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A34689 A practicall commentary, or an exposition with observations, reasons, and vses upon the first Epistle generall of John by ... John Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652.; R. D. (Roger Drake), 1608-1669.; Scott, Chr. (Christopher), fl. 1655. 1658 (1658) Wing C6452; ESTC R5113 587,691 443

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restrained it from any fellowship with them 2 As Chirurgions apply Corrosives so Christians to mortifie their lusts apply such Corrosives may subdue their lusts Rom. 8.13 If ye walk after the flesh ye shall dye but if ye through the Spirit mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live either kill your lusts or else you will kill your souls therefore mortifie your lusts through the Spirit that you may live which is a notable Corrosive to mortifie them by the Spirit of God so another Corrosive is when a man applies the threatnings of God to his soul and against his Lusts if you shall lay to heart all the dangers of your lusts it will eat out the corruption of the flesh Another special Corrosive is the Death of Christ when we consider Christ dyed for us and we are dead in him how then should we live any longer to sin Rom. 6.1 to 6. 3 As Chirurgions cut off that Member that is thus mortified so Christians that they may not love their lusts must cut off those lusts and cast them away Matth. 18.8 9. were our lusts as near and precious to us as our right eye were they never so convenient or necessary even as our right hand though we should dis-inable our selves in our Callings yet cut them off it is better you should be lame in your businesse better you should goe with reproach and shame in the world than at length be cast body and soul into Hell fire cut off the members of sin which are as near and dear and necessary unto you as right eyes and hands in regard of your worldly employments yet away with them mortifie them Like to this phrase of Mortifying is the Crucifying of the flesh with the affections and lusts Gal. 5.24 they that are in Christ have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts they have crucified the whole body of sin partly in the affections which are not sinful in themselves but as they are inordinate but they keep in their affections and passions in such order that they sinne not in anger or joy or love c. and partly their lusts of the flesh also covetousnesse pride vanity wantonnesse they are crucified they look at all their lusts as Crucifying Christ and they look up to Christ for the pardon of sin and so also for the healing of sin for pardoning and healing goes together Hos 14.3 4. 1 Joh. 1.7 8. they that are Christs looking up to the vertue of Christs Death they find their lusts not only pardoned but healed crucifying of our lusts hath some resemblance with Christs Death as 1 They attach Christ seek him out and are content to give money rather than to find him so will a Christian doe in regard of his lusts 2 He layes them open as enemies to Caesar to the great God and desires vengeance on them 3 He considers that Christ is dead for him and he is crucified with Christ therefore what hath he to doe to live to the world or the lusts thereof Reas 1. Why all should be weaned from lusts from the enmity which these lusts have against God which is a sufficient motive to weane us from the world Gal. 5.17 if they be enemies to God then a Christian hath reason to hate them as enemies to his best friend and indeed he cannot love God and those lusts too He that loveth the world the love of the Father is not in him he is not fit for any duty he that loves the world cannot accomplish the will of the Father every lust hinders spiritual duties hearing of the Word Prayer receiving of the Sacrament any one lust tolerated or lived in hinders all Spirituall duties Reas 2. From the enmity they have against our souls 1 Pet. 2.11 Dearly beloved as strangers and pilgrimes abstain from fleshly lusts which fight against your souls they fight against your souls and so fight that either you must kill them or they will kill your souls either mortifie them or they will mortifie your souls either captivate them or they will captivate your souls Therefore seeing they are so contrary to God and any Spiritual life and our own souls as we would not have our lusts hinder our peace with God and eat out our grace as we would maintain our communion with God and the life of our souls Love not the world nor the lusts of the world Vse 1. To teach us it is not enough for us to abstaine from outward gross sins but love not your lusts thou mayest refrain from the outward acts of sin but yet thy heart may be strongly affected towards sin and thou mayest delight therein if thou dost thou lovest the world and the things of the world therefore labour to cleanse your selves from secret lusts Circumcision was the cutting off the fore-skin of a secret member and yet God would have another Circumcision more secret and that is of the heart we must not content our selves with outward reformation but circumcise our hearts Levit. 