion and makes a calm He who is in a perpetual phrensie letting loose the reines to wrath and malice never yet felt the sweet efficacy of grace ●t is one of the sins of the Heathen Implacable Rom. 1.31 a revengeful cankred heart is not only heathenish but divellish Jam. 3. 14 15. If ye have bitter envying and strife in your hearts this wisdom descendeth not from above but is devillish The old Serpent spits forth the poyson of malice and revenge Motive 10 10. If all that hath been said will not serve to master this bedlam-humour of wrath and anger let me tell you you are the persons whom God speaks of who hate to be reformed you are rebels against the Word read and tremble Isa 30.8.9 Now go write it before them in a table and note it in a book that it may be for the time to come for ever and ever that this is a rebellious people children that will not hear the Law of the Lord. If nothing yet will charm down the wrathful
hearts and then stands and warms himself at the fire When boystrous winds are up we use to talk of Conjurers Sure I am when mens spirits begin to bluster and storm the Divel hath conjured up these winds Discords and Animosities among Christians bring their godliness much into question for the wisdom which is from above is peaceable gentle and easie to be entreated Jam. 3.17 SECT 3. Containing an Exhortation to peaceable-mindedness Use 3 BE of a peaceable disposition Rom. 12.18 If it be possible Exhort as much as lieth in you live peaceably with all men The Curtains of the Tabernacle were to be looped together Exod. 26.3 4. So should the hearts of Christians be looped together in peace and unity That I may perswade to peaceable-mindedness let me speak both to Reason and Conscience 1. A peaceable spirit seems to be agreeable to the natural frame and constitution man by nature seems to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a peaceable creature fitter to handle the Plough than the Sword other creatures are naturally arm'd with some kind of weapon wherewith they are able to revenge themselves The Lyon hath his Paw the Boar his Tusk the Bee his Sting only man hath none of these weapons he comes naked and unarmed into the world as if God would have him a peaceable creature Candida pax homines trux decet ira feras Man hath his Reason given him that he should live amiably and peaceably 2. A peaceable spirit is honourable Prov. 20.3 It is an honour for a man to cease from strife We think it a brave thing to give way to strife and let loose the reins to our passions oh no it is an honour to cease from strife Noble spirits are such lovers of peace that they need not be bound to the peace 't is the bramble that rends and tears whatever is near it the Cedar and Fig-tree those more noble Plants grow pleasantly and peaceably peaceableness is the Ensign and Ornament of a noble mind 3. To be of a peaceable spirit is highly prudential Jam. 3.17 The wisdom from above is peaceable A wise man will not meddle with strife it is like putting ones finger into an Hornets Nest or to use Solomons similitude Prov. 17.14 The beginning of strife is as when one letteth out water To set out the folly of strife it is as letting out of water in two respects 1. When water begins to be let out rhere is no end of it so there is no end of strife when once begun 2. The letting out of water is dangerous If a man should break down a Bank and let in an Arme of the Sea the water might overflow his Fields and drown him in the Flood so is he that intermeddles with strife he may mischief himself and open such a Sluce as may ingulph and swallow him up True wisdom espouseth peace a prudent man will keep off from the bryars as much as he can 4. To be of a peaceable spirit brings peace along with it a contentious person vexeth himself and eclipseth his own comfort he is like the Bird that beats it self against the Cage he troubleth his own flesh Prov. 11.17 He is just like one that pares off the sweet of the Apple and eats nothing but the Kore So a quarrelsome man pares off all the comfort of his life and feeds only upon the bitter Kore of disquiet he is a self-tormentor the wicked are compared to a troubled sea Isa 57.20 And it follows there is no peace to the wicked Ver. 21. The Septuagint renders it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is no joy to the wicked froward spirits do not enjoy what they possess but peaceableness of spirit brings the sweet Musick of peace along with it it makes a calm and harmony in the soul therefore the Psalmist saith it is not only bonum but jucundum not only good but pleasant to live together in unity Psal 133.1 5. A peaceable disposition is a God-like disposition 1. God the Father is call'd the God of peace Hebr. 13.20 Mercy and peace are about his Throne he signs the Articles of peace and sends the Ambassadors of peace to publish them 2 Cor. 5.20 2. God the Son is call'd the Prince of peace Isa 9.6 His name is Emmanuel God with us a name of peace his Office is to be a Mediatour of peace 1 Tim. 2.5 He came into the world with a song of peace the Angels did sing it Luk. 2.14 Peace on Earth he went out of the world with a Legacy of peace John 14.27 Peace I leave with you my peace I give unto you 3. God the Holy Ghost is a Spirit of peace he is the Comforter he seals up peace 2 Cor. 1.22 This blessed Dove brings the Olive-branch of peace