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A43587 The sure mercies of David: or, a second part of Heart-treasure Wherein is contained the supream and substance of gospel-mercies purchased by Christ, and promised in the covenant of grace, together with the several ways how they are made and are to be improved for the saints fort and defence, settlement and incouragement in shaking and back-sliding times. Being the fruit of some meditations upon Isa. 55. 3. By O. Heywood an unprofitable minister of the gospel.; Heart-treasure. Part 2. Heywood, Oliver, 1629-1702. 1670 (1670) Wing H1775; ESTC R216795 143,081 284

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common mercies 188 4. Cast out and cashier all sin 190 5. Renounce your own righteousness 191 6. Close in with Jesus Christ 192 7. Enter into a solemn Covenant with God 194 CHAP. XII 2. Head How a doubtful soul may be assured of its title to these sure mercies 197 1. Study Sciptures and promises 198 2. Attend on a quickning ministry 199 3. Improve the states of the Covenant 200 4. Ply the throne of grace 201 5. Walk close with God 202 6. Be much in self-observation 204 7. Recollect former experiences 205 8. Strengthen every grace of the spirit 206 9. Lay all the stress on Gods free-grace 207 10. Exercise your selves in thank fulness 209 Four Motives to labour for assurance 211 CHAP. XIII 3 Head In what cases may a Covenanted soul make use of these sure mercies 1. In case of dissetiling suggestions to Atheism 218 2. In case of guilt upon the conscience 220 3. In case of afflictions persecutions 223 4. In case of spiritual famine 224 5. In back slidings and fears of apostacy 227 6. In desertions as to quickning comfort 229 7. In the hour and power of death 234 CHAP. XIV Head How a Covenanted soul must behave himself with reference to these mercies 1. Believe and receive them readily 239 2. Improve them in particular needs 240 3. Be content with these mercies ib. 4. Walk worthy of them 241 5. Be active and passive for them 242 6. Plead these mercies for posterity ib. 7. Breath after a full possession of them 243 CHAP. XV. Vse of thank fulness for these Covenant-mercies 1. Free 246 2. Dear 247 3. Deep ib. 4. Designed ib. 5. Dignifying 248 6. Sanctifying ib. 7. Separating 249 8. Sealing ib. 9. Extensive ib. 10. Comprehensive 250 ERRATA PAge 25. line 16. read good p. 93. l. 21. add which p. 112. marg r. discitur p. 132. l. 8 add in p. 135. l. 11. add are p. 141. l. 30. r. himself p. 151. l. 26. add him p. 182. l. 8. r. Children of the Kingdom p. 231. l. 30 r. necessary blot out un THE SURE MERCIES OF DAVID Isaiah 55.3 Even the sure mercies of David CHAP. I. THis Evangelical Prophet acts the part of an Apostolical Preacher deciphering our dear Saviour as lively as if he Writ an History not a Prophecy as if he saw him in the Flesh and ●ot in the Type only This Chapter contains 〈◊〉 sweet relation or revelation of the Myste●ies of Gospel-Grace an high-sounding ●roclamation and pathetical Exhortation to the sons of men to embrace the saving benefits purchased by our Lord Jesus Christ This Exhortation is pressed upon consciences with four Arguments which are as it were a satisfying Answer to as many tacit Objections which may be made by unbelieving soul● these arguments are drawn from the 1. Freeness ver 1. of Gospel-grace 2. Fulness ver 2. of Gospel-grace 3. Firmness ver 3. of Gospel-grace 4. Largness ver 5. of Gospel-grace 1. A soul may say Alas I am an unworthy wretch I have nothing that can commend me to God I have neither penny nor penny-worth money nor price to give neither grace nor good work to bring to God may I have a share in it● Yes it s free come buy for just nothing ver 1. 2. But may the soul say if it be so cheap it may be its of as little worth too dear of taking gratis things of light price are often of as light use and answer their rate by being unprofitable will it do me any good O yes it s of vast advantage if you take pains for any thing else you do but spend money for that which is no Bread but if you obtain Gospel-Grace you eat that which is good and your soul shall delight it self in fatness ver 2. 3. But may I have a share in these Mercies shall I not miss of them and when I once have them shall I not lose them again I am but tantalized if I see such sweet morsels and cannot reach them and I shall be more miserable if I taste such pleasant dainties and have them snatcht away he answers to the first all shall be made over to you by a Covenant and to the second they are the sure mercies of David ver 3. 4. But alas may a poor soul say this is Childrens meat what have doggs to do with these dainties I am a sinner of the Gentiles salvation is of the Jews and for the Jews is there any hope for such strangers to the Common-wealth of Israel Yes Jesus Christ is given for a witness to the people to all people i. e. Gentiles Isa 49.6 a Nation that thou knowest not and Nations that knew not thee shall run unto thee ver 4 5. The Text falls under the third Argument and contains 1. A double duty hear come i. e. believe obey 2. A double promise of life and Covenant 1. Your soul shall live life is the flower and foundation of all outward mercies but spiritual life transcends a corporal temporal life which is but a dying life or living death Grace is the life of the soul Spiritual life is the seed-plot of eternal life in Glory mankind lost life by hearing the charming temptations of the subtle Serpent life is recovered by hearing the gracious words of life from Jesus Christ Hear and your souls shall live 2. I will make an everlasting Covenant with you the words are in Hebrew I will cut a Covenant with you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Percutiam vobiscum foedus q.d. dividantur ejus me●bra qui juramentum violaverit the expression hath allusion to the ancient practice of entring Covenants which was by cutting a Beast in two parts and the parties Covenanting going betwixt those parts to note that after that manner shall that mans members be divided that shall violate that solemn Covenant See the practice in Gen. 15.17 18. Jer. 34.18 Now the great Contents of this Covenant are expressed in these words which I have pickt out and pitcht upon to speak fully to Even the sure mercies of David which contain 1. The summ of the Covenant i. e. mercies 2. The nature of those mercies i. e. sure 3. The subject of the mercies David There is not much difficulty in the words only 't is disputed what is meant by David here Now in Scripture David is taken 1. For literal David 2. For mystical David Jesus Christ it may be applicable very properly both wayes here 1. It may be taken for the person of David the Son of Jesse King of Israel and then the mercies of David are the choice promises that God made with his servant David described in 2 Sam. 7 13-17 and in Psal 89. Some make the first words of that Psalm to be the title of it and render it thus I will sing of the mercies of David because Gods Covenant with David is abundantly held forth in that Psalm But this phrase doth rather allude to 2 Chron. 6.42 where Solomon thus prayes
gift of God and none can come to Christ except the Father draw him Joh. 6.44 Alas it is as impossible to believe in Christ as to keep the Moral Law from principles of corrupted nature our state had been sad and forlorn still if God had not undertaken to work the faith which he requireth Duce D●o venitur ad deum 't is only the arm of omnipotency that can draw the soul to Christ Jesus is the only Author and finisher of our faith Heb. 12.2 Eph. 1.19 there is an exceeding greatness of his power to all them that believe put forth to create an act of saving faith all they that have felt it can testifie that this is a rich mercy and this is one of the mercies of the Covenant More particularly there are four choice dispositions promised in the Covenant of Grace which are Covenant-mercies 1. Saving illumination Jer. 31.34 they shall all know me saith the Lord by nature we are blind and blockish creatures but the new Covenant brings light and sight to the ignorant erring sinner and Oh what a mercy is it to know God and Christ and sin and misery and duty and felicity to know Scripture-truths and Gospel-mysteries our own hearts and the sweetness of Grace heaven and the way thither certainly such saving knowledge is worth a world truly such light is sweet and a pleasant thing it is for the eye of the soul to behold the Sun of Righteousness and the beauty of Heaven what blind Bartimeus would not own it as a rich mercy to have his eyes opened and is it not a blessed thing to be translated out of Aegyptian darkness into this marvelous light Oh happy are the eyes that are annointed with the new-covenant eye-salve and behold Coelestial objects through this Divine optick of faith and become faithful guides to the feet of an holy life 2. Sound humiliation this is another Covenant-mercy Ezek. 11.19 I will take the stony heart out of their flesh and will give them an heart of flesh a broken heart is instead of many Sacrifices an hard heart is the greatest judgement and a soft heart the greatest mercy repentance is Gods gift bound up in the Covenant of Grace our sweet and blessed Redeemer is exalted as well to be a Prince that he may give Repentance as to be a Saviour to give unto us remission of sins Oh what a mercy is the spirit of Repentance they that have this Godly sorrow shall never need to sorrow for it such a Repentance needs not to be repented of blessed are they that mourn for sin for they shall rejoyce happy such as sow in tears for they shall ●eap in joy certainly a Converted sinner looks upon a repenting heart as a rich mercy one penitent tear is an orient pearl of more worth than the whole Creation a bleeding soul is a blessed sight in the eyes of God and man it layes the Christian under the promise of the Covenant and qualifies it for remission and the sweetest consolation 3. Another Covenant-mercy with respect to the condition is heart-sanctification Ezek. 36.25 I will sprinkle clean water upon you and you shall be clean this is the mercy that David is so importunate for create in me a clean heart no less than creation will effect it a putting off the old man and putting on the new in a sound Regeneration is a miraculous mercy Oh what would a poor soul give for dominion over some special corruptions and power to resist temptations why here it is this mercy of mortification which is also a Christians duty is infolded in this blessed Gospel-Covenant so that sin shall not have Dominion over them that are under this Covenant of Grace a Christian can do more to mortifie sin and Crucifie the flesh than another man every word of God hath a cleansing vertue now you are clean saith Christ through the word that I have spoken to you but the promises of the Covenant have a direct and immediate tendency to cleansing 2 Cor. 7.1 having these promises i. e. the fore-mentioned Covenant let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness both of flesh and spirit it is only the Gospel Covenant that can make Evangelically holy and holiness is the image of God the beauty of a soul the duty of a Christian and the mercy of the Covenant 4. A spiritual conversation this is also included in the Covenant Ezek. 36.27 I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes and ye shall keep my Commandments and do them Oh what a blessed thing is it to have a heart to love and fear and serve the Lord Oh what a mercy to be inabled to perform holy duties to walk with God in all wayes of well-pleasing Jer. 31.33 to have the Law of God written in the heart and transcribed in the life yea to keep Gods commands with ease alacrity and complacency not to have them grievous but pleasant to the soul and thus it is when the Christian acts from an innate principle of Grace and Holiness well this is the promised and purchased condition of the New Covenant God undertakes to put a new habit into the soul his fear which is the beginning of Wisdom and principle of obedience God gives the spirit of prayer the spirit of power love and of a sound mind 2 Tim. 1.9 he promiseth to give them one heart and one way that they may fear him for ever Jer. 32.39 Oh what rich mercies of the New Covenant are these 4. Yet the great mercies of the Covenant are behind under the next head for a Covenant contract conveyance contains the Habendum or grant reflecting advantage to the party Covenanting and that in these words I will be thy God this is repeated fifteen or sixteen times in the Scriptures this this is the mercy of the New Covenant the mercy of mercies the flower cream and quintescence of all mercies God gives himself to the soul by Covenant and what greater or better gift can he bestow if he should give us all the world and deny himself we are miserable beggars if he give himself and nothing of the world we are truly rich if we have God we have all things if we want God we want all things Deus m●us est omnia Ben scripsisti Thoma q●id pet Resp nil nisi ●ipsum Domine my God is my All saith one 't is recorded of Thomas Aquinas the great School-man that a voice from Heaven spake thus to him thou hast well written Thomas what desirest thou and that he answer thus nothing O Lord but thy self this certainly is the Language of a gracious soul Lord put me not off with any thing below or besides thy self what mortal Creature durst have presumed to beg of God such a boon if God had not graciously promised himself in the New Covenant what can the creature desire more what can it now want when it hath an infinite God all