3.3 4. God took speciall care that he might have all the Kidnies and Fat the Kidnies and Fat are our strongest desires and lusts why when we come to offer Sacrifice we must bring them before the Lord and burn them there is no savour so sweet in Gods nostrils as the burning of our strongest lusts the more our lusts stink in our nostrils the more sweet smelling savour it is to God so long as our lusts smel sweet in our nostrils so long we are loathsome to God Vse 2. It must teach us it is not enough to cut off some lusts but those that we love most a good husband that hates prodigality you shall not need to exhort him to frugality so prodigality cannot endure covetousnesse it hates basenesse and pinching he cannot abide it it is not his own lust so another he cares not for this pride and bravery so he may ly close at the pot or an Harlot why this is no great matter to cry out against those lusts that are not ours but it is a Christian duty not to love our own lusts covetousnesse is not thy lust but if prodigality be thy lust doe not thou cry out against covetousnesse and thou which art covetous doe not thou stand out against another mans prodigality but strive against thy own covetousnesse there are lusts which are to us as Eves apple fair to the eye such lusts as our souls lust after Rev. 18.14 look thou to these lusts which thy soul lusts after let them depart from thee Vse 3. This reproves our aptnesse to cherish and nourish our own lusts when we are commanded not to love them to mortifie them not to make provision for them if we then provide for them we are justly to be reproved Job 24.15 Prov. 7. Woe be to them that draw iniquity with the cords of vanity and sin as it were with Cart-roaps Isa 15.18 that take occasion to fulfill their sins that draw them on with Cart-roaps that give way to such
us so we should cleanse our selves from all sin because it is a remnant of filthinesse Vse 6. It may shew us the wonderfull preciousnesse of the bloud of Christ and the no lesse wonderfull favour and love of God towards us were not Christs bloud of wonderfull efficacy it could not cleanse such base filthy sinfull lusts so Gods favour were it not wonderfull he would not take upon him such an homely office Women if they were not Mothers would not take such homely offices up as to cleanse their Children from their filth why if God were not of the like affection to us he would not cleanse us from our filthinesse we count it an homely office to sweep sincks and scum pots c this is Gods office if he did not sweep the Sinck and scum off the scum of our hearts it would never be done and therefore it shews the tender affection of God towards us in that he is willing to take such an office upon him to cleanse us from our filthinesse he poures clean water upon us all other means will doe no good without him it is with us as it is with young Infants that would lie in their defilements if their Mothers did not make them clean and so would we even wallow in the defilements of sin if God did not cleanse us therefore admire Gods love and mercy towards us Vse 7. It is a good help to mortification if we consider what a loathsome thing sin is and what pure eyes God is of it would be an antidote against sin shall we commit such filthinesse in Gods sight to make our selves so base and loathsome before him Doct. All sin is unrighteousnesse and cleanse us from all unrighteousnesse that is from all sin Sin and unrighteousnesse the one explains the other Rom. 6.13 yeild not your Members weapons of Unrighteousnesse that is weapons of sin sometimes Unrightnesse is properly confined to the sins of the second Table as unholinesse to the first but sometimes righteousnesse comprehends the whole course of a Christian and Unrighteousness comprehends all sins 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reas Because every sin doth either God wrong or others or our selves Righteousnesse gives every one his due if we sin in temperance we debase and defile our selves if we sin in theft or slander we wrong others in their goods or good names if we worship not God as God if we keep not his Sabbaths or prophane his name we wrong God Vse 1. Shews the Error of those who think if they pay every man his own they are righteous men why doe you no wrong are you not sinners yes they will say why then you are not righteous for every sin doth wrong to God our selves or others Others say if they wrong any it is themselves why it is unrighteousnesse to wrong your selves 2. As you love innocency live righteously doe God no wrong others no wrong your selves no wrong otherwise you are unrighteous 3. For Comfort to any that have their souls cleansed by the bloud of Christ from all filthinesse we are holy set at liberty from all filthinesse and all unrighteousnesse Doct. Sin pardoned is ever cleansed sin pardoned is sin cleansed what sin God pardons the same sin he cleanseth Heb. 9.14 The same bloud that pardons cleanseth us from sin Reas From the power of the death of Christ which serves not onely to procure pardon of sin but likewise healing of sin for his bloud is offered up as a ransome for sin well then it is pardoned but it is not onely so but it is a means to kill and mortifie sin Rom. 6.6 there is a destructive power to kill sin as well as meritorious power to pardon sin now his death is said to mortifie sin in us 1. Exemplariter For if Christ be dead we also shall die with him to sin Rom. 6.9 11. 