in his mouth Now a peaceable disposition evidenceth something of God in a man therefore God loves to dwell there Psal 76.2 In Salem is Gods Tabernacle Salem signifies peace God dwells in a peaceable spirit 6. Christs earnest prayer was for peace he prayed that his people might be one John 17.11 21 23. that they might be of one mind and heart And observe the Argument Christ useth in prayer it is good to use Arguments in prayer they are as the feathers to the Arrow which make it flie swifter and pierce deeper Affections in prayer are as the fire in the Gun Arguments in prayer are as the Bullet the Argument Christ urgeth to his Father is Ver. 22. That they may be one even as we are one There was never any discord between God the Father and Christ though God parted with Christ out of his bosome yet not out of his heart There was ever dearness and oneness between them Now Christ prays that as he and his Father were one so his people might be all one in peace and concord Did Christ pray so earnestly for peace and shall not we endeavour what in us lies to fulfill Christs prayer how do we think Christ will hear our prayer if we cross his 7. Christ not only prayed for peace but bled for it Col. 1.20 Having made peace through the blood of his Cross Pacem omnimodam he dyed not only to make peace between God and man but between man and man Christ suffered on the Cross that he might cement Christians together with his blood as he prayed for peace so he payed for peace Christ was himself bound to bring us into the bond of peace 8. Strife and contention hinder the growth of grace Can good seed grow in a ground where there is nothing but thorns and bryars to be seen Matth. 13. The thorns choaked the seed When the heart is as it were stuck with thorns and is ever tearing and rending can the seed of grace ever grow there Historians report of the Isle of Patmos that the natural soile of it is such that nothing will grow upon that Earth A froward heart is like the Isle of Patmos nothing of grace will grow there till God
their spiritual accounts they reckon what Religion must cost them and may cost them it must cost them the blood of their sins it may cost them the blood of their lives 2. The fore-thoughts of persecution will be as sawce to season our delights that we do not surfeit upon them How soon may there be an Alarum sounded how soon may the clouds drop blood the thoughts of this would take off the heart from the immoderate love of the creature Our Saviour at a great Feast breaks out into mention of his death Mark 14.3 She hath prepared this against my Burial So the fore-thoughts of a change would be an excellent antidote against a surfeit 3. The fore-thoughts of sufferings would make them lighter when they come * Levius laedunt praevisa mala Grotius the suddenness of an evil addes to the sadness this was ill news to the fool in the Gospel who reckoned without his Host Hac nocte This night shall thy soul be required of thee This will be an aggravation of Babylons miseries Rev. 18.8 Her plagues shall come in one day not that Antichrist shall be destroyed in a day but in a day that is suddenly the blow shall come unawares when he doth not think of it the reckoning before hand of suffering doth alleviate and take off the edge of it when it comes therefore Christ to lighten the Cross still fore-warms his Disciples of sufferings that they might not come unlooked for Joh. 16.33 Acts 1.7 4. Fore-thoughts of persecution would put us in mind of getting our Armour ready 't is dangerous as well as imprudent to have all to seek when the trial comes as if a Souldier should have his weapons to get when the enemy is in the Field Caesar seeing a Souldier whetting his sword when he was just going to fight cashier'd him he that reckons upon persecution will be in a ready posture for it he will have the Shield of Faith and the Sword of the Spirit ready that he may not be surprized unawares 2. Let us prepare for persecution a wise Pilot in a calm will prepare for a storm God knows how soon persecution may come there seems to be a cloud of blood hanging over the Nation SECT 9. Shewing how we may be armed for sufferings Quest HOW shall we prepare for sufferings Answ Do three things 1. Be persons rightly qualified for suffering 2. Avoide those things which will hinder suffering 3. Promote all helps to suffering 1. Labour to be persons rightly qualified for suffering Be righteous persons that man who would suffer for righteousness sake must himself be righteous I mean Evangelically righteous in particular I call him righteous 1. Who breaths after sanctity Psal 119.5 Though sin cleaves to his heart yet his heart doth not cleave to sin though sin hath an alliance yet no allowance Rom. 7.15 What I do I allow not a good man hates that sin to which Satan doth most tempt and his heart most incline Psal 119.128 2. A righteous person is one who makes Gods glory his Center the glory of God is more worth than the salvation of all mens soul He who is divinely qualified is so zealously ambitious of Gods glory that he cares not what he loseth so God may be a gainer he prefers the glory of God before credit estate relations It was the speech of Kiliaz that blessed Martyr Had I all the gold in the world to dispose of I would give it to live with my relations though in prison yet Jesus Christ is dearer to me