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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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Spirit dwelling in you and that argues acquaintance with him Psal 19 11. in keeping of them there is great reward greater than any gold or silver a man may keep that and yet want a quiet Conscience but a man that keeps Gods Commandments shall not want peace of Conscience Psal 119.72 thousands of gold and silver will not keep a mans heart warm and comfortable but the keeping of Gods Commandments will and be it that you be about your calling no businesse of your calling will hinder your peace no Commandment of God hinders your Peace indeed if you go about things without warrant from a Commandment be it in the World in your callings if you look at your profit and pleasure c. and not at Gods Commandment to set you a work you lose your Peace and you will want your Peace in that dayes conversation but if you go about things in vertue of a Commandment never fear your calling will never hinder your Peace keep the Commandment and keep your Peace we hinder our Peace often because we go about businesses without an eye to the Commandment and so it is not acceptable to God he finds no savour of rest in it and therefore no wonder if we lose our Peace but if any work though never so mean be done in obedience to Gods Commandments we shall keep and maintain our Peace 1 JOHN 2.4 He that saith I know him and keepeth not his Commandments is a lyar and the truth is not in him IT is St. Johns usual course to propound the Truth Affirmatively and Negatively Vers 3. Affirmatively Vers 4. Negatively Vers 5. he amplifies the keeping of Christs Commandment by a double benefit 1 In him that doth so is the Love of God perfect 2 Hereby we know that we are in him From whence Verse 6. he passes this conclusion of conforming our lives to the life of Christ Verse 4 He that saith he knows him c. To say is either in Heart in Word or in outward Carriage He that saith I know him he speaks not of an active understanding of him but of an affectionate hearty knowledge Knowledge is either speculative or operative infused or acquired Historical or Experimental all come to one but this Knowledge here meant is acquaintance so then he that saith he hath acquaintance with God and keeps not his Commandments that is as his Way his Treasure his Ornaments his Eye his Life 1 He is a Lyer that is he not only speaks false but he knows he speaks falsly for that is the difference between an untruth and a lye 2 There is no truth in him not one true grace not one true act of Repentance Faith c. Doct. Opinion or profession of the Knowledge of Christ without keeping of his Commandments is an undoubted signe that he is a lyar and the best Grace on him is counterfeit he hath no true Grace in him To say in the heart is opinion to say in the tongue or carriage is profession and if he do thus he is a lyar the truth is not in him Tit. 1.15 16. they professe they know God but in their works they deny him ssch a one is abominable disobedient and to every good work reprobate that is he goes about it untowardly is unskilful in it hath no sincerity and his work is rejected of God as reprobate counterfeit silver Q How is such a man a lyar and no truth in him A man may be a lyar sometimes and yet have some truth in him but this man hath no truth in him but 1 He speaks falsly 2 Against Conscience 3 No truth is in him A. 1 He speaks falsly which appeareth from the Efficacy of all true knowledge of Christ which brings forth obedience if a man knows Christ he loves him and affects him and obeyes him Mat. 7.22 23. all saving Knowledge stirs us up to obedience to God to righteousnesse to man if a man be a Son of Beliac such a man knows not God those that obey him not never knew him 1 Chron. 29.9 Know thou the God of thy Father and serve him they that never served God never knew him Joh. 14.21 if any man love me he will keep my Commandments and further no man knows God but he hath known the depth and danger of sin he hath known his enstrangement and absence from God if a man know not himself he knows not God 2 After that he hath known sin he comes to know Christ and his mediation such a man is sensible of his former misery and knows the excellencie of Christ he hath been so bitten with sin that he looks at it as the most hainous fight and the keeping of Gods Commandments he looks at it as the sweetest thing in the World 2 Cor. 6.14 Gods Commandments are not grievous to him such Knowledge springs from experience of our former misery therefore they that never come to this never knew Christ 2 Why is such a man a lyar that saith he knows God and keeps not his Commandments 1 From the conviction of the Testimony of that light which shines in his heart Joh. 16 9. there is a Spirit of conviction in all those that live in the Church for others do not contend that they know Christ but those that thus professe are convinced of their sins of their unbelief and disobedience and of the wickednesse of their hearts and lives Obj. Are there not many that live carnally and wickedly and yet are not convinced of their sins It is true there are such but then living in such a course they do not trespass against their Consciences they think they keep the Law and so think well of themselves and they are at peace and secure He that walks thus civilly and conformably yet such a mans Conscience is at uncertainty about his Estate he is convinced that he wants something but he cannot tell what it is till he be throughly convinced by Gods Spirit thus it was Mark 10.19 Matth. 