2. It hath a natural Efficacy as it is an object for us to look at as fearful and formidable when sin presents it selfe we look at it as crucifying Christ and shall we look on it without mourning Zech. 12.10 shall we wrong him so much as to crucifie him again 3. His bloud cleanseth sin in obtaining at Gods hand a Spirit of Sanctification which makes the death of the Head reach to the lowest Members of the body as when the head dies all the Members die so the death of Christ having obtained the Spirit of God from him if he our head die then we shall die to sin as the resurrection of Christ procures vivification so the death of Christ mortification Gal. 4.4 5. Obj If sin be always mortified where it is pardoned how comes it to passe that godly men fall so often into the same sin Doth not David confesse that there was a way of lying in him Psal 119.29 Remove from me the way of lying which implies it was not one act but a way a course that he walked in sometimes so Isaac Gen. 26. told the same Lye both to the Philistims and Abimelech so it was with Jonah he was froward before he went to Niniveh and froward afterward how is it then that sin may be cleansed and yet renewed and if renewed how cleansed Ans It is with Sin in this respect as with Sampsons Hair it may be cut but it will grow again Sin may be mortified in some kinde and yet renewed again because Sin in this Life is mortified but in part Pride Wantonnesse Coveteousnesse in part are mortified but in part alive and if we neglect the practise of mortification that sin we had got some mastery of we shall fall into again if Sin break out again it is because we neglect those means we should mortifie Sin by he doth not say the bloud of Christ hath cleansed us but cleanseth Doth cleanse implying that cleansing is a continued Act the bloud of Christ is a notable Medicine to heal Sin and purge from filthinesse but if a man neglect to apply this Plaister to his Soul it may not be so effectuall as it would Vse 1. For tryall whether our Sins be pardoned or no would you know whether your Sin be pardoned why then it is also cleansed if your Sin be not cleansed in some measure it is not pardoned at all therefore look at your Sins if they be healed then they are certainly pardoned for it is the same bloud of Christ that both heals and pardons Sin Hos 14.4 God doth not onely love freely and pardon graciously but he heals them also therefore consider doe you finde your Sins healed that is that they have not that power they had before doe they seem loathsome to you whereas before you delighted in them now in heart you hate them and in practise avoyd them then those Sins are pardoned and if he pardons one Sin he pardons all his pardons are universall but if a man live in Sin still and love it as well and is no more ashamed than formerly he had been but goes on in the same
Sin truly it is not healed and then not pardoned Obj. I feel my sin so far from being mortified that it grows more strong and vigorous therefore what shall I think of my selfe Ans It may grow stronger in our feeling when it is not so in it self it is not because Sin is stronger but our sense is more quick a man that is in extemity of Sicknesse he feels no pain but when be begins to recover he feels more pain why then the Disease is not stronger but he is more sensible 2. Doe you not find that Sin is more loathsome and bitter to you then it is in some measure mortified for mortifying is a borrowed specch from a Surgions mortifying a Wound they use to binde the joynt and stop all spirit and bloud so that it is made insensible of pain so if we have stopt the freenesse of our spirits to Sin we are not so lively and frolick to Sin it is a signe corruption is mortified but if you see you are as lively and ready and delight as much in Sin as before Sin is not mortified but if it grow loathsome and bitter to us it is a signe of mortification Vse 2. Directs us how to make good use of the bloud of Christ not onely to pardon our Sins but to heal them we are not wont to make use of it for pardon but we must make use of it as well for healing for else we take the bloud of Christ in vain if we make use of it to pardon and not to cleanse for his bloud was sent as well to pardon as to heal therefore pray not to God to pardon your sins through Christs bloud onely but lay his bloud warm to your hearts every day that so you may have your hearts and ways cleansed it is a continued act not of one day or two but throughout our whole life we should make use of Christs bloud to cleanse us 1. Consider what great things he did for us the just for the unjust and the meditation thereof will make us ashamed of sin 2. Pray to God for the quickning work of his Spirit that the same bloud of Christ that hath procured pardon may also procure healing for us Vse 3. It may teach us all to labour to grow in cleannesse of heart and life for the bloud of Christ cleanseth us Zech. 13.1 a Fountain that runs into a Channel that is muddy it will by continuall running cleanse it so though Christ finde our spirits muddy and defiled yet we should let it run daily on us and be ever rincing of our hearts at the fountain Vse 4. Comfort to all Gods Servants that have had any experience of the pardon of their sins you shall certainly in time feel and finde healing and cleansing from your sins if you see a clear Fountain running into a filthy Channel it is very muddy and the worse for the present the mud being stirred but afterwards it is cleansed and made pure and clean so Christs bloud may run into muddy spirits and that bloud at first may make corruption more stirring you finde more pride and vanity and uncleannesse but will it hold so no truely in cleansing it will cleanse and go on till it hath purged all corruption 1 JOHN 1.10 If we say that we have not sinned we make him a lyar and his Word is not in us THese words are a repetition of the former v. 8. but with some addition he aggravates this sin they doe not onely make themselves lyars but they make God a Lyar which is not onely Blasphemous but Heretical it extirpates all the truth of the Word Doct. Opinion and Profession of perfect righteousnesse even in those that are cleansed by the bloud of Christ is not onely an Errour but a blasphemous and heretical Errour it is Sacrilegious and Heretical For having told us before that if we confess our sins God is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and