than all 3. A righteous person is one who values the jewel of a good conscience at an high rate good conscience is a Saints Festival his Musick his Paradise and he will rather hazard any thing than violate his conscience They say of the Irish if they have a good Skimmeter a warlike weapon they had rather take a blow on their Arme than their Skimmeter should be hurt To this I may compare a good conscience a godly man had rather sustain hurt in his body or estate than his conscience should be hurt he had rather dye than violate the Virginity of his conscience such a man as this is Evangelically righteous and if God call him to it he is fit to suffer 2. Avoid those things which will hinder suffering 1. The love of the world God allows us the use of the world 1 Tim. 6.7 But take heed of the love of it he that is in love with the world will be out of love with the Cross 2 Tim. 4.10 Demas hath forsaken me having loved this present world he not only forsook Pauls company but his doctrine The love of the world choaks our zeal a man wedded to the world will for thirty pieces of silver betray Christ and a good cause Let the world be as a loose garment that you may throw off at pleasure before a man can dye for Christ he must be dead to the world Paul was crucified to the world Gal. 6.14 It will be an easie thing to dye when we are dead before in our affections 2. Carnal fear There is a two-fold fear 1. A filial fear when a man fears to displease God * Incidam potius in Geheunam quam peccatum Anselm when he fears lest he should not hold out this is a good fear Blessed is he that fears alway if Peter had feared his own heart and said Lord Jesus I fear I shall forsake thee Lord strengthen me doubtless Christ would have kept him from falling 2. There is a cowardly fear when a man fears danger more than sin when he is afraid to be good this fear is an enemy to suffering God proclaimed that those who were fearful should not go to the Wars Deuter. 20.8 The fearful are unfit to fight in Christs Wars a man possessed with fear doth not consult what is best but what is safest If he may save his Estate he will snare his conscience Prov. 29.25 In the fear of man there is a snare Fear made Peter deny Christ Abraham equivocate David fain himself mad fear will put men upon indirect courses making them study rather compliance than conscience Fear makes sin appear little and suffering great the fearful man sees double he looks upon the cross through his perspective twice as big it is fear argues sordidness of spirit * Degeneres animos timor arguit it will put one upon things most ignoble and unworthy a fearful man will Vote against his conscience fear infeebles it is like the cutting off Sampsons locks fear melts away the courage Josh 5.1 Their hearts melt because of you and when a mans strength is gone he is very unfit to carry Christs Cross fear is the root of Apostasie Spira's fear made him abjure and recant his Religion fear doth one more hurt than the Adversary it is not so much an enemy without the Castle as a Traytor within indangers it 't is not so much sufferings without as trayterous fear within which undoes
to Christs blood he can cure the greatest sin as well as the least * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Hast thou a bloody issue of sinne running the issue of blood in Christs sides can heal thine 5. Objection But mine is an old inveterate disease Object 5 and I fear it is incurable Answ Though thy disease be chronical Answ Christ can heal it Christ doth not say if this disease had been taken in time it might have been cured he is good at old sores The Thief on the Cross had an old festring disease but Christ cured it it was well for him his Physitian was so near Zacheus an old sinner a Custome-house man he had wronged many a one in his time but Christ cured him Christ sometimes grafts his grace upon an old Stock we read Christ cured at Sun-setting Luke 4.40 He heals some sinners at the Sun-setting of their lives 6. Objection But after I have been healed my disease Object 6 hath broken forth again I have relapsed into the same sin therefore I fear there 's no healing for me Answ It is rare that the Lord leaves his children to these relapses though through the suspension of grace Answ and the prevalency of tentation it is possible they may fall back into sin these sins of relapse are sad It was an aggravation of Solomons offence that he sinn'd after the Lord had appeared to him twice 1 Kings 11.9 These sins after healing open the mouth of conscience to accuse and stop the mouth of Gods Spirit which should speak peace These sins exclude from the comfort of the promise it is as it were sequestred but if the soul be deeply humbled if the relapsing sinner be a relenting sinner let him not cast away the anchor of hope but have recourse to his soul-physitian Jesus Christ can cure a relapse he healed Davids and Cranmers relapse 1 John 2.1 If any man sinne we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ Christ appears in the Court as the Advocate for the Client As he poured out his blood upon the brazen Altar of the Crosse so he poures out his prayers at the golden Altar in heaven Heb. 7.25 He ever liveth to make intercession for us Christ in the work of intercession presents the merit of his blood to his Father and so obtains our pardon and applies the