the Author was known an● a seal is the mark whereby genuine things a● discerned from counterfeit all these are th● uses of the spirits sealing to confirm o●● hearts in the truth of God in his promise● against all the temptations of Satan th● blessed sealing is more prevalent for our co●firmation than all philosophical reasons o● demonstrations 5. Another way to beget assurance amo●● men is a solemn Oath and we know an Oa● for confirmation is to them an end of all stris● Heb. 6.16 and thus God willing more abu●dantly to shew unto the heirs of promise th● immutability of his Council confirmed it b● an Oath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Inv●tat praemio salutem jurans etiam vivo dicens c●pit credi sibi O beatos nos que● causa deus jurat O mis●rrimos sinec juranti domino credimus Tert● de poen or interposed himself by an Oath● it is very observable to consider the form 〈◊〉 the Oath God swears by himself who 〈◊〉 the living and true God he could swear by ●o greater and it is observed that two things make a thing more credible 1. the quali●y of the person speaking 2. The manner of the speech Now the form of the Oath ●n Gen. 22.16 is exceeding emphatical to Abraham partly because of the asseveration surely Gen. 22.16 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Est particula ca●salis coaditionalis partly because of the duplication in blessing I will bless thee if I speak ●t it shall be done moreover the form of the expression in Genesis is strange for it is thus Quid tibi prodest si Deus se juram●nto o●st●ing●t si tu haec quasi commun●m audi●ns fabulam transeas Jurare di●it●r deus ut tu audiens paveas intre●iscas metu consternatus inquiras quid illud tantum est pro ●o deus jurare dicitur Or●g Homil. 9. super Gen. 22. if I bless thee thou shalt be blessed or because I bless thee or if I do not bless thee which is the form of an Oath Heb. ●4 3 as if he should say then let me not be true just yea let me not be God God pawns his faithfulness upon it and may he not then be believed but for what end is this it is to confirm his promises and assure the hearts of all the heirs of promise that he intends to do and will accomplish what he hath spoken that they might have strong consolation and that he might take away all doubts and haesitation and all this he doth for the heirs of promise he would not have done thus for others but he doth this and much more to satisfie his doubting Children 6. Yet further men use to give a pawn a pledge to assure others of their real purpose to make good the bargain and this is part of the payment this also doth our gracious God 2 Cor. 1.22 Cap 5.5 Ephes 1.14 his spirit is the earnest of our inheritance untill the redemption of the purchased possession an earnest is used in purchasing Land in hiring of Servants and in contracting Marriage and when ever the Lord puts his Holy Spirit into the heart it s as a pledge of all the mercies of the Covenant and of our eternal inheritance and though some men may be unfaithful so far as rather to lose their earnest than make good their bargain yet we may be assured God will not do so for it is as impossible that any saving grace of the Spirit should be cast into hell as it is for any sin to enter into Heaven God will not lose his pledge but fetch the soul to Heaven when he hath fetcht the heart to himself Grace is the Prologue and Praeludium to Glory the first Resurrection leads the van to the second a gracious change prepares for a glorious change Rom. 8.11 if the spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his spirit that dwelleth in you the spirit confirms the promises and we need not fear any danger of retractation not but that the promises are firm enough but he would establish our hearts in the faith thereof and acquiescence therein lest any question it 7. Another way whereby men testifie their cordial resolution to make good promises is by doing a great part of the work which gives real evidence they will do the rest he that promiseth to give another a thousand pounds Should a King promise to erect some Colledge and give liberal maintenance to Students in it we are certain by an humane faith that he will do such a thing th●ugh it be not begun but if the foundations be in laying we see its execution in part and are assured it will be finished Ba●us on E●h c. 1. v. 17. p. 144. and hath already given him nine hundred may he not rationally trust him for the rest or suppose there were but one pound or a penny behind there is great reason to conside in him for what is wanting why truly the Lord hath performed the greatest part of the promises of the Covenant the great promise of the Covenant was that the seed of the Woman should break the Serpents head that the Son of God should be incarnate be in mans stead in life and death to satisfie justice fulfil the Law and by his death bring in everlasting rightcousness and he hath already done it now saith the Apostle Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his own Son See Rom. 4.8 9 10. Qui misit unigen●tum immisit spiritum p●omisit vultum quid tandem tibi negaturus ost Bern. but delivered him up for us all how shall be not with him also freely give us all things God is before-hand with us yea if we be indeed heirs of promise he hath made good good another grand branch of the New Covenant in giving the conditions of the Covenant faith repentance and new obedience so that the main business is already done the writings are made sealed signed and delivered there wants nothing but actual possession nay there is a Seisin and delivery of part of the inheritance and dare we not trust God for the remainder certainly we have good reason so to do the contrary is unreasonable 8. God hath gone another step which is to work many Miracles for the confirmation of these sure mercies this is a degree further than man can reach to make any thing sure hence saith our sweet Saviour Joh. 5.36 I have greater witness than that of John for the works which the Father hath given me to finish the same works that I do bear witness of me that the father hath sent me this Text shews the true and proper end and efficacy of Christs miracles Ig●tur non s●●● muta s●d vo●ahssira ideo non simpliciter intuenda sed intellig●nter audienda Marl. in loc they are not dumb shews but have a voice and cry aloud for
heal your backsliding will not cause his anger to fall upon you because he is marryed to you and he hates putting away the mercies of the Covenant depend not on your mutable wills but upon everlasting love your souls are carryed to Heaven in the Chariot of the Covenant which moves upon the solid Axle-tree of free-grace which as it was not procured so is it not continued by your merits or goodness 't is true if you had carryed the matter so towards men as you have done to God you might expect an heavy sentence but these are the sure mercies of an infinite God the Covenant is made in Christ and made good by Christ the Alpha and Omega the Amen the faithful and true witness is the Surety and Mediator of this blessed Covenant Oh Christians lay your stress here there 's help laid upon one that is mighty to save he can save to the uttermost pinch he is good at this soul-saving work do not fear he that begun this good work in your hearts will perfect it you may be confident of it 1 Pet. 1.5 Rom. 14 4. Jer. 32. you shall be kept by the power of God through faith to salvation though you be very weak yet he is able to make you stand you shall not depart from him omnipotency is engaged for you act faith therefore upon the numerous and gracious promises of perseverance though you have many fightings without and fears within though you feel averseness to good and a tendency to sin wants and weaknesses burdens and breaches snares and sadness yet lift up your hearts you stand upon better terms with God than Adam in innocency or the Angels in glory who were not confirmed in their integrity but are fallen by a dreadful apostacy it were sad for poor believers if their happiness did depend upon their mutable nature or strongest resolutions or if God should revoke his mercies as often as they provoke his justice but blessed be God for Jesus Christ and the rest of the sure mercies of David triumph in this O ye Children of the promise the Covenant wherein your souls are wrapped is ordered in all things and sure Heaven it self is engaged for you the Gates of Hell shall not prevail against you none can pluck you out of his hands who is the rock of Ages in whom is everlasting strength you may confidently make bold and blessed Paul's victorious challenge who shall separate us from the Love of God Rom. 8.35 ad finem though your internal motions be often like Ezekiel's wheel 〈◊〉 16 〈◊〉 intricate confused and perplexed as a wheel in a wheel grace sweying one way and flesh another yet if you be joyned to the living Creatures and united to Christ in the bond of the Covenant you shall go streight on with constancy and uniformity till your souls arrive at glory these mercies are not for a day or week or month or year but they run parallel with the life of God and line of eternity for with everlasting mercies he will have compassion on thee Isa 54.7 8. 6. In case of desertions and Gods withdrawings from him the soul may and must improve these sure mercies of David now desertions are ordinarily distinguisht into Gods withdrawing 1. His quickning 2. His comforting presence from the soul in both these cases the soul may improve them 1. In case God suspend the gracious influences of his spirit and the heart be shut up under deadness hardness unbelief distractions and the poor Christian cannot feel those lively springings of the graces of the Covenant in his heart then let him have recourse to the promise wherein God hath engaged himself to give a soft heart a new spirit faith love repentance the spirit of prayer c. all habits of grace the lively exercise of grace assisting grace quickning enlarging moving melting manifestations are bound up in this Gospel-covenant hence it is that when David ●inds his heart dull and out of frame he runs to God and cryes out my soul cleaveth to the dust ver 107. quicken me according to thy word Psal 119.25 and he goes often over with that phrase which imports that David lay under the sense of some promise that God had made for the quickning of his heart when it was out of frame and accordingly he recounts the gracious influences of Gods spirit and professeth that he will never forget his precepts because by them he had quickned him ver 93. thus let dead hearts lay themselves at Christs feet and plead in this manner Lord my heart is exceeding dull and distracted I feel not those enlarging melting influences which thy Saints have met with but are they not main material mercies of the Covenant dost thou not promise a spirit of illumination conviction humiliation is not holiness of heart and life a main branch of it dost thou not promise therein to write thy Law in my heart to give me oneness of heart to put thy fear within me to subdue my corruptions to help my infirmities in prayer now Lord these are the mercies my soul wants and waits for fill my soul with these warming influences revive thy work of grace in my soul draw out my heart towards thee inlarge my affections to thee repair thine image draw out grace into lively exercise doth not that sweet word intend such a mercy when thou saist Ezek. 36.26 thou wilt not only give a new heart but put a new spirit within me to make my soul lively active and spiritual in duties and motions dear Lord am not I a Covenanted soul and are not these Covenant-mercies why then my God dost thou thus harden my heart from thy fear why dost thou leave me in all this deadness and distraction remember thy word unto thy servant in which thou hast caused me to hope and in which thou hast helped me to plead oh quicken my dull heart according to thy word thus improve these mercies in case of deadness 2. In case of sadness and disconsolateness and the hidings of Gods face from a troubled drooping spirit Oh then make much use of these Covenant-mercies both as they are mercies and as they are sure mercies they are as free and as firm as ever if you see nothing but wickedness and wretchedness in your selves remember mercy prevents you if you see nothing but justice and frowns in Gods face remember his faithfulness ingageth him he is faithful he cannot deny himself would he love thee so as to make thee his and will he not now love thee as his Child consider the Covenant is certain though there be a present suspension thy union to Christ is secured though actual Communion be intercepted yea real unnecessary Communion is continued though sensible manifestations be obscured for observe it the soul holds Communion with Christ by that which desertions cannot hinder salvation may be there though the joy of that salvation be gone Covenant-relation may continue without comfortable satisfaction why bast