that the bloud of Christ cleanseth us from all unrighteousnesse yet if after this we say we have no sin we doe not onely make our selves lyars but God a lyar for if he be not a true God he is no God and his word is not in us that is no part of the Word is in such a man Q. But why doth St. John repeat this thing had he not said enough before that he repeats it Ans 1. Before it might be thought that he spake of Carnal men therefore to make it manifest that even those that had confessed their sins and were cleansed from unrighteousnesse yet even those if they should say they had no sin should make not onely themselves lyars but God a Lyar therefore he repeats it 2. He saw that men were ready to cleanse themselves from sin sinfully if we can by any pretence we will be ready to free our selves from such opinion of sinfulnesse therefore he presses it that indeed we are so foul that if we say the contrary we have no spark of Religion in us not one spark of the Word dwells in us 3. Because it is a point of great necessity to believe the contrary truth therefore he takes up this conclusion again To say is either In Heart In Word In Carriage Well to say thus is to make God a Lyar and so no God for if he be not a God of Truth he is no God for Verum bonum convertuntur Q. Why doth he make God a Lyar A. 1. Because God hath given his Son Christ to cleanse us from all sin and to what end should he send Christ to cleanse sin if we had no sin he that saith he hath no sin overthrows the coming of Christ and the cleansing virtue his bloud 2. God hath often said all men are Sinners in his Word Rom. 3.23 Gal. 3 22. Job 15.14 What is man that he should be clean Job 7.20 David an holy man yet professeth Psal 130.3 Psal 143.2 the perfectest of Gods Servants have testified of themselves that they are Sinners therefore if we say we have not sinned we make God a Lyar. Q. What is meant when he saith the Word is not in him A. 1. It is not in his judgement when he is not perswaded of it 2. It is not in his heart when he trusts not in it and receives it not in love and the saving efficacy of it he that saith he hath no sin receives not the word he speaks of the Word here as Verbum salutiferum Acts 20.32 1 Thes 2.13 2 Tim. 3.15 Now the Word is said not to be in a man when there is not so much Word as will save a man may be ignorant of some Divine truths and yet the Word of God may be in him but if he want the Knowledge and Faith of such Points without which he cannot be saved the Word dwells not in him now he that denies sin to be in him there is not onely a denial of that truth but he is empty of all other saving truths All
on in a Christian course then it will never hinder thee in the ways of God and thou lovest not the world but the love of God is in thee Doct. There is in our corrupt nature not only a love to the world but also a love to our own lusts Love not the world nor the things of the world that is our own Lusts implying there is in us by nature a love to the world and the things of the world the lusts of the flesh the lusts of the eye and the pride of life The lust of the flesh is such a corrupt inclination whereby our bodies do affect sensual lusts and sensual objects as meat and drink that is intemperancy or women that is Incontinencie or Pastimes and Pleasures and that is Voluptuousnesse and they are called the Lusts of the flesh because our flesh sets us a work to them what are the lusts of the eye there is a good eye a bountiful eye but an evil eye is called a covetous eye Pro. 23.6 Deu. 15.7 so then the lusts of the eye is Covetousnesse and it is called the lust of the eye because the eye stirs us up to it and that is all he hath to behold them Eccles 5.10 11. the very beholding satisfies The pride of Life is the affecting of a mans own carnal excellency when as he doth look at himself only whether he doth it in heart by high conceit or worldly boastings or in outward carriage now all these we are ready to love we are ready to love our own wantonnesse our intemperancy or to be carried away with the lust of the Eye the profits of the World or else to be puft up with our own excellency whatsoever the heart lusts after it is either honour or profit or pleasure now love not the World nor the lusts of it why would you think a man should be so wicked as to love Voluptuousnesse or Profit or Honour Yes St. John else would not so carefully have forbidden it Reas 1 Now that this is so appears 1. From our aptnesse to take part with our own lusts when they are either discovered or reproved thus Herod loved his lust his Herodias which appears in that he took part with his lust against John Baptist and took it hainously that he should reprove him for it Matth. 14.3 he will rather restrain John than restrain his lust when a man would rather restrain the Ministers than his lust that is a sign of his love to his lust So Asa 2 Chron. 