Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n deed_n flesh_n mortify_v 5,880 5 10.8136 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A44677 A funeral sermon for that very reverend, and most laborious servant of Christ, in the work of the ministry, Mr. Matthew Mead who deceased Oct. 16, 1699 / by John Howe ... Howe, John, 1630-1705. 1699 (1699) Wing H3025; ESTC R3677 24,534 76

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

concern'd at the diseasedness that appears in our flocks but overlook the diseases and distempers of our own Souls That was meant for a bitter reproach to our Lord dying upon the Cross He saved others himself he cannot save To us if it might be truly said it must be a just reproach as well as bitter our saving our selves being our duty enjoyn'd us and tending to the saving of others whereas our Lords saving himself in the sense intended by those Scoffers was against the Law he was then under and against his own design tending to overthrow it and leave them to perish whom he was dying to save 4. The observable neglect of the design to save our own Souls would defeat and destroy the other design of saving theirs that hear us For who can think us serious in our preaching or that we believe our selves in what we say if we manifestly decline our selves that way of salvation which we propose to others we tempt men to Infidelity if we live like Infidels It was a cutting Repartee made by an Atheistical person to one that leading an ill life yet profest to wonder that the other the Arguments for a Deity being so plain and cogent did not own there was a God The other reply'd he much more wonder'd that he who did own him should yet live as he did This tends to overthrow all our preaching Tho' our Saviour directs to do as they said who sate in Moses ' s chair not as they did because they said and did not Yet he did not thereby justify those self-repugnant Teachers for his reflection upon them is sufficiently severe And we are to consider in the case not meerly what man's duty is but what their dispositions are Not what they ought but what they are apt to do If they think we do but act a part when we speak never so movingly to them they will be little mov'd by all that we can say They will be more apt to conclude that we who have studied and searched into the matters of Religion more than they have done have found some flaw at the bottom and perceive the very Foundations of it to be infirm and therefore practice not according to the Doctrines and Rules of it But that for our gain because it was the Calling we were bred to and we know not how else to live we are content and some way constrain'd to keep up the forms we found in use and maintain them that they may maintain us 5. Yet when it shall be found as upon strict enquiry it cannot but be that the Foundations of Religion are more firm than those of Heaven and Earth how dismal will it be to have preach't to others and our selves to be cast-aways 1 Cor. 9. 27. For as by loose licentious walking we hazard other mens Souls which we should endeavour to save so we more certainly lose our own God may save them some other way and by other more apt Instruments but we have little reason to expect that we shall save our own either while we design it not as if we were to be saved by chance or much less if we counteract any such design Which we may most destructively by that single Instance which the Apostle in that last mentioned place refers to an indulg'd intemperance or not keeping our bodies in subjection in servitude or in a serviceable temper as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imports to subdue them into the state of Servants wherein rather than fail one would use the severity which this other word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there signifies It is plain that if we live after the flesh we must die Rom. 8. 13. There is one Law for Ministers and People And it is only by the spirit we are so to mortify the deeds of the flesh that we may live How dismal when a Minister's own breath poisons him When the very Gospel which he preaches is a deadly odour to himself how horrid when a Shepherd is the Leader of the Epicurean Herd 6. But if by neglecting visibly the Gospel-way of saving himself he not only hazard but actually destroy other mens Souls together with his own he then perishes under a much heavier load of guilt than another man can that was not under his obligations As his obligation was double so is his guilt When sinfull vicious inclination hath depraved his mind put out the eye of his practical understanding so that the blind leads the blind both fall into the ditch but he falls much the deeper having the others destruction charg'd upon him together with his own Such Teachers as bind heavy burdens for others which they will not touch fall under an aggravated woe And the case is the same with them that prepare and set before their Hearers the most nutritive and delectable fare which they will not tast And for that Reason perhaps the People will not feed on them because the Preachers themselves too evidently appear to have no tast or relish of them 2. The Ministers of Christ ought to conjoyn the serious design and earnest endeavour of saving them that hear them with the design and endeavour of saving themselves They are not to be so bound up within themselves as only to mind their own things tho' of this most noble kind 1. The Law of Nature obliges them to it Which extends its obligation as far as humane nature extends And must therefore include them with the rest of Mankind under the same common notion viz. them who are Ministers not as they are such for nature hath not made them Ministers but as they are Men. Whom the Royal Law mention'd before requires to love their neighbour as themselves and therefore to seek anothers felicity not before but as their own We are taught to count it an unnatural barbarity when we see any prest and pincht by bodily wants and miseries to hide our selves from our own flesh Isa. 58. 7. How much more if we see immortal Souls in danger to be lost and perish that are of the same make and capacity with our own 2. The Law of Christ as such obliges Christians to the same thing Which is not in this instance therefore a divers Law but hath a different stamp and impress as being the Law of the Kingdom of God in Christ. We are to bear one anothers burdens so fulfilling the Law of Christ Gal. 6. 2. What so weighty a burden can there be upon any man as this the importance of his eternal salvation And which is plainly here referr'd to when we are required to endeavour the restoring of such as have been overtaken and lapsed into sin by which the precious Soul is hurt and endangered should they be left to sink under such a burden Christians are elsewhere required to have compassion on such as they see in such danger to save them with fear and pull them as firebrands out of the fire Jud. 23. These are obligations common to Ministers with others