these things a may be or may not be in a conjectural uncertainty is all they arrive unto however they do not follow home the light and perswasions they have alas did souls seriously think of this that as sure as they are men or women as certainly as they eat and drink work and sleep so certainly there is a God a Christ grace pardon guilt Heaven Hell which they must very shortly feel this could not but have a strange influence upon their hearts and lives their affections and conversations oh what persons should Saints be if they lived under the through impressions and convictions of the certainty of divine revelations It were a blessed effect if all the Treatises that have of late been writ might convince this prophane and Atheistical world of the certainty of Christianity many have travelled much in this with good success several ancient writers as Clemens Polycarpus Vid. Scultit med patrum Justinus Martyr Tatianus Iraeneus Athenagoras Tertullian have proved by demonstrative arguments the truth of Christian Religion against Jews Heathens c. and Grotius Morney of late and at this day Baxter Stillingfleet c. have put their sickle into this Harvest from whom the Church hath reaped precious fruit I pretend neither to the Learning or Authority of those famous Worthies but insist only upon the Sure Mercies of the Covenant as a poor Superstructure upon those Solid Foundations it was the design of Luke the Evangelist in Writing his Gospel to the noble and excellent Theophilus that he might be assured of the certainty of those things wherein he had been instructed Luk. 1.4 such a design have I in this small piece Oh that some might stand out and say as the Disciples now we are sure that thou knowest all things by this we believe that thou comest forth from God Joh. 16.30 oh sirs stick not in an uncertain conjecture arrive at a full assurance of understanding to the acknowledging of the mysterie of God Col. 2.2 pray for the spirit of Revelation that you may both know the certainty of Gospel-mysteries and mercies and your own interest therein that you may both be strong in faith and full of comfort advance higher daily in embracing unseen things rest not in a sceptical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Philosophical dubitation but strive to arrive at an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or firm demonstration rest your souls upon Divine Testimonies as to the object of faith and commit your souls to him in believing and well-doing for evidence of your state Remember that choice word Hos 6.3 then shall we know if we follow on to know the Lord his going forth is prepared as the morning and he shall come unto us as the rain as the latter and former rain unto the earth that this and all other soul-helps may accomplish this great end of your edification consolation and salvation shall be the earnest Prayer of Your Soul-friend and Servant in Christ June 3. 1670. The Contents of the Book CHAP. I. THe Context and exposition of the words 1 Several Doctrines raised one insisted on 6 CHAP. II. What are the mercies of the Covenant 9 1. The parties covenanting 11 2. The consideration paid 12 3. The conditions required which are four 14 4. The graunt that 's God himself 15 1. What God is to the soul in four things 19 2. What God graunts to it 20 CHAP. III. In what respects these mercies are sure 26 1. Infallibility 28 2. Immutability 30 CHAP. IV. What ways God takes to make them sure 33 1. Passing his word ib. 2. Putting it into writing 34 3. Calling in witnesses ib. 4. Setting to his seal 35 5. A solemn oath 36 6. Giving a pledge 37 7. Doing a great part of the work 38 8. Confirmation by miracles 40 9. Singular ways of reporting them 41 10. Marriage knot made from Hos 2.19.43 CHAP. V. How these mercies are made sure in and by Christ viz. by 47 1. His hypostatical union ib. 2. His spiritual Vnction 49 3. The Covenant of redemption 50 4. The execution of his offices 53 As Prophet Priest King 54 In his state of Humiliation 55 Exaltation 56 Resurrection ib. Ascention 57 Session ib. Intercession 59 CHAP. VI. 1Vse of Confutation 63 1. Atheists ib. 2. Papists as to 1. Merit 67 2. Assurance 70 2. Arminians as to 1. Vniversal Redemption 72 2. Final Apostasie 75 4. Socinians concerning Christs satisfaction 76 CHAP. VII 2. Vse of instruction 1. In the difference betwixt the two Covenants 79 In this see 1. Gods grace and mercy ib. 2. His infinite wisdom 82 2. The difference betwixt Covenant and Common mercys 85 1. In the Fountain 86 2. In the dimensions ib. 3. In the operations 88 4. In the duration Of both 90 3. In the difference betwixt gifts graces 93 1. In their Original 94 2. In their Nature 95 3. In their Retinue ib. 4. In their Ends and Effects 96 4. See the Truth of Christian Religion 98 CHAP. VIII 3Vse Of Examination 104 1. Whether we have accepted God as our God 106 2. Whether we have given up our selves to him 109 1. Really 110 2. Readily 112 3. Resolvedly 114 4. Vnreservedly 116 i. e. Totally Finally 3. Whether we have new-new-covenant dispositions which are such as these viz. 1. Saving illumination 120 2. Law writ in our hearts 122 3. One heart one way 123 4. The fear of God 125 5. Sanctification 126 6. A new Heart Spirit 128 7. A soft Heart 129 8. Spiritual Obedience 131 4. Try by the nature of these sure mercies which are 1. Transforming Mercies 133 2. Comforting Mercies 134 3. Raising Mercies 135 4. Inlarging Mercies 136 CHAP. IX 4. Vse of Conviction 1. Of Sinners 1. They are under a sure sentence of wrath 138 2. Not sure to be a moment out of Hell 142 3. Their mistake will aggravate their state 144 4. The nature of these mercies Tormenting 145 2 Conviction is of Saints 1. They indent with God 149 2. They compound about these mercies 150 3. They live not upon them 152 4. They live not up to them 155 Walking 1. Vnholily 156 2. Vnsteadily 157 3. Vncomfortably 159 4. Vnfruitfully 162 Bringing forth small and sour fruits ib. CHAP. X. 5Vse of Exhortation Look after interest in these sure mercies pressed by Motives 166 1. Nothing else can be made sure 167 2. Else common mercies are accursed 168 3. Else choicest duties are not accepted 169 4. Else you can have no solid ground of peace 171 5. These render every state safe 173 6. These mercies influence our spirits 174 7. These bring the soul to Heaven 175 Children of godly Parents exhorted to embrace Covenant-mercies by two Arguments 177 CHAP. XI 6Vse is of Direction referring to four heads 1. What is a soul to do to get interest in these mercies 1. Make a strict enquiry into your state 185 2. Work on your hearts the mysterie of merciless state 186 3. Be thankful for not content with
faith in the intelligent observer yea and they were wont to beget faith in the spectatours as Nathaniel believed upon Christs telling him of his conference at a distance Joh. 1.48 49. the beginning of his miracles manifested his glory and his Disciples believed in him Joh. 2.11 and others comparing the doctrine of John with Christs Miracles believed on him Joh. 10.41 and indeed the Argument of Miracles is a cogent convincing Argument for no man can do these real Miracles except God be with him Joh. 3.2 Certainly the strange things wrought by Christ ought to assure our hearts of the truth of the Gospel and consequently of the sureness of these Covenant-mercies But upon this subject you have evident and abundant demonstrations from the pen of Reverend Mr. Baxter in his Saints Rest Part 2. in the Preface and in pag. 215. to 234. to which I referr you the truth is God hath graciously condescended to confirm the Gospel by many infallible miracles which none can question and all this to make sure to the elect these Covenant-mercies therefore they are inexcusable that slight this way of the Gospels confirmation See Heb. 2.3 4. 9. Another step that God hath gone is the various wayes that God hath taken to make us know these sure mercies and thereby to assure us thereof As Mat. 3.17 Cap. 17.5 1. An audible intelligible voice from Heaven at Christs Baptism and in his Transfiguration this is my beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased and this voice the Apostle Peter saith he heard in the Holy Mount 2 Pet. 1.17 18. so that these Gospel mercies are not devised Fables but divine Oracles of undoubted truth 2. The constant preachings of honest and unbiassed men that were eye-witnesses of his glory they give clear evidence of their hatred of evil love of truth and goodness and they could not be perverted by any selfish ends of profit pleasure or honour for these were not proposed promised or attained Nay affliction and persecution was their known portion and therefore certainly could not would not couzen the world with lyes to get that which was not attainable in that way 3. God hath adorned men with admirable gifts to enable them to demonstrate the certainty and excellency of these Covenant-mercies extraordinary gifts in the Apostles dayes as extemporary prophecying 1 Cor. 12.8 9 10. singing healing diseases working miracles discerning spirits divers kinds of tongues so that all Nations might hear these magnalia dei in their own dialect Act. 2.6 Eph. 4.8 and now they are translated into all languages and God hath continued to distribute ministerial gifts for the Churches satisfaction and edification 4. Yea he sent his own Son to be the Preacher as well as Purchaser of these sure mercies he spake at sundry times and in divers manners in times past by the Prophets but in these last dayes he hath spoken to us by his Son Heb. 1.12 the more to conciliate in us reverence and credence for he saith surely they will reverence my Son certainly he will declare to us the whole counsel of God for he was in the bosome of the Father and came from thence for that very end to declare Gods mind Joh. 1.18.5 Yea he hath raised Jesus Christ from the dead so that we have a Preacher sent from the grave to assure us of the truth of these high mysteries and sweet mercies so the rich man could say in hell if one went to them from the dead they will repent and believe Rom. 16.30 now our dear Saviour himself was dead and is alive and as he is declared to be the Son of God by his Resurrection from the dead Rom. 1.4 so after his Resurrection he declared the great things of God confirming his Disciples in the truth of things formerly delivered and giving further testimonies and instructions Luk. 24 44-49.6 Still another way of manifestation is clear and christal Ordinances in which as in a fair