16.10 he not only affected his security but he loved his lust which is manifest in that he took it so hainously when the Prophet reproved him for it so for pride of life it was Jonahs greatest lust love of his own credit which appears in that hee was displeased exceedingly because he was crost in it that the City was not destroyed hee had Prophecied destruction to Niniveh and God upon their repentance spared them and he thought he should be counted a false Prophet and lose his credit and therefore he was much displeased yea he was displeased that God should reprove him for his frowardnesse Jon. 4. so that he loved this pride and anger in himself because he pleaded for it when God askt him Dost thou well to be angry Yea saith he I do well to be angry even to the death If a man plead for his Lust and stand out against reproof that is a sign he loves that lust Reas 2 From the slight regard we give to exhortations against our Lusts if Ministers exhort Love not the world nor the things of the world if we slight them and search not out our lusts and put them away and mortifie them if we favour our selves therein it plainly appears wee love them If a Prince should send to a City not to harbour such and such Traitors but to seeke them out and punish them if they never look after them never seek them out is it not a sign of their love to those Traitors so if we hear of sinfull lusts that we should not love them if yet notwithstanding we go home and never regard them it is a manifest sign that we love these lusts Vse 1 May shew us the wonderfull depth of the wickednesse that is in our hearts one would think it were wickednesse enough to have Voluptuousnesse and Covetousnesse and Pride and vanity in our hearts but this is nothing in respect of our love to them we not only have these lusts but wee love them therefore this should learn us to abhor our own carnal estate that we are not only full of pride and covetousnesse and intemperancie but that we should love these lusts that is a depth of wickednesse that a man should stand out against any friend or counsel or reproof or exhortation and take part with his lusts this is a sign that the heart is desperately wicked Jer. 17.9 therefore let no man have an high conceit of himself but labour to see the depth of the wickednesse of his heart by Nature in that he not only is filled with these lusts but loves them Vse 2 May serve to teach us whensoever we renew our repentance and finde out any covetousnesse or pride or intemperance go but a little lower and you shall finde a love of those lusts in your hearts and as God said to Ezekiel Ezek. 8.6 Turn thee and thou shalt see greater abominations than these so shall we finde in our own hearts whence else comes all extenuating and mincing and hiding of sin whence else comes disputing and pleading for our lusts it is made manifest that rather than we will be acccounted proud or wanton or covetous we will bid defiance to all alas what is this but to love the world and the the things of the world Doct. The Lusts of the world young and old are to be weaned from The love of Christians is not to be set on the lusts of the world The Holy Ghost dehorts from this by Scriptures that enforce restraint from these lusts 1 Pet. 2.11 2 Tim. 2.22 Fly youthful lusts and St. Peter wishes them to abstain from them as if they were some deadly poyson that would stain and infect our souls it implies some great danger Rom. 13.14 fly from them make no means to accomplish them 2 There are other words which shew more enmity as mortifying Col. 3.5 there he calls Lusts the members of the body implying there is a body of sin now this mortifying is a metaphor taken from Chirurgions who when they would cut off a Member they mortifie it by binding it and hindering the recourse of the bloud and and spirits and so benumb it Secondly They apply Corrosives to stupifie it and then cut it off lest it fret and kill the whole body so we ought to mortifie our lusts by restraining and binding our hearts from delight in any pleasure Psal 119.101 my feet that is the inclination of my heart he had bound up his spirit from them and
to look upon a Maid Job 31.1 so for drink Prov. 23.31 Prov. 4.15 it is a notable means of mortification to withhold the blood and spirits from flowing into that member thereby in a good measure they stupifie it Secondly Use some course to stupifie that part Thirdly Cut it off would you mortifie lust Beware of all occasions if such meats or drinks wilt make you Gluttons or Drunkards meddle not with them and so you shall hinder influence to these lusts apply the death of Christ the threatnings of God and so when it begins to stupifie cut it off better it is to want all the sinful pleasures of this life than having of them to be cast into Hell 2 Refrain from bringing forth fruit of these lusts the more fruitful a Tree grows the more sap and strength it draws and strikes deeper into thee earth so let sin once grow fruitful bring forth acts it will get deeper hold and grow so rooted that it will reign in you if you avoyd all occasions and yeeld not to satisfie the least of them it will soon be gone if a strange Dogg comes in if you feed him he stands waiting for one piece after another but if you beat him he is gone where he may finde better entertainment so if lusts find that they can have no entertainment they cannot get one morsell no yeilding to them but repulsing they will be gone from you where they may finde better welcome 3 When thou findest any lust of the flesh arising in thee turn the strength of it to a Spiritual end A man hath an affection to meat or drink what saith Christ I have meat and drink that ye know not of though he were very faint and hungry yet when he saw a company come he attended not to his meat and drink but there was Spiritual food and that comforted and refreshed him so art thou troubled with lust after Women and God calls thee not to Marriage why turn the strength of thy affection to another that is white and ruddy the fairest of ten thousand The more you set your heart to consider how amiable and beautiful and excellent he is you shall finde he will so satisfie your heart that you will finde little content in any other thing besides As the Sun if it shine hot on a fire it puts it out so the love of Christ if it once shine in your hearts and fill your souls with light and joy unspeakable and glorious you shall finde all base Kitching lusts were they never so vehement the Sun of Righteousnesse will soon eat them out so for love of idlenesse and rest let but a Soul consider what comforts he ever found in the favour of God when his left hand was under him and when God held him up in his everlasting Arms do but consider how sweet was one hour of that inward peace you found then above all outward comforts you shall easily see that though your body should never finde rest more yet this inward peace will so satisfie you that you will be ready to say with Paul I have enough I have learned in all these to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 self-sufficient that I need not more Phil. 4.11 12. 