vertue of his blood to us and so works our cure therefore be not discouraged from going to thy Physitian though thy disease hath broken out again yet Christ hath fresh sprinklings of his blood for thee he can cure a relapse Object 7 7. Objection But there is no healing for me I fear I have sinned the sin against the holy Ghost Answ 1 Answ 1. The fear of sinning it is a signe thou hast not sinned it Answ 2 2. Let me ask Why dost thou think thou hast sinned the sin against the holy Ghost I have grieved the Spirit of God Answ Answ Every grieving the Spirit of God is not that fatal sin We grieve the Spirit when we sin against the illumination of it the Spirit being grieved may depart for a time and carry away all its honey out of the Hive leaving the soul in darkness Isa 50.10 But every grieving the Spirit is not the sin against the Holy Ghost A childe of God when he hath sinned his heart smites him and he whose heart smites him for sin hath not commited the unpardonable sin A childe of God having grieved the Spirit doth as Noah when the Dove did flie out of the Ark he opened the windows of the Ark to let it in again A godly man doth not shut his heart against the Spirit as a wicked man doth Acts 7.51 The Spirit of God would come in he keeps him out but a gracious soul opens his heart to let in the Spirit as Noah opened the door of the Ark to let in the Dove * Intra sancte Spiritus ut habeam te velut signaculum super cor meum Austin Christian is it not so with thee then be of good comfort thou hast not sinned the sin against the Holy Ghost that sin is a malicious despighting the Spirit * Hebr. 10.29 which thou tremblest to think of Therefore laying aside these Argumentations and Disputes whatever the diseases of thy soul are come to Christ for a cure believe in his blood and thou mayst be saved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 You see what a skilful and able Physitian Christ is what Soveraign oyles and balsomes he hath how willing he is to cure sick souls oh then what remains but that you cast your selves upon his merits to heal and save you of all sins unbelief is the worst because it casts disparagement on Christ as if he were not able to work a cure Oh Christian believe in thy Physitian John 3.15 that whosoever believeth in him should not perish Say as Queen Esther Esther 4.16 I will go in unto the King which is not according to the Law and if I perish I perish So say the Lord Jesus is a Physitian to heal me I will adventure on his blood if I perish I perish Queen Esther ventur'd against Law she had no promise that the King would hold out the golden Scepter but I have a promise which invites me to come to Christ He that comes unto me I will in no wise cast him out John 6.37 Faith is an healing grace We read when the Israelites were burying a man for fear of the Souldiers of the Moabites they cast him for haste into the grave of Elisha now the man as soon he was down and had touched the dead body of the Prophet revived and stood upon his feet 2 King 13.21 so if a man be dead in sin yet let him be but cast into Christs grave and by faith touch Christ who was dead and buried he will revive and his soul will be healed Remember there 's no way for a cure but by believing without faith Christ himself will not avail us Rom. 3.25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood Faith is the applying of Christs merit A playster though it be never so rare and excellent yet if it be not applyed to the wound will do no good though the playster be made of Christs own blood yet it will not heal unless applyed by faith The Brazen Serpent was a Soveraign remedy for the cure of those that were stung but if they had not looked upon it they received no benefit So though there bean healing vertue in Christ yet unless we look upon him by the eye of faith we cannot be cured * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Above all things labour for faith this is the all-healing grace this hand touching Christ fetcheth vertue from him Not that faith hath more worthiness than other graces but only it is influential as it makes us one with Christ If a man had a stone in a Ring that could heal many diseases we
destroy them had not Moses his chosen stood in the breach to turne away his wrath Let us never leave imploring our heavenly Physitian till he lay a Fig on ENGLANDS Boyle and cause it to recover 1 PET. 1.2 Grace unto you and Peace be multiplyed The beauty of Grace THE blessed Apostle having felt the Efficacy and Soveraignty of grace is taken up with the thoughts of it and so sweet is this wine of Paradise that he commends it to these dispersed Christians to whom he writes wishing them all encrease Grace unto you and Peace be multiplied The words run in the forme of a Salutation Grace unto you and Peace When we salute our friends we cannot wish them a greater blessing than Grace and Peace Other mercies lie without the Pale and are dispersed in common to men but Grace is a special Congiary and Gift bestowed on them who are the Favourites of heaven In the words observe 1. The Connexion 2. The Order 1. The Connexion Grace and Peace 1. The Connexion The way to have peace is to have grace grace is the breeder of peace the one is the root the other the flower peace is the sweet water that drops from the limbeck of a gracious heart 2. The Order 2. The Order