glass we may behold both the face of God and the choicest mercies of the Covenant here you may not only hear the voice of God but see Jesus Christ evidently set forth crucified before your eyes Gal. 3.1 in the Sacrament of his blessed body and blood are obvious Gods Grace in giving Christ Christs love in giving himself his body broken for our food his blood shed for the remission of our sins and all the benefits of this new Covenant 7. Another way more yet of the Lords manifesting these mercies and so making them sure is the sanctifying and satisfying illumination of souls by his holy spirit by this holy unction they know all things 1 Joh. 2.20 God hath revealed them unto us by his spirit in 1 Cor. 2.10 12. now the spirit comes with conviction and demonstration answers all the souls doubts and cavils and leaves it without dispute and haesitancy so that the believing soul cannot but say they are sure mercies he dare not deny this for a world 10. Yet there is one other way whereby God doth make sure these mercies of the Covenant and that is marriage-knot a mutual and matrimonial ingagement in the perpetual and inviolable bond of the Covenant whereby Christ and the soul are inseparably linked together and this relates to the particular application of these Covenant-mercies and compleats all the former for saith the poor soul I do not question but these mercies are sure in themselves in their own nature and sure to some but are they so to me what ways may I be assured of my title thereunto and interest therein now this the Lord doth make good by entring into that sweet and familiar relation with his people of marriage Isa 54.5 Jer. 3.14 Rom. 7.4 thy maker is thy husband and I am marryed to you saith the Lord a believing soul is dead to the Law that he may be marryed to Christ and our heavenly husband hateth puting away Mal. 2.16 once marryed to Christ and for ever marryed to him death it selt breaks not this marriage-knot nay it fastens and heightens it here Christ and the soul are but as it were contracted there the marriage is solemnized with the acclamations of glorious Angels and glorified Saints for saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 11.2 I have espoused you to one husband that I may present you as a chast Virgin to Christ now souls are fitting for that great solemnity when the marriage of the Lamb shall come that the bride is made ready Rev. 19.7 she is making her self ready in this world she is marryed at the illustrious day of Christs second appearing so then this marriage-knot cannot be broken since it is compleated in glory But yet more particularly consider that remarkable Text in Hosea 2.19 20. wherein the mercies of the Covenant are made over in a way of matrimonial relation And I will betroth thee unto me for ever c. in which Scripture there are four things that may assure the heart of the firmness of these
through Jesus Christ is that these are most fully assured to us by the execution of Christs Mediatory Offices both in his estate of humiliation and exaltation Let us here consider 1. Christs Offices 2. His States 1. Christs Offices are of three sorts as 1. Sacerdotal 2. Prophetical 3. Regal 1. As Priest Christ insures to us many Covenant mercies for he hath put himself in our stead offered himself as a propitiatory Sacrifice to satisfie divine justice which is a sweet smelling savour Eph. 5.2 and of infinite value hence it is that Christ is called a merciful and faithful High-priest in things pertaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the people Heb. 2.17 certainly remission of sins is one of the grand mercies of the New Covenant and this Christ assureth as Priest 2. As Prophet he reveals to us the will of his Father opens to us the sealed Book annoints our eyes by his blessed spirit the spirit of Christ inspired the Prophets of the Old Testament 1 Pet. 1.10 11. and the Apostles of the new in writing Scripture and Ministers in Preaching the Gospel and believers in discerning the meaning of the Word and beauty of Christ it is Christ as Prophet that writes his Law in Believers hearts which is one of the great mercies of the new Covenant that inlightens dark minds and unlocks to us Divine Mysteries and bringeth us from darkness to light 3. As King Christ Jesus doth what he pleaseth for the good of his Church converting and subduing souls to himself granting to them the spirit of power love and of a sound mind softening their hard and stony hearts mastering their high and sturdy Wills awing ordering and centring their unruly roving and raging affections subduing their strong corruptions regulating their conversations begetting and increasing their Graces supporting them under and sanctifying their afflictions all which Jesus Christ as King works for his Covenanted ones Yet more particularly in the second place let us consider how our Covenant-mercies are assured to us by Jesus Christ with reference to his two estates of humiliation and exaltation 1. In his estate of exinanition and humiliation here I might run through the instances of his contemptible birth his despicable life i. e. to a carnal eye his being in the form of a servant having no form nor comeliness his hunger thirst wandrings revilings of men wrath of God rage of Devils all these confirm the Covenant if we believe the history of the Gospel but there 's one thing more that put all out of doubt and that is his real ready and voluntary death for as he had a power so he had a will to lay down his life and he dyed for the confirmation of this Covenant and all the mercies thereof a pregnant proof of this you have in Heb. 9.15 the summ of which Text is that Jesus Christ the great Mediatour of this new Covenant hath suffered death for the sins of the elect that were committed against the first Covenant whereby all true believers might have the benefits of the new Covenant more surely and immutably made over to them and this he further comfirmes by the paralel case of a Testament and the Testatour even amongst men ver 16 17. where a Testament is there must also of necessity be the death of the Testator no man can challenge a Legacy till he prove the death of him that left it Thus the Apostle argues Gal. 3.15 Erethren I sp●ak after the manner of men though it be but a mans Co●e●ant y●t if it be co●●irmed to man disanulleth or addeth thereto for while he is alive he may alter his Will at his pleasure or as reason requireth but when the Testator is dead the heirs may look after their Legacies Jesus Christ is the Testator Saints are the heirs the Legacies are these mercies of the Covenant now the Testator is dead the Legacies come clear and the heirs of promise may claim their interest therein there 's no alteration of the Will when the Testator is dead there 's no reversing true Christians now come to enjoy their estates Christ emptied himself that we might be filled he lost his life that we might live he became poor that we through his poverty might be rich 2 Cor. 8.9 2. Christ's exaltation doth much more assure to us Covenant-mercies which consists in 1. His Resurrection 2. His Ascension and both these do abundantly confirm this to us 1. Christs rising again from the Grave assures us of the certainty of these mercies for though he was dead yet he is alive and so lives to be his own Executor if Christ had been detained Prisoner by the King of Terrours we might groundedly suspect that justice were not satisfied nor mercies fully purchased but he was delivered for our offences and raised again for our justification Rom. 4.25 and now he hath conquered death and through death he hath destroyed him that had the power of death that is the devil and so hath delivered the heirs of promise from the fear of death Heb. 2.14 15. nay and by his resurrection he raiseth us to a new life of holiness here and a blessed life of happiness hereafter Rom. 6.4 with cap. 8.11 2 Cor. 4.14 Christs Resurrection abundantly clears the Saints from all accusations and condemnation Rom. 8.33 34. in this therefore we may rejoyce and triumph as the foundtain of our consolation See Act. 2.24 25 26. 2. Christs Ascension into Heaven insures and secures Covenant-mercies to us both as it sets him in the holy of holies far above the reach of men and Devils and as he went before to prepare a place for us Joh. 14 2. he bids Mary to tell the Disciples Joh. 20.17 go to my Brethren and say unto them I ascend to my Father and your Father to my God and your God q. d. now you may be assured of your interest in God in a Covenant-way for now I have done that work on earth that obstructed your fellowship and obscured your interest so that now you may call him your God and come unto him as your Father without misgivings within or challenges from without There are two things in Christs Ascension that assure these mercies to us 1. His session at Gods right hand 2. His Intercession 1. Jesus Christ is set at Gods right hand in heavenly places Ephes 1.20 and the two following verses afford us two choice considerations that tend further to assure us 1. That he is far above all principality and power might dominion and every name in this world and that to come ver 21. i. e. Christ as man is advanced not only above all States and Potentates on earth but above all Angels and Arch-angels in Heaven therefore far above the Devils none can hinder all are his servants to help forward his design for the good of souls oh what a sweet consideration is this that our nature is advanced thus high yea in the person of the
they are the Children of God Eph. 1.14.4.30 Rom. 8.15 16. and this is an earnest of their inheritance which assures them of the whole possession it 's a seal and takes away all occasion of doubting Paul saith of all believers 1 Cor. 2.12 we have not received the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are given us of God i.e. these mercies of the Covenant Adoption pardon sanctification salvation God hath laid it upon us as a duty to make our calling and election sure not in it self 2 Pet. 1.10 but to our selves therefore it is attainable for God doth not command us impossibilities 2 C●r 13.5 he that bids us try our selves whether we be in the faith supposeth we may come to know upon an exact tryal Besides many of the Saints have been assused of their sincerity and salvation by ordinary ways which all the Saints may use and have a like success in a like full assurance of faith Mark 11.24.1 Joh. 5.14 15. and God hath bid us ask that we may receive that our joy may be full now we are to ask in faith that he will grant what we ask and we have a promise to be heard yea he therefore sets us on asking that he may give But I need not stand long to prove the possibility of a Child of Gods attaining assurance for experience doth abundantly confirm it and blessed be God that in this we can groundedly say the Papists are Lyars 3. Another sort whom this Text and Doctrine confutes is the Arminians and this in two respect 1. In the business of universal Redemption 2. In the falling away from Grace 1. The Text saith these are the sure mercies of David God's Davids or beloved ones have only an interest in them not all men and in the Doctrine I say that Covenant-mercies promised in Christ are purchased and insured by Christ to all the Heirs of promise and I must add only to these and to none besides and therefore Christ dyed not for all and I shall only use these two Arguments which immediately relate to the present subject 1. Christs mediatory undertakings are not intended as a price for any but such as were proposed by God to the Mediator in the Covenant of Redemption to be Redeemed by him but all and every one were not so proposed therefore not redeemed I have before opened that great transaction betwixt the Father and the Son now 't is most certain that the Mediators death and sufferings are to be lookt upon as regulated and qualified in respect of their effects according to what was proposed by the Father and consented to by the Son hence Christ saith that he came not to do his own will but the will of him that sent him and to finish his work and to give eternal life to as many as God had given to him therefore Christ must by his undertakings ensure these mercies to all those and none but those that the Father proposed to him in this everlasting bargain as for that conditional giving