4 Walk faithfully and constantly in your general and particular Callings the reason why a Christian grows carnal and sensual is because either in Gods Ordinances or his particular Calling hee was not spiritually minded walk in the Spirit and you shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh Gal. 5.16 be spiritual and heavenly in Prayer in hearing the Word in your Calling and you shall finde your lusts decay otherwise he that rusheth into occasions of sin needlesly he tempts the Devil to tempt him so that whereas the Devil might otherwise be much weakened and not so able to overcome if we invite occasions and rush into such places where Satan reigns we thrust Weapons into Satans hand and a man never ordinarily leads himself into temptation but he falls let Peter go into the High Priests Hall he shamefully denies his Master before he come out therefore take heed of running into occasions of sin 2 Refrain from the fruits of sin and grow Spiritually minded look after Spiritual objects when we are carried to Sensual objects when we are carried to delight in pleasures and pastimes why let us remember Blessed is the man that hath not walked c. Psal 1.1 2 3. but his delight is in the Law of the Lord he recreates himself his Soul in that such a man shall be as a tree planted by the rivers of water ever sucking sap and grace from the Ordinances that so he grows up but contrary such a one as runs into occasions and fullfills his ●●sts he shall be as a barren Heath and parched Wildernesse his leaf and fruit blasted We come now to the second sort of lusts Doct. Young and old are to be weaned from any lusts of the eye By the lust of the Eye is meant Covetousnesse or inordinate desire of profit 1 Because the Eye makes us covet it as Achan Josh 7.21 2 Because the eye in some measure is glutted with the sight of it Obj. Why doth he not speak of lusts of the Ear for 2 Tim. 2.4 there is an itching Ear thus the Athenians Acts 17 21 and so some have a strong affection to Musick and never well without it this is a lust of the Ear and why is not this reckoned as well as the lust of the eye Aquinas makes this Objection and answers it thus That these lusts stand not so much on the bodily eye as the imagination but the man may as well desire curiosities by the Ear as the Eye make us covet what it sees Answ The answer therefore is the Eye is the seat of sundry Faculties 1 It may be referred to the Understanding and Imagination for that is in the Soul Psal 33.18 2 The hope of a man is translated to his Eye 2 Chron. 20.12 sometimes pity Thine eye shall not spare Deut. 13. sometimes disdain expresseth it self in the eye sometimes pride Prov. 30. in a lofty look and the eye is put oft for the desire of the heart when the eye looks long after it Matth. 5.28 there is a desire that reacheth to something Psal 54. Psal 92.1 Mine eye also shall see my desire upon mine enemies not onely hopes but desires are ever in the eye It is true therefore that the desire of Melody is a lust of the flesh desire of news to satisfie curiosity affection of vain preaching tends to satisfie the pride of life for the lust of all outward senses as far as they satisfie the Senses and Body they belong to the lusts of the flesh but a longing earnest desire after profit is Covetousnesse which is a lust of the eye Q. 1. Wherein stands the lust of the eye A. Either when it is set on wrong objects or in excessive measure or to a wrong end and these the Scripture aims at if the
Word of God Zech. 7.13 Prov. 28.9 Reas 1. From a rule of equity which God useth in dispensing himselfe Mat. 7.2 As we dispense our selves to him so doth God himselfe to us This it a generall rule of Gods walking towards men With what measure we mete God will measure to us again If we let no Word of God fall to the ground but our conscience stand in awe of it and our hearts cleave to it God will let none of our prayers fall to the ground 2. From the unity of the Spirit that doth help us to keep the commandements God makes account we keep the commandements when there is none but our judgements approve Ezek. 36.26 27. Rom. 8.15 The Spirit helps us to pray and it asks things according to the will of God and he knows the meaning of the Spirit As who should say He that prayes not in the Spirit is a Barbarian unto God 3. From the love and respect God bears to them that keep his commandements It is the way to become Gods Favourite John 14.21 23. Vse 1. It shews us the cause of the fruitlesnesse of our prayers at any time God hears not us because we hear not him If our prayer fall to the ground then surely Gods Word hath faln to the ground A good prayer and a bad life can never meet James 2.20 If we live in awlesse respect to Gods commandements he hears not our prayers 2. Encouragement to the obedience of Gods commandements What comfort would a man have more then to have his wish If God give thee an heart to keep all his commandements thou mayst assure thy heart that all thy