19.18 19 20. the young man told Christ all these have I kept from my youth what lack I yet his Conscience guided him to feel that he wanted something though he had kept the Law in the outward letter yet he saw he wanted something and his Conscience was not at rest so that such a man as saith he knows Christ and keeps not his Commandments speaks against the conviction of his Conscience and therefore is a lyar I speak not of such Christians who want Peace because they do not keep Gods Commandments but of such who when they have Peace think they keep his Commandments 3 Why is there no truth of grace in such a man as saith thus Reas From the necessary conjunction of all graces with obedience no true grace of God but is either the cause of obedience it breeds it or else is a companion of obedience or else an effect of obedience it sprang from obedience Faith worketh by love Gal. 5.6 and love is the fullfilling of the Law Rom.
reverently of his name would he have others be silent in your presence much more should you subject your best gifts to God and take heed that you put no dishonour upon your selves by any unseemly carriage old Noah had no sooner committed that shamefull sin of drunkennesse but his own child mocked him Gen. 19.17 Prov. 6.11 Doct. It is the honour of aged men of fathers when they know him which was from the beginning When they know the Father of eternity the Antient of dayes this is that which is an honour to old men both before God and man viz. the knowledg of Christ dispensed from the beginning as 1 Joh. 1.1 From the beginning is not to be understood in relation to time but Eternity he doth not say That was with the beginning but from the beginning before the beginning Joh. 8. Before Abraham was I am he was before the World now the knowledge of Christ is the honour of aged persons There is a two-fold knowledge of Christ 1 A Speculative Historical Knowledge only of the understanding Act. 9.15 2 There is a practical saving Knowledg of Christ and there is a threefold difference between that knowledg that rests in the understanding and this practical and saving kno●ledg of Christ 1 The knowledge that rests in the understanding is only by hearing or reading but the other is got by the Spirit of Christ infused into us 1 Cor. 2.9 partly by inlightning our minds partly by feeling the work of Grace in our hearts Phil. 3.10 hence it is that this experimentall knowledge excells the best knowledge that is got by reading or hearing he knows the worth and vertue of Christ 2 They differ in their effects that knowledge that rests in the understanding breeds pride and carnall confidence Isa 47.10 and scandall and offence to the weak 1 Cor 8.12 but this saving knowledge breeds 1 Prayer Joh. 4.10 2 Faith Psal 8.10 They that know thy name will trust in thee 3 Justification 1 Joh. 2.2 4 Obedience 5 Innocency towards our brethren Isa 11.6 to 9. 6 It works eternall life John 17.3 3 They differ in the adjuncts saving knowledge is joyned with an high esteeme of Christ Phil. 3.7 8. yea a man hath liberty to rejoyce in this knowledge which he may not in any other Jer. 9.24 25. There are two things in the knowledge of Christ which old men have more than other men Jacob expresses them both Gen. 48.6 7. he did now by much experience know the goodnesse of God that he had provided for him at home in Labans house in his journey he had supplyed him in all his wants and delivered him out of all his dangers a young man cannot say so much it seemes not so savoury in a young mans mouth but when an old man comes out with a recitall of Gods favour this is the honour of old age Vse 1. Of direction to old men to take notice of their own Estate whether they know him that was from the beginning hath Gods Spirit brought you to pray to humble your selves to obedience to innocency c. if it be so happy are you you are truly honourable Vse 2. Not to satisfie your selves with any knowledge till you know him that was from the beginning the study of antiquity is pleasing to many especially to old men no knowledge like this when you are able to speake of Gods old mercies to you that he hath fed you all your life when you are able to tell your children of their duty to God could you tell of all Antiquities it is nothing till you know him that was from the beginning 1 JOHN 1.13 The middle Part. I write