of some to Christ which some speak of that would derogate from his glory for he must needs know the event and that such a conditional giving would not effect it and to say he would what should not come to pass or to apply such means as he knew would not be effectual to the end cannot be imagined besides those that are given to Christ are contra-distinguished from others that are not given to him therefore these only are assigned peculiarly to be redeemed and not others Arg. 2. All those and only those whom Christ Redeemed have all the mercies of the Covenant insured to them but all have not all the mercies of the Covenant ensured to them and conferred on them therefore all are not Redeemed by Christ Christ is the surety and Mediator of the New Covenant and he gives Faith Repentance Pardon Heaven to them for whom he is engaged as a Surety they shall not fail of all the Covenant-mercies that are absolutely necessary to Salvation for he is faithful in the Execution of all his Offices now we know all men have not saving Faith nor Repentance it cannot be conceived but that his satisfaction must be equally effectual for the procuring of these saving mercies to those whose room he sustained and indeed God promiseth as a recompence to him that he shall see of the travel of his soul and be satisfied yea he shall justifie many i. e. as many as he undertook for Isa 53.11 if Christ hath born their iniquities they must be justified else he missed of his end there is an inseparable connexion betwixt Christ's undertaking for them and his bestowing Covenant-mercies on them all that are Redeemed by Christ's Blood are made Kings and Priests to God Rev. 5 9 10. they are purchased to be a peculiar people to God they are washed from their sins in his blood redeemed from their vain Conversation delivered from spiritual enemies to serve God in holiness all their days and to be received to Heaven when they dye these are the mercies of the Covenant which the Mediator purchaseth and applyeth to all the elect and to none but elect souls therefore none else are Redeemed for there is no saving nor eternal mercy procured to any reprobate by Christ's death for the proper and native fruits of Christs death are not divided therefore he prays for them that were given to him and for whose sake he did sanctifie himself Joh. 17. and excludes the reprobate World for whom he purchased not these Covenant-mercies therefore he dyed not for them that 's the former 2. This point confutes Arminians in their sad opinion of the Saints Apostacy some hold a total as Lutherans others a final as Arminius others maintain a total and final Apostacy of Saints we hold that believing regenerate justified persons that are endowed with the divine nature and a lively hope shall not lose that principle and fall from that state of grace and be utterly deprived of the favour of God and indeed we need no other Arguments but this that these mercies of the Covenant are sure mercies which they would not be if they might be lost there is the immutability of Gods Promise in the New Covenant the intercession of Jesus Christ for the Elect the Omnipotency of the Shepherd of Israel who will not lose one of his Sheep the efficacy of the spirit supporting and renewing the seed of God and life of Grace in believers 1 Joh. 3.9 and this seed of God keeps a believer from sinning in two respects 1. He hates and ●ills in part the evil which he wills and works 2. If by humane frailty he fall Rom 7.19 he makes not a trade of sin or keeps a course in it but the seed of Grace makes him restless till he return to God and be entertained into favour and fellowship with him thus though good David sometimes goes
maist be feared Oh this is kindly when the sense of Gods love awes the soul to obedience and works upon it tenderness of Conscience that it can say I dare not grieve so good a God or offend so loving a Father who never did me hurt who is always doing me good shall I render evil for good God forbid this is Child-like and ingenuous and doth demonstrate a Covenant-relation 5. Sanctification is another Covenant-promise Ezek. 36.25 then will I sprinkle clean water upon you and ye shall be clean from all your filthiness and from all your Idol● will I cleanse you this is a sweet disposition what can you say to it not that the soul in this life can be free from the remainders of corruption for what is man that ●e should be clean but the power Job 15.14 strength and Dominion of sin is crushed in a Covenanted soul so that it may be truly said of the Regenerate that he hath a clean heart Psal 24.4 Joh. 13.10 and clean hands and Christ saith his Disciples were clean all except Judas Well then ●hath the good Word of God made you holy Joh. 15.3 and cleansed your hearts do you desire to make clean the inside of the Cup as well as out-side I mean do you cleanse your selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit resolving to perfect holiness in the fear of God 2 Cor. 7.1 Job 17.9 are you growing stronger and stronger he that ●hath clean hands doth renew his strength are you washed from your idols i. e. the sin to which you are most addicted Psal 18.23 and keep your selves from your own iniquity can you say you hate every false way can you cut off a right-hand sin pluck out a right-eye sin though never so dear and useful pleasant and profitable do you resist and conquer in some measure your master-lusts so that you can say through grace Rom. 6.14 sin hath not Dominion over you though you feel to your cost it hath possession in you can you say you are prepared for duties and ordinances 2 Chron. 30.19 Act. 15.9 Psal 119.9 though you be not cleansed according to the purification of the sanctuary doth faith in God's promises purifie your hearts do you cleanse your ways by observing Scripture-precepts Psal 51.10 do you pray hard for a clean heart as well as clear state Oh sirs try your selves in these things unless you be sanctified you are not justified many are undone through self-deceit in this case Solomon saith there is a generation that are pure in their own eyes yet is not cleansed from their filthiness Prov. 30.12 take heed of this and labour to evidence your justification by your sanctification 6. Another gracious effect of the New Covenant is A new heart and a new spirit Ezek. 36.26 this is an holy disposition an habit of grace the image of God the Divine nature strangely changing altering metamorphosing the soul casting it into a new mold and turning the stream and current of the souls motions and affections into another channel to a complyance with God's will and a tendency towards Heaven and the things of Heaven this is a wonderful act and fruit of God's free-grace and sanctifying spirit and oh what a change doth it produce in the heart and life not only a mental change to have the mind adorned with some general truths in a notional way so that whereas before a man was an ignorant Sot now he is grown a knowing person and learned discourser or disputant nor yet is it only a moral change whereby a man formerly a notorious offender is grown an exact Civilian nor yet a formal change by which a careless neglecter is become a constant performer of religious duties which is good so far yet no more than an hypocrite may do Simon Magus believes Herod doth many things Ahab fasts Judas can Pray and Preach But the new creature goes beyond them all for 't is a Cordial Spiritual Evangelical change of the whole man to what is good so that now the soul hath new motions actions conversation a new rule a new principle a new end new affections new loves and delights a new light and life new heat and strength new companions and acquiescence new griefs fears burdens back hopes hatred desires and expectations old things are past away and behold all things are become new so that it may well be called a new Creation 2 Cor. 5.17 Christians try your selves in this what work of God hath passed upon your souls have you a new heart are you made holy as God is holy doth this new heart hate and expel sin doth it close with real Saints as Saints doth it breathe after Grace in the souls of relations neighbours doth it make you sensible of the smilings and hidings of God's face doth it raise your hearts to heavenly objects and delights doth Grace in some measure g●●w thrive increase and come on in your souls do you Worship God in a spiritual manner and long for Communion with him here and in Heaven 7. A soft heart is promised in the new Covenant Ezek. 36.26 I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and give you an heart of flesh i. e. a soft broken and tender heart a flexible plyant and melting disposition not so much the eyes pouring floods of tears for that may proceed from a natural constitution but a soul grieved for sin as offence against God which lyes in the sinners account and estimation looking upon it as the greatest evil and worse than the worst affliction and if it were to do again he would rather be torn to pieces than willingly commit such a sin he would give all the World if in his power that it were undone again and therefore is it that the Scripture rather expresseth it by mourning than by weeping for weeping is rather a passionate act of the outward senses and irascible faculties though 't is desirable to give vent to inward sorrow by outward tears but mourning is an heart-contrition and hearty compunction for sin as dishonouring God grieving his Spirit Crucifying his Son and violating his holy and righteous Law well then have you soft and tender hearts i. e. can you lay to heart your sins as the greatest evils that ever befell you can you justifie God if he should condemn you can you condemn your selves as worthy to be damned in Hell for ever do you loath your selves for all your abominations can you wish you had been upon the rack when you committed such sins are you weary and heavy laden with the intolerable burden of the guilt of sin and what would you give or leave to have it taken off is your heart sensible of the absolute need you have of Jesus Christ are you soft and plyable to Gods holy will attentive to Divine motions retentive of Divine impressions doth the least hint of God's mind find in you an observant spirit when God saith seek
thou hast no reason to complain Seneca compares a a Christian that 's disconsolate for outward ●osses or crosses to a man that hath a fine Orchard the Trees whereof are richly laden with store of precious fruit and because the wind blows off some leaves the man sits down and takes on heavily he weeps and wailes and cryes out he is undone why what 's the matter why the wind hath taken off some leaves but the roots and trees and fruits are safe should not we judge that a fond and foolish man just thus is it with the Christian God and Christ promises and Gospel-mercies are sure and stedfast by an inviolable Gospel-Covenant yet the sinful silly soul lyes whining and complaining for the loss of some leaves of Worldly comforts which he may live well without Yea saith the poor soul but these outward things are not the chiefest cause of my trouble and discouragement did I know that these mercies were made sure to me I should be comfortable but alas I fear I have no share therein I shall answer this doubt afterwards at present I only say lay thy hand upon thy heart and deal ingeniously is this the ground of thy trouble is not this only pretended is not something else the real ground the heart is deceitful look again see what comforted thee before this outward trouble came and what chears thee when thy present pressure is removed but suppose it be jealousies about thy interest yet why shouldst thou be uncomfortable hast not thou ventured thy soul on a sure foundation what reason hast thou of discouragement a faith of adherence brings some settlement as well as a faith of evidence every act of faith brings some comfort whom having not seen saith the Apostle of a corporal sight so may I say of a kind of spiritual sense and assurance ye love in whom though now you see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1.8 recumbency hath a kind of complacency it argues want of faith to want joy and unbelief is a shameful sin considering the assurances given us in the Gospel but more of this hereafter But oh consider sirs what wrong you do to your selves by uncomfortable walking you weaken and exhaust your strength and spirits what discredit you bring upon the ways of God rendring them soure and distastful in the account of others what opposition it expresseth both to many positive precepts and the spirit of comfort and to these sure mercies of David methinks I hear the God of Heaven thus bespeaking the gracious troubled heart soul what ailes thee what is it thou wouldst have I have given thee many glorious gifts pardon reconciliation adoption ordinances the benefit of all my works of Providence a title to the good things of Earth whiles thou livest and a free admission into Heaven when thou dyest nay I have given thee my self my Son my Spirit and that by the surest marriage-Marriage-Covenant and will not all this revive thy fainting spirit what wouldst thou have more and what canst thou desire to make it surer to thee speak but the word and it shall be done but I have gone beyond thy demands and why then art thou thus drooping and disconsolate is thy heart revived when mortal lying man makes thee a promise of some outward good and canst thou now faint when the eternal God hath taken all these pains to assure thy troubled heart of thy interest in these sure mercies of David Oh Christians shame your selves for your uncomfortableness are these consolations of God small unto you thank your selves for your discouragements and let it be matter of trouble that you have so many needless useless troubles in your souls 4. Another fault in the Heirs of the promises whereby they are unsuitable to these mercies is unfruitfulness herein they do not live up to these mercies and are exceeding defective and imperfect especially in two respects the fruit they bring forth is 1. Small 2. Soure fruit 1. 