petitions are granted 3. A ground of comfort to every such soule as makes conscience of his wayes If thou walkest with a care to fulfill Gods will he will fulfill thine Such as give themselves to walk as Christ hath walked may have this comfort John 11.32 Psal 119.5 6. Such petitions as are long delayed and seem to be most strongly denyed are fulfilled Dan. 10.3 10 11 12. Daniels prayers were heard the first day but not then answered A petition is granted in Heaven and a course taken for the accomplishment of it but yet there must be a time to bring it about Deut. 5.25 26. Though God delay our prayers yet even then he grants them Prov. 21.10 Jer. 17.10 God regards the hearts of his people and their movings Moses desired onely to see the good Land God bid him go up to the hill and so strengthened his sight to see it he should not go over because the people should see Gods displeasure against him We have an end alwayes in our prayers and we prescribe means to God he many times denies the means in displeasure but gives the end 2 Cor. 12.7 8. So it was in Paul God would not remove the messenger of Satan but he did that by it which he would have done the free passage of the spirit in his heart Heb. 5.7 A Christian prays for the light of his countenance God hears not Why dost thou desire it to strengthen thy faith He will doe it by the word of promise We pray that God would mortifie some corruption Why doe we desire it that grace may have free passage in our hearts God will by such lusts mortifie a greater that is pride of heart and God works such a loathing in thy heart and bitternesse in regard of sin that we might mortifie them The second benefit is the acceptance of all our prayers in the presence of God amplified by an argument taken from the practice of such men whose hearts doe not condemn them before God they keep his commandements and doe that which is pleasing in his sight set forth in a Syllogisme Whoso keeps Gods commandements those whatsoever they ask they receive of God But those whose hearts condemn them not keep Gods commandements Doct. That such as keep Gods commandements they keep a good conscience and Gods favour together They have peace at home and in heaven First They have peace at home in their own conscience Heb. 13.18 We have a good conscience in all things desiring to live honestly that is to keep Gods commandements Secondly As they keep a good conscience on earth so they keep favour in heaven 1 Kings 15.5 Thus it s said of David that he did that which was good in the sight of the Lord he had a care to keep Gods commandements Thus did Asa 2 Chron. 14.2 Hezekiah Ib. 29.2 So did Josiah 2 Kings 23.25 and 2 Chron. 34.2 What is it to keep Gods commandements Ans It is not barely to keep them in our minds and memory but First to keep them as one would keep his high-way A traveller so soon as he is out of his way and sees it he blames himselfe for it and hastens to get into it again Secondly as a man would keep his jewells Prov. 6.20 21. Thirdly to keep it as the apple of our eye Prov. 7.1 2 3. If the least more fall into our eye we never leave till we get it out so we must make scruple of the least sins Fourthly we must keep the commandements as we would keep our life Now Skin for skin and all that a man hath will he give for his life So we should lose our lives and all we have for Gods commandements Reas From the suitablenesse of the will or commandements of God and the conscience of a Christian You please a man when you doe that which is according to his will and so look what is good in Gods sight that is according to Gods commandements The commandements of God are a lively image of his will God is a God of pure eyes Hab. 1.13 he hateth wickednesse Psal 5.4 Any thing that is evill is displeasing in Gods sight When Vriah was slain and David took his Wife into his house it is said that thing displeased the Lord 2 Sam. 12.27 But the will of God is our sanctification 1 Thes 4.3 A man is said to be made after Gods own Image when he is righteous and holy The Apostle exhorts us to put on the next man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse Eph. 4.24 Holinesse is the sum of the commandements of the first Table Righteousnesse of the second Vse 1. Hence we may have a tryall of our conscience whether it be good or no for upon the goodnesse of our conscience depends the peace of this world and another Heb. 13.18 Examine your selves Doe you keep Gods commandements as a man would keep his way the apple of his eye his life and soul or his Jewells Else you doe not keep a good conscience There are four sorts of consciences First A conscience that is quiet yet not good As when the strong man keeps the house all that he p●ssesseth is in peace Luke 11.21 Secondly There is a conscience which is good but yet not quiet Such was Davids Psal 31.22 when he said in his hast he was utterly cast