unto you young men because you have overcome the Wicked one WHy doth he call them young men and not Brethren as before he called old men Fathers Ans Because then he had not distinguished them from others for all Christians are brethren one to another 1 Observe here First their Adversary the wicked one 2 Their Victory They have overcome the wicked one This wicked one is Satan 1 Joh. 5.18 Mark 5.37 Mat. 13.19 Mar. 4.15 he is called Satan he being once one of the noblest creatures nobler than man Doct. The chiefest of the glorious Creatures of God may become the chiefest wicked one He is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that wicked one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and it implies 1 That he excells in wickednesse his Understanding most blind his will most rebellious his affections most corrupt 2 It implies he is the Father of all sin Mat. 5.37 Joh. 13.2 Joh. 8.44 he is called the Father of Lyars 3 It implies That Satan takes pains to doe evill is industrious to doe evill 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 labour he traverseth the World goes about continually doing evill 1 Pet. 5.8 Job 1.7 he is insigniter improbus But how comes it to passe that he that was a glorious Angel is now become that wicked one The causes of his deprivation were partly accidentall and outward partly inward accidental as 1 God did not elect him to stand as he did ordain some Angels 1 Tim. 5.21 so that he was left to a possibility of falling though not to a necessity 2 His condition being a creature gave occasion to his fall God being infinitely good his will is the rule of good now he being a creature Gods Will is his rule and he may not attend to the rule and then he doth evil 3 But thirdly There was an inward cause that led him to sin and that was the pride of his nature not made so but he exalted himself 1 Tim. 3.6 which implies that he saw man made after the Image of God and he was a glorious creature attending on God himself and was puft up with his glorious condition and despised man that was to live on the earth and dresse the Garden Vse 1. May teach young Scholars not to please themselves in any gifts of Nature though never so excellent for even an Angel that excelled in Wisdome hath fallen away and become that wicked one Vse 2. It may teach them to take heed how they enter into the calling of the Ministry in their young years especially before they be humbled it was the cause of Satans fall that he was puft up with his office it is a wonder to see when Scholars are admitted into the Ministery in their young times how they despise the people think themselves unmeet to condescend to Peasants but they will rather exercise their Gifts in the University and so fall into the condemnation of Satan 3. Hence you may see part of the Image of Satan why was he called that wicked one because he excells in wickednesse and is the Father of sin and takes pains to doe evill so do you see men excell in wickednesse lead on others to sin take pains in mischiefe such a one bears the Image of Satan upon him When Paul saw Elimas hardned in mischief leading on others
doe him the best service we could so we should be carefull seeing God hath forgiven us so great a debt to take heed that we run not into further Arrerages that we dishonour not nor offend that God who hath so freely for his own sake forgiven us Vse 2. It must teach us all that have any comfortable experience of the forgivenesse of our sins to walke even as Christ hath walked for even upon this ground doth St. John here press it it should be our meat and drinke to doe his will to glorifie him in all our course as it was Christs care Joh. 17.4 and that is the end that God ayms at in forgiving our sins that we should walke as Christ walked Vse 3. For Consolation If our sins be forgiven for Christ name sake then we need not fear the continuance of them for had he forgiven us for our own sake we might justly have feared that he might yet afterwards through our defaults lay them again to our charge but he hath forgiven us for Christs sake he doth not forgive for thy Prayers sake but thy sins were pardoned before thou calledst on him Isa 65.24 God was answering before and your prayers grew so zealous because your sins were forgiven Isa 43.22 and therefore God will cancel our acquittance because he did it for his names sake for the glory of his own grace 1 JOHN 2.13 I write unto you Fathers because you have known him which is from the beginning c. VErse sixth he commended this duty to all Christians to walke even as Christ walked which duty and Commandement vers 7. he amplifies by the antiquity of it vers 8. from the newnesse of it Thirdly instanceth in one speciall duty of it that is love of our Brethren vers 9 10 11. vers 12. he amplifies it by a benefit or motive to walke as he hath walked and that is from the pardon of sin generally granted to all christians therefore walke as Christ hath walked because he hath forgiven