'T is usually but small in quantity short of that abundance and ripeness that should come of so good a soil as mercy is especially when mercy is the Tillage Gods Vineyard is in a very fruitful Hill Isa 5 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so we read it but in Heb. 't is the Horn of the Son of Oyle I know the Son of Oyle may import a very fat or rich soile as Son of the Morning for exceeding bright and illustrious and so Gods people were planted in Canaan which was an exceeding fruitful Countrey but may at least allusively affirm of real Saints that they are planted in the Horn of the Son of Oyle even in the Son of God who was annointed with the Oyle of gladness above his fellows and in whom true Believers are planted and from whom they may suck and draw abundant juice and fatness as branches do from the root of the Olive-tree Rom. 11.17 moreover what abundant pains doth God the Father the Husbandman take to make souls very fruitful he takes away such as bear no fruit at all and every branch that beareth fruit he purgeth it that it may bring forth more fruit Joh. 15.2 Oh what mercies do the Saints partake of Gospel-priviledges Promises Providences Ordinances Experiences Comforts Corrections every thing that might make them fruitful in good works in Praying Reading Meditating Conferring exact Walking doth God distribute and where 's their answerable fruitfulness God expects more and riper fruit alas how short and defective are we how little glory do we bring to God how little profit unto others or comfort to our own souls Phil. 1.11.1 Thes 3.12 Mat. 3.8 Col. 1.10 we should be filled with the fruits of righteousness we should abound more and more and bring forth fruits meet for sincere repentance and truly fruitful in every good work but are we so yea or no I much suspect it and what a shame is it that we should lye under the warm influences of the Sun of Righteousness so long and be so unfruitful the God of Heaven humble us for this 2. I am afraid that the fruits we do bring forth are but sowr and bitter not so sweet and kindly as may be the genuine fruits and products of these sure mercies my meaning is that the obedience and performances of the Saints too often flow from a spirit of bondage fear and terrour and not from that filial Child-like disposition and the Evangelical spirit of Adoption that should be the principle and impulsive cause of Saints spiritual actings I know legal fears and terrours are good in their kind to drive the soul out of it self and unto Christ but afterwards a spirit of love best becomes a Child of God hence saith the Apostle Rom. 8.15 2 Tim. 1.7 ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear but ye have received the spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father a Child-like boldness best befits a Son it 's more
is only by faith which is the souls accepting of him upon his own terms Joh. 1.12 here I must not digress into the large field of that useful subject of saving faith but must refer you to the large discourses upon this radical fundamental grace and I beseech you be not mistaken in this here lyes the hinge and vitals of Religion even in an entire affectionate voluntary and universal accepting of Jesus Christ as our King Priest Prophet to be ruled guided saved by him in his own way Oh sirs if you do not this you do nothing if you believe you shall be saved Mark 16.16 but if you believe not you shall be damned that 's plain English and truly my friends all men have not faith this faith of Gods Elect this precious faith Oh therefore look after it long for it come with a broken heart to a bleeding Christ come weary and heavy laden and lay your load on the Son of God come with a troubled humbled heart wounded with a sense of sin and look up to this brazen Serpent for help and healing reach out thy trembling hand and get hold of the skirt of his garment or rather with old Simeon embrace Jesus Christ in the arms of thy faith and then thou hast these mercies of the Covenant 7. Enter into a solemn Covenant with the Lord no way to be interested in the mercies of the Covenant but by entring into the Covenant this this is the work I would perswade your souls unto this indeed is the life of Religion which is so called a relegando from binding because it binds as it were God and man together and joyns their interests in this blessed bond of the Covenant 2 Cor. 8.5 Isa 44 5. 2 Chron. 30.8 O therefore set your selves to enter a solemn engagement give up your selves to the Lord openly profess that you are the Lords or else subscribe with your hand and yield up your selves to the Lord to whom of right you do belong and take God as your God Josh 24.24 25. say the Lord our God will we serve and his voice will we obey as the people of Israel once and thus do you make a Covenant this day lift up your hand to the most high God as once Jacob did who made a vow saying if God will be with me and keep me in this way that I go then shall the Lord be my God Gen. 28.20 21. now consider friends hath not God done as much or more for you as Jacob here desires and why should you not take God for your God say thus I have heard of the Lords goodness nay I have felt and drunk a large share of Gods kindness and compassion he hath done that for me that none else could and hath undertaken to do yet much more and therefore God forbid that I should cleave to any other God all my days as I will be wholly the Lords so I will have only the Lord and as he is the God so he shall be my God this is that which the Scripture calls avouching the Lord to be our God and if we avouch him to be our God he will avouch us to be his people Deut. 26.17 18. which imports the mutual conditions of this blessed Covenant even a reciprocal embracing and accepting each other the Saints take God to be theirs by the saving Grace of faith and God entertains them by a gracious act of favour love and condescention only be sure you remember that the Articles of Agreement are of Gods own framing and the soul must come up wholly unto his terms else no bargain God will not abate any thing of his appointed conditions it must be sincere faith though it be but weak which empties the soul of sin and self and turns wholly to God and doth resign up it self universally voluntarily and perpetually to be the Lords and in the same manner takes God to be his and looks upon this as his mercy as well as his duty his highest preferment as well as his greatest employment and sweetest enjoyment Oh thinks a good soul that I could be more the Lords than I am I am too much mine own Hos 3.3 but I will enter into the strictest Matrimonial bond to be only for God and not for another then he would be for me and oh that I could take the Lord wholly for mine and only as mine and joyn no other Lovers with him I need none but him he is all sufficient and my exceeding sweet and great reward and upon this condition God takes you and you shall have advantage by him and the Gospel-Covenant and all the mercies of it and if you be not willing to forsake all for him Mat. 10.37 Luk. 14.28 29. you are not worthy of him but I shall spend no more time about this because so many have writ of a souls Covenanting with God See Mr. Baxter's Saints Rest par 1. p. 176. to 182 alibi passim Mr. Guthrie Mr. Allen Mr. Vincent have prescribed directions and a form of words for a solemn Covenanting with God See also Reflect 8. in the close of this Treatise p. Thus much for the first Classe or rank of Directions CHAP. XII 2. HOW a poor doubting soul may assure to it self these Covenant-mercies many good souls may have an interest in these yet not be assured of their interest which yet is of great consequence and concernment though not to the being yet to the well-being of a Christian therefore we are commanded to give diligence to make our calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Vit. A●et in lo● not in respect of God say Interpreters with whom all things are firm and undoubted but in respect of others say some that those with whom we live may see the Tree is good because the fruits are good but I rather take it that we must labour to clear these up to our own souls that we may have some real well-grounded assurance thereof in our hearts and both these are mercies included in the Gospel-covenant only take notice that calling is before election and there we must begin and so ascend from the work of Grace in our hearts to the workings of Grace in Gods heart for our love is a reflection of his love to us Grace is a fruit of Election this then is a weighty case of Conscience suppose a gracious soul be dark and doubtful about his state and is full of questionings and disputings whether these sure mercies of the Covenant do belong to him what must such a soul do that it may be assured of its interest therein See this point handled solidly in a Treat called A Believers duty towards the Spirit c. ●on Ephes 4 30. Read 6. Direct pag. 158. to 183. See Baxt. 32 Directions and that indeed they are sure to him Now for answering this Question I shall propound these Directions 1. Study the Precepts Promises and Presidents in the Scriptures be diligent