First grace then peace grace hath the priority Grace and peace are two sisters but grace is the elder sister * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. and give me leave at this time to prefer the elder before the younger Grace unto you be multiplied For the illustration consider 1. What is meant by grace 2. The Authour of it 3. Why it is called grace 4. The Cogency of it 1. What is meant by grace This word GRACE is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it hath various acceptions in Scripture 1. Grace is sometimes taken for the favour of God Gen. 6.8 Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord God did cast a gracious aspect upon him 2. Grace is taken for beauty as we say such a thing is graceful Jam. 1.11 The flower falleth and the grace of the fashion of it perisheth 3. Grace is taken figuratively and improperly for the shew of grace as we call that a face in the glass which is but the idaea and resemblance of a face so John 2.23 Many believed in his Name that believing was but a shew of faith as Austin and Theophilact note 4. Grace is taken in a genuine and proper sense so in the Text Grace be multiplied it may admit of this description Grace is the infusion of a new and holy principle into the heart whereby it is changed from what it was and is made after Gods own heart Grace makes not only a civil but sacred change it byasseth the soul heaven-ward and stamps upon it the image and superscription of God 2. The Authour or Efficient of grace namely the Spirit of God who is therefore call'd the Spirit of grace Zach. 12.10 The Spirit is the fountain from whence chrystal streams of grace flow * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theodoret. Man as Clemens Alexandrinus observes is Gods Harp or Timbrel the Harp will not sound unless touched with the finger so the heart of man cannot put forth any gracious harmony till first it be touched with the finger of Gods Spirit this blessed Spirit works grace in the Subject 1. Universally 2. Progressively 1. Universally 1 Thes 5.10 The God of peace sanctifie you wholly The Spirit of God infuseth grace into all the faculties of the soul though grace be wrought but in part yet in every part in the understanding light in the conscience tenderness in the will consent in the affections harmony therefore grace is compared to leaven Matth. 13.33 because it swells it self into the whole soul and makes the Conversation to swell and rise as high as heaven 2. The Spirit of God works grace progressively he carries it on from one degree of another The Pelagians hold that gratia operans the beginning of grace is from God but gratia cooperans the progress of grace is from our selves so God shall be the Authour of faith and we the finishers God shall lay the first stone and we the Superstructure but alas there needs the continual influence of the Spirit to the carrying on the work of grace in our hearts Should God withdraw his Spirit from the most holy men their grace might fail and annihilate † * Sublata causa tollitur effectus If the Sun withdraw its light though never so little there follows darkness in the Ayre we need not only habitual grace but assisting exciting subsequent grace The Ship needs not only the Sails but the winde to carry it there needs not only the Sailes of our Abilities and Endeavours but the winde of the Spirit to blow us to the heavenly Port. 3. Why the work of holiness in the heart is called grace Answ 1. Because it hath a super-eminency above nature * Caelitus delapsa Beza it is a flower which doth not grow in natures garden 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a Divine extraction Jam. 3.17 By reason we live the life of men by grace we live the life of God 2. It is called grace because it is a work of free-grace * Gratia quasi gratis data every link in the golden chain of our salvation is wrought and enamel'd with free-grace That one should be sanctified and not another this is of grace that God should pass by many of the Noble Rich Learned and graft his heavenly endowments upon a more wilde luxuriant Stock a crabbed nature weaker parts well may it be called grace Quest Quest But why is not grace bestowed upon all Answ Answ We must hold with Zanchy there is alwayes a just reason of Gods will but in particular I answer 1. God gives grace to one and denies it to another to shew his Prerogative God is not bound to give grace to all Rom. 9.15 I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy Suppose two Malefactors brought before the King one he will pardon but not the other if any demand the reason he will answer 't is his Prerogative So God will give grace to one not to another he will make one a vessel of mercy the other a vessel of wrath this is his Prerogative The Apostle hath silenced all disputes in this kinde Rom. 9.20 21. Who art thou that replyest against God hath not the Potter power over the clay If we could suppose a Plant to speak Why was not I made a Bird or a Beast Why should not I have reason just so it is when vain man enters into contest with God Why should not I have grace as well as another Dispute not against Prerogative let not the clay syllogize with the Potter 2. I answer God may justly deny his grace to any wicked man for two reasons 1. Because once he had grace and lost it if a father give his son a stock to trade