promises and rewards Vse 4. For them that would have Gods commandements seem easie to them and not burthensome why grow up in the love of God meditate on his goodnesse and promises and mercies and so thou shalt grow up to love him and the more love the more willing and obedient A man never loseth his first works but he loseth his first love Let him renew his first love and he shall renew his first works Rev. 2.4 5. 1 JOHN 5.4 5. For whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world and this is the victory that overcometh the world even our faith Who is he that overcometh the world but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God VEers 1. the Apostle had made an evidence of the love of God to keep his commandements and to do them with ease This he proves vers 4. by an argument taken from the removall of the impediments of Gods love in such an heart and that is the overcoming of the world And the argument stands thus To them that overcome thy world Gods commandement● an easie yoke But they that are born of God have overcome the world Ergo It s the love of the world that hinders our obedience to Gods commandements This kept off the young man so every one that is kept off it 's for the love of some pleasure or profit which they wil not deny so Gods commandements seem burdensome Doct. 1. Every regenerate Christian is a victorious Christian a conquerour of the world Every Christian be he never so poor that hath but the least pittance or shred of true grace hath a mighty power in him to overcome the world It was a famous thing of old to be but conquerors of the world as the Babilonian and Romane Monarchies were But St. John testifies here that every Christian is Lord of the whole world 1 Cor. 3.22 23. He hath it there by gifts but here by conquest he overcomes the world viz. so far as it is an enemy to grace Indeed in themselves the comforts of the world are good and usefull but as far as they have a snare in them he overcomes them 1 John 4.4 The honours of the world have a snare in them to puffe up our hearts 2 Chron. 26.16 Profit of the world choak the good seed of the Word Mat. 13.22 23. So the pleasures of the world they make the Word unfruitfull Luk. 8.19 Now how doth a regenerate Christian overcome this 1 He abideth constant in his Christian course notwithstanding the flattering or threatning of the world so that he will not be seduced by any of these snares Eph. 6.11 13. Paul would not give place to such seducements no not for an hour Now that is a part of a mans victory to hold his owne and to keep his standing and not to flit such a man is never said to be overcome that keeps his standing 2 He not onely holds his own but he resists his enemies he musters up all the forces he hath to resist the temptations of the world Jam. 4.7 Resist the devill and he will fly from you Stand out against a temptation and you overcome it Joseph being tempted by his Mistris he takes into his hands for his weapons Gods commandements and his Masters kindnesse Gen. 39.7 8 9. That that would be a dishonour to God and an injury to his Master and so he overcame the temptation 3. To overcome a temptation is to make a good use of every temptation and to get ground by it that the more he is invited by a temptation the more earnest he is against it and the more forward in his Christian course When Michael reproved David for his unseemly dancing as she thought Why saith he I will be yet more vile Whereas her temptation was fetcht from his disgrace why he would bear more such disgrace So when Johns Disciples stirred him up to emulation against Christ that he carryed away all the applause of the people after him What saith John He must increase and I must decrease He is the Bridegroome and I but his friend And it is my joy and glory to see him glorious so that he made an advantage by that temptation and drew them on the more to honour Christ by how much the more they sought to debase him the more we are tempted to covetousnesse wantonnesse or emulation the more liberall chaste and ●umble let us grow This is to overcome a temptation to take a spoyl to enrich our selves by the spoyl of our enemies that is such a conquest as the Apostle calls more then a conquest Rom. 8.37 In all this we do more then conquer For a conqueror gets a victory sometimes but with much wounds and losse we sometimes with no losse 2 After victories they grow Inxurious As it was said of the Romans after their great conquests Luxuria incubuit victumque ulciscitur urbem But a godly man so overcomes and divides the spoyl that he spoyls not himself Worldly conquerors fall to ryot and excesse after their victories but a Christian conqueror grows more wary and humble and sober then before As it was said of John Baptist by Christ A Prophet yea more then a Prophet So a regenerate man is a conqueror yea more then a conqueror Reas From Christs victory over the world Rom. 8.37 It is through him that loved us Christ hath overcome the world John 16. ult Therefore I am to wrestle but with a wounded pimoned enemy Christ having led captivity captive I come but to contend with a captive world and so I overcome through Christ that hath loved me It 's the death of Christ that hath crucified the world to me Gal. 6.14 And therefore I am to fight but with a crucified enemy 2 From the mighty power of Gods Word abiding in a Christians heart 1 John 2.14 The commandements of God and his promises do so rule in his heart that no flatterings of the world no commandements of men can oversway him 3 From the Spirit of God dwelling in them which is greater then the spirit of the world 1 John 4.4 This Spirit doth so mortifie him to the world and so quicken him to grace that he overcomes the world Obj. Did not Demas a great professor forsake Paul and embrace this present world 2 Tim. 4.10 Have not many for the live of the world erred from the faith 1 Tim. 6.9 10. Was it not so with Ananias and Saphira and Judas The love of this world overcame them Hath not the love of the world overcome many of the Germane Christians to apostatize to Idolatry and yeeld themselves to the temptations thereof How is it true then that every poor Christian overcomes the world Answ 'T is true the world prevails with many professors but many of them were never truly born of God as Demas and Judas Ananias and Saphira Obj. Do you think that every one that is led away with the world hath no shred of true grace in him Answ No for