in reading the Word of God Oh of what use would this be there you may find what God commands how Saints have obeyed by what means they have cleared up their integrity and interest in Christ here you may find what are the conditions of the Covenant and upon what terms the mercies thereof may be enjoyed and what are the infallible Characters of such as have received benefit thereby here you may find Christ the main and choicest mercy of the Covenant yea for this end was the Scripture written that we might have comfort in God and by consequence also assurance of our interest in him Rom. 15.4 for this cause did both Christ speak Joh. 15.11.1 Joh. 1.4 and John write Divine truths that are upon record that his joy might be in us yea that our joy might be full an express Text you have in 1 Joh. 5.13 these things have I written unto you that believe in the name of the Son of God that ye may know ye have eternal life the more you study the Scriptures the more clearly you may read your names in the Book of Life your hearts if sincere will eccho to the word you read because the Law of God is written in your hearts therefore read and study this blessed Book these words are Charters of your heavenly inheritance food for your hungry appetites glasses in which you may discern the face of your souls Oh Christians neglect not the Scriptures look up for a right understanding and due application of every passage therein and then comfort your selves and one another with these words 1 Thes 4. ult 2. Attend upon a quickning Ministry here the terms of the Gospel are propounded the mercies of the Covenant are displayed true believers discovered and characterized here you may meet with a Barnabas as well as with a Boanerges yea it may be the hand that wounded may heal you God usually makes the fruit of the lips to be peace Isa 57.19 and many times sends some choice Interpreter to declare unto a man his righteousness and clear up his integrity Job 33.23 and therefore is it that God directs all such as walk in darkness to obey the voice of his servants Isa 50 10. or rather gives this as their character that they do so Isa 40.1 2.2 Cor. 1.4 and God gives Ministers a charge to comfort his people and lays up comforts in their Breasts to this end that they may comfort such as are cast down Oh the reviving words you may hear in the Ministry of the Word here you may hear doubts resolved cases of Conscience propounded answered and hearts opened anatomized here the spirit of God is often conveyed which seals up the believing soul to the day of redemption Isa 59.21 Gal. 3.2 3. Mat. 28. ●0 the presence of God accompanies his institution so that what the Minister declares in the name and by the Authority of Christ Isa 44 26. Mat. 18.18 according to the word he will ratifie back and confirm it in Heaven and how many drooping heirs of promise hath God erected satisfied encouraged about their title to Covenant-mercies by this Ordinance Oh the advantage that many have got thereby therefore wait on God in this Ordinance Oh look not upon it as weak and beggarly Elements as some ignorantly and blasphemously call all Ordinances make them not a matter of Ceremony and Formality but prepare for them and use them conscientiously and you shall see the sweet effect thereof 3. Improve the seals of the Covenant both Baptism and the Lords Supper Rom 4.11 Circumcision is called the seal of the righteousness of faith because that sweet Evangelical priviledge or marrow of the gospel-Gospel-covenant is signified sealed and exhibited in that Ordinance Oh Christians understand and improve that sweet Ordinance of Baptism it would be a spring of sweetness and satisfaction to your doubting fainting spirits 1 Cor. 10.16 c. 11.24 and then for the Lords Supper herein Christs Body and Blood are particularly applyed to us to become our own yea verily and really though not corporally but spiritually exhibited to every worthy receiver and hence resulteth spiritual joy solace and satisfaction as in the Passeover in Hezekiahs days 2 Chron. 30.21 26. they kept the feast with gladness and there was joy in Jerusalem But be sure you examine your selves prepare your hearts excite your Graces understand the Covenant apply these blessed mysteries to your own souls open your hearts by Meditation that the King of glory may come in stir up your souls to draw near to God and he will draw near to you Gal. 3.1 you 'l see Christ Crucified before you you 'l enjoy a blessed feast of fat things that will nourish and comfort your pining souls here you 'l feel pleasant Apples and sweet flagons of the Wine of his special love to stay you up and support your hearts in the day of your affliction and sad desertion and if you cannot enjoy that refreshing Ordinance yet reflect upon your former enjoyments and meditate upon your Crucified Redeemer and represent his bruised body and effused blood to your selves and in due time you 'l cry out with Thomas my Lord and my God 4. Ply the Throne of Grace in Prayer say as David Psal 35.3 O Lord say unto my soul I am thy salvation Isa 56.7 God hath promised to make his people joyful in the house or duty of Prayer Saints have found by experience the sweet and satisfying fruit of a serious wrestling with God thus David Psal 31.16 make thy face to shine upon thy servant and ver 21. he breaks out in thankfulness for an answer Blessed be the Lord for he hath shewed me his marvellous kindness in a strong City Yea Christ himself commands us to ask that we may receive that our joy may be full Joh. 16.24 and is not a clear evidence of our interest in the Covenant and the mercies of it worth asking therefore plead with God tell him thou preferrest Covenant-mercies above worldly enjoyments and that thou wouldst rather have these mercies made sure to thee than to have a lease of thy life for his loving-kindness is better than life Psal 63.3 tell him the joy of the Lord is thy strength and how much it will tend to thy furtherance in his service if he will lift up the light of his Countenance on thy soul tell him he hath granted comfortable assurance to many souls and thou needest it as well as they thou art an humble suitor at the Gates of mercy and art resolved not to let him go except he bless thee yet once again tell him it is no more then he hath promised in his word and Christ hath purchased by his blood and therefore it is no arrogancy for thee to crave or expect and when thou hast been pleading conclude with that poor man Mark 9 24. Mat. 9.29 Lord I believe help thou my unbelief and he will say according
sin exceedingly against God and our own souls in neglecting those means of assurance 2. You cannot evidence your truth of grace or title to Covenant-mercies unless you use Gods appointed means to obtain assurance it 's an ill sign of a graceless heart to nourish doubtings and distrusts and then to come in with such pleas as these true faith is accompanied with doubtings he that doubts not doth not believe a doubting faith is a good faith let me have doubts and fears I dare not be too confident lest I presume But I must tell thee soul a doubting faith is but a weak faith and a Christian ought to be strong in faith Rom. 4.20 and make a progress to a full degree and proficiency in grace and endeavour to arrive to a plerophory and full assurance for this is the nature of grace to be pressing after perfection Rom. 1.17 and go from faith to faith even from a faith of adherence to a faith of evidence and assurance yea let such know this that slight means of assurance you live in a constant neglect of a known duty in disobedience to a flat command Heb. 6.11 and we desire that every one of you do shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope unto the end q. d. if your faith and hope be of the right stamp as it may seem to be it will be working off all doubtings anxious thoughts and distrusting fears and move to a further degree of confidence and assurance else you may suspect the truth of it 3. You cannot assure your selves of creature enjoyments a day to an end nor yet of immunity from crosses and if you have not assurance of these sure mercies what have you to bear up your hearts in an evil day we little know what shaking times may come that may pluck from you whatever you account dear and if you have not something above oh the sad confusions that will seize upon you but assurance of an interest in the God of Heaven and the good things of the Covenant will be a guard to free your hearts from those numerous Armies of tormenting fears that will beset you this will be a cordial to drive away sick and swooning qualmes from your troubled spirits assurance of Gods love will fortifie your hearts against the fierce assaults of men and devils Psal 27.1 the Lord is my light and salvation whom shall I fear Exod. 12.23 Ezek. 9.6 destroying Angels shall not come near any persons that are sprinkled with Christs blood and have the mourners mark a day of danger horrour confusion may overtake us in the Nation in which we may be stript naked of all our enjoyments surely then assurance of our interest in the best riches in the World will stand us in stead and when all things else fail these will abide with us But 4. Consider the great advantages of assurance I can but name them 1. It will assure us that we shall want nothing that 's good for us if he have given us Christ then will he give us all good things Rom. 8.32 2. It gives a sweet relish to every comfort of life delight in Gods great goodness Neh. 9.25.3 It will sweeten the bitterest cup of affliction Mat. 9.2 4. It gives boldness to the Throne of Grace Heb. 10.22 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. with a liberty to say what we list if according to his will and he will hear us 5. Assurance helps the soul to despise the World he that knows he is cloathed with the Sun can trample the Moon under his feet 1 Pet. 4.14 16. see Heb. 10.34.6 It strengthens against the censures and reproaches of men no matter what men say when God acquits Rom. 8.33 34. our Conscience tells us we are not the men we are represented to be 7. It sweetens the reading of the Word and receiving of the Sacraments these promises seals blood of the Covenant are mine precepts threatnings all things his 1 Cor. 3.21 22.8 It enlargeth the soul in praise and thanksgiving hence those Hallelujahs in Heaven the more assurance the more thankfulness Psal 103.1 2 3. 9. It commendeth Religion to others makes Gods ways lovely Oh taste and see come and I will shew you what he what he hath done for my soul ingageth many Psal 142.7.10 It helpeth on repentance makes Godly sorrow more kindly Evangelical a love-look from Christ melts Peters heart this Sun dissolves frozen souls Ezek. 16.63.11 It engageth a soul against sin appearances of God are cords of love which are strongest to an ingenuous spirit Rom. 6.1 2.12 Assurance animates our performances and obedience is any thing too much to do for God yea my God deserves all I am have his command 's are not grievous 1 Joh. 3.5.13 It deadens the heart to needless disputes and Controversies it settles the heart in the truth and fortifies it against the subtilties of seducing spirits for Gods Law is in their hearts Heb. 13.9.14 It representeth the glory of Heaven is some blessed embleme of a souls bathing it self in these Rivers of pleasure that are at Gods right hand divine embraces a corner of Heaven a Pisgah-sight of Canaan 15. It sweeteneth the King of terrours and plucks out the sting of death so that a gracious soul assured of Gods love can triumph with Paul over this conquered enemy 1 Cor. 15.55 and indeed none but an assured Christian can look death in the face without horrour and amazement ruffling gallants may be prodigal of their lives who are far from any capacity of obtaining assurance but those are liker Bruits than men that are guided by sence not by reason and consider not that their souls are immortal and that they are entring into Eternity at death but these have drowned themselves in sensuality and consider not what they do but 't is only the Christian that's upon good grounds assured of his good estate that can in cold blood adventure upon death yea be willing to dye yea desire to be dissolved and be with Christ I have but hinted at these things because 't is an ordinary subject wherein many have done worthily to promote endeavours to obtain assurance Sirs what say you to these things is not assurance of interest in Covenant-mercies worth labouring for can you let these things lye without clearing your title doth not the new creature breathe after it doth not a rational soul desire it do not all wicked men catch after a certainty and frame to themselves some kind of certainty do not worldlings take care to secure their Lands Goods Estates shall they require Bonds Seals Oaths Sureties and yet account all this too little and shall we account any thing too much to secure these sweet mercies whithout which we are undone for ever Oh let nothing hinder your endeavours this way let no objections make you delay or be discouraged let not Satan deter you or the Worlds conceits make you slight it as unattainable nor a slothful unbelieving heart
thou forsaken me saith Christ and David his Type yet my God still Psal 51.8 Christians you are not to trust to present feelings David doth not say make me to feel but hear joy and gladness saith one because sense and feeling is of no worth of it self except first we hear it in a promise that 's a fancy that 's felt and not heard from God and we are to build upon a word of promise even when we want the feeling of comfort and 't is not safealtoger the to lean upon former experiences only though these are good secondary helps yet our primary and Principal foundation is God in a Promise as our God in Covenant let a dark and troubled spirit read study and practise that choice instruction Isa 50.10 trust in the name of the Lord there 's enough in Gods name to answer all●d ubts read it Exod. 34.5 6 mercy there answers to our misery grace to our undeserving long-suffering to our continued apostacy goodness answers our vileness truth and faithfulness answers to our Covenant-breach and falshood God keeps Covenant though we break it yea God keeps Covenant with us though we are apt to think he breaks it David thought Gods mercy was clean gone and that his Promise failed for evermore but he is convinced at last that that apprehension was his infirmity Psal 77.8 9 10. therefore let a clouded soul in its blackest desertions lift up his eyes and heart to these sure mercies and ponder thus 't is true my soul is dark and God withdraws it is a night of great affliction but was it never day with thee O my soul hath not the blessed day-star of grace risen in thy heart hath not God united thee to Jesus Christ did he never give thee the earnest of his Spirit didst thou never feel the stirrings of its graces or the stealing of its comforts reflect upon thy former state or rather study the freeness and the fulness of Gospel-grace what though I be without any sensible feelings of Gods grace or shinings of his face is not my life sometimes hid with Christ in God even from mine own eyes as well as from others may not the Sun be under a Cloud shall I say my Father doth not love me because he doth not always dandle me upon his knee and evidence his love to me in sweet embraces I am resolved to cleave unto him though he kill me and to believe in him though I cannot see him I will venture my weary soul upon his free-grace in Christ the Covenant is firm its mercies are sure there 's hope in the God of Israel it may be he will cast a propitious aspect on a weary ●oul however I am resolved to lye at his ●eet and act affiance and dependance on his ●mmutable promise whether he ever shine upon my soul or no this will bring a good issue 7. The last case wherein a Christian is to improve these sure mercies of David is in the hour and power of death when that grim Serjeant looks upon us with its ghastly face and arrests us with its cold hand then mercy will stand us in stead and sure mercies will be our sweetest Cordial these mercies pluck out the sting of death perfume the grave make way for the gracious soul to take its flight to glory so that death is now become the Christians friend and servant rest and interest conquest and Crown the Apostle doth therefore reckon up death as one part of the Saints Inventory 1 Cor. 3.21 22. all things are yours whether Paul or Apollo or Ceph●s or the World or life or death or things present or things to come all are yours this is the fullest longest surest title here 's a sufficient enumeration nothing can be wanting either in the mercies ensured or manner of ensuring or the duration it 's to all Eternity and it 's the best and clearest Tenure in capite in the head Christ and 't is both by Purchase and by Conquest nothing is wanting to make these mercies sure for ever for death which dissolves all other bonds of relation doth more firmly and closely joyn God and the gracious soul 't is as a Porter to let them into their Fathers house a divine Limbeck to purifie and prepare them for glory and that voice which calls to the believer saying come up hither in this life souls are but espoused to Christ 2 Cor. 11.2 after death they are presented to him and the marriage is consummated 2 Cor. 5.6 8. ver 1 2. Phil. 1.21 here we are absent from our husband while present in the body but 't is more desirable to be absent from the body and present with the Lord and this is done by a dissolving of the earthly house of this Tabernacle so that hereby death becomes a gain and brings believers to their proper home and why should we be afraid of a stingless Serpent or helpful servant that doth us the greatest kindness why are believers afraid to dye why do they not rather say with that good man egredere anima egredere go forth my soul go forth and meet thy dearly beloved But we need go no further to prove either the immortality of the soul or the commodities of death than the subject we are upon even these sure mercies of David for they continue to David even when he is laid in the grave therefore our Saviour proves the Resurrection from the Covenant with Abraham Numb 18.19 Mat. 32.31 Isaac and Jacob because it is a perpetual Covenant a Covenant of Salt and thus runs the argument God is the God of the living and not of the dead therefore these Patriarchs are living and have an existence because he hath made a Covenant with them otherwise if these arise not then must the Covenant of necessity cease but the Covenant endures for ever therefore those with whom he makes the Covenant must live for ever since God calls himself their God Exod. 3.6 even after they are laid in their graves therefore let Christians rest in hope when they are laying down their heads in the grave for the Scripture saith the righteous have hope in their death the Covenant abides firm still the mercies thereof dye not when the body dyes the Heathens themselves saw this Socrates saith the Swan was Dedicated to Apollo because she sung sweetly before her death and the Romans when their great men dyed and when their bodies were burnt to ashes they caused an Eagle to fly and mount on high to signifie that the soul was immortal and shall not the Children of Promise sing chearfully when their souls are ready to mount up to eternal mansions I confess I am really ashamed when I read Cicero Cicero Tusc Quest lib. 1. De contemn●adâ morte Maximum argumentum est naturam ipfam de immo talite animorum tacitam judicare quod omnibus curae s●nt maxime quidem quae post mortem futura s●nt Serit arbores
God as a whole burnt-offering 't is but a reasonable service for he hath given you more than you can give back to him walk holily steadily cheerfully as becomes these mercies do much for God that hath done so much for you let nothing discourage or disquiet your spirits since yo● have mercies sure mercies to lodge in your bosomes why should that soul be sad that enjoyeth an interest in the father of consolations the purchaser of salvation and comforting spirit sure mercies with propriety beget solid comfort and assurance for ever Col. 1.10 Eph. 4.1.1 Thes 2.12 Oh Christians learn the lessons much inculcated to walk worthy of God of your vocation relation and this Kingdom 5. Be active and passive for these mercies they cost Christ dear to purchase them do not you think any thing too dear to do or endure for promoting or preserving of them kindness is very endearing to a grateful heart your pains cannot be spent to better purpose than in the cause of God we must always be paying our debt though we can never fully pay it we must be behind-hand with God but let a soul under the sense of mercies sweat blood for God if he call to it you sow not in a barren soul as showrs of mercy ingage you to fruitfulness so an abundant crop of mercy will be your sure reward and in your saddest Winter you shall have the sweetest harvest of mercy if Christians knew what grapes of Coelestial Canaan they should taste in their Wilderness-sufferings for Christ they would not be so afraid of them as they are these mercies run most freely and sweetly when other streams are stopt fear not sufferings mercies will meet and support you 6. Plead these mercies for your posterity though you should leave your Children thousands a year yet these Covenant-mercies will be the best portion you cannot assure your estates to your heirs but these are sure mercies so that if you take hold of Gods Covenant plead it live up to it you shall have the benefit of these your selves and some at least of your Children and Successours shall enjoy the same mercies for God will remember these unto a thousand generations though he be not bound to every individual soul of your natural off-spring however the Scripture fully shews that this is the surest way to obtain a portion for your Children tell God they are more his than yours you are but Nurses for his Children tell the Lord that thou must dye and leave them but he lives for ever intreat him to be their loving everlasting Father tell him that though thou leave them something in the world yet that is neither suitable nor durable but these sure mercies will not fail them and comfort your hearts for your house and family with the last words of dying David 2 Sam. 23.5 oh labour to transmit your title unto God to future generations as the two Tribes and an half did to future Ages by their Altar Ed. Joh. 24.24 28. see 1 Chron. 28.9 7. Breathe after a full possession of these sure mercies they are from everlasting to everlasting follow them to the spring in admiration and thankfulness and follow this stream of Covenant-mercies to the Ocean of Eternity indeed the streams are in time to the Sons and Daughters of men but the original is without a beginning in God eternal thoughts of love and the end is without end in those everlasting embraces in Heaven oh long to see the end if these mercies be so sweet here what will they be in Heaven in their proper Element as it were oh that blessed state that Paradice of pleasure that joy of our Lord Abraham's bosome an house not made with hands a City with foundations a Crown a Kingdom art thou the happy product of these sure mercies of David do these mercies bring forth such felicity oh happy day that my soul hath an interest in these sure mercies but how long shall my soul be kept from the full possession of these mercies when shall I come and appear before God how long shall I sojourn in Mesech and be detained from my Fathers plenteous Table above shall not a Captive long for his deliverance and a young heir for his full inheritance and shall not my soul long to be with Christ above shall my body be so weary and hath not my soul more cause to be weary of its burden and absence from home Rom. 8 19-23 shall creatures groan and shall not I much more to be delivered into the glorious liberty of the Sons of God shall the Spirit and the Bride say come and shall not my soul that hears these things eccho come shall he say himself Rev. 22.17 20. I come quickly and shall not I answer Amen even so come Lord Jesus Come Lord I long to see the and of these wonders of grace I much desire to enjoy those mercies which eye hath not seen ear heard or heart conceived after another manner than here I am capable come my God I beseech thee shew me thy face and because none can see thy face and live let me dye that I may see thy face and be swallowed up in the Ocean of mercy whence these Covenant-mercies flow Dear Lord either come down to me or take me up to thee Make haste my beloved Song 8.14 and be thou like a Roe or to a young Hart upon the Mountains of Spices Thus I have at last dispatcht this sixth Use of Instruction and Direction to sinners and Saints CHAP. XV. VII THE seventh Use of Encouragement Comfort and Refreshment and here 's an abundant spring opened to revive all the heirs of Promise But because I want room and because much of that which hath been already delivered tends this way I shall rather improve it to excite the people of God and heirs of Promise to the great and sweet duty of thankfulness And here I might elarge upon the Nature Use Comfort and acceptance of the duty of praise in the account of God and men but I must wave that and only insist on some few particulars that concern the nature of these mercies which may ingage us to be thankful which are these 1. They are free-mercies they may be had without money or price saith this Prophet here Quanti O bomines profiteremini vos esse empturos si salus aeterna venderetur ne si paeto tum quidem qui totus aureo ut est in favulis fluit fluento quis dedcrit pro salute justum pretium numeraverit Clem Alex. adm ad gentis free-grace was the Fountain Cause and Original of these he had mercy because he would have mercy nothing moved his bowels of mercy on our part free-grace had no impulsive cause but it self when you are to purchase these mercies the price it fallen to just nothing he gives liberally and upbraids not oh what cause of thankfulness and admiration 2. They are Dear mercies this doth not contradict the former