you your sins now vers 13. these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or little children he distinguisheth into three sorts Fathers Young-men and Babes little children is the quality of all christians but Babes are newly born to Christ now all these should walke as Christ hath walked In the Verse we have these three parts 1 An Enumeration or distribution of the severall ages of christians to whom he commends this duty 2 A Ministerial duty of love he tenders to them that is he writes unto them 3 He propounds to every one of them a severall Reason why he urges this duty upon them I write unto you Fathers because ye have known him that is from the beginning I write unto you Young-men because you have overcome the wicked one I write unto you Babes because ye have known the Father What is meant here by Fathers Young-men and Babes some thinke it is meant of the severall statures of Grace that Christians grow to some are Fathers some Young-men some Babes but we never read these distinct but that an old man in Christ is a strong man in Christ for grace doth not grow weaker but stronger and the eld●r in Grace the more wise the more fruitfull the more gracious therefore I think by Fathers he means ancient Christians yet old men too he therefore hath respect to their natural age and by young-men he understands men young in years yet stronger in Grace By Babes such as are tender in years and so Babes in Christ too therefore it may well be understood of the naturall difference of ages and this interpretation may be confirmed from the reason he gives taken from the severall inclinations in Natural ages take old age that takes pleasure in study and rehearsal of old things that have been long past so you have known the ancient of dayes you have known how Christ hath been dispenced from the beginning so that your naturall desire of old things you have turned to the antiquity of Christ And for young-men they have naturall strength and strive to put it forth in Fightings or Combates why I write unto you young men because you have overcome the wicked one because you have turned your strength to fightings against Sin Satan and the World and have overcome them and for Babes though they know little yet they first discern their Parents and express their joy in them so I write unto you Bahes you that are very young in years and young in Christ because you have learned to know the Father First in that he writes to all sorts of Christians Fathers Young men and Babes and all well seasoned with Grace Obedience Knowledge c. observe thus much Doct. God hath his children among all sorts of Ages of men some of them are aged some young some Babes in Nature and in Grace He hath his Children out of old age Youth and Child-hood out of all he hath elected some to doe him service these old men he doth not tell you when they came on but whensoever they came they had strength of grace so Young men he tells you not when they came on whether in Child-hood or no but they had strength of grace sure they had overcome the wicked one and for Babes they came on in child-hood and yet had strength of grace and it may be some old men might in their old age come on to the knowledge of the ancient of days so that there is strong grace found in all sorts of men Wisdome in Old men Spiritual vigour in young men and he speaks of Babes as knowing their Father in heaven as well as their Parents on earth God hath a company of all ages calling on him justified and sanctified Amongst old men and women we read of Abraham and Sarah an old couple stricken in years of Isaac and Rebecca an old couple also and knowing the promises made of Christ Joh. 8.56 Your Father Abraham saw my day and rejoyced so did Sarah rejoyce in the promised Seed We have also the examples of Moses and David and Zachary and Elizabeth that continued till they were old both in age and grace there were some such among the Priests as Aharon and Hojadah 2 Cron. 24.15 some among the Souldiers there were some old Souldiers of Christ old Kings old Nobles c. which knew him which was from the beginning For young men famous is the example of Phineas Numb 25. in his youth he was full of zeal such was Josiah 2 Chron. 34.1 2 3. we read that at sixteen years of age he sought the Lord God of his Fathers and at twenty years he grew so strong that he wholly carried before him the whole State though they were then strongly corrupted and given to Idolatry yet being strong in the Spirit he carryed them on to Justice and reformation strongly he cleansed the Land from Dan to Beersheba a notable encouragement to youth to be vigorous in zeal and grace And for Children Samuel when he was but a child
Peter James and John Mat. 26.41 when Christ called on them to watch and pray he comes and finds them sleeping what saith he the spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak even then when he had most need and themselves also of watchfullnesse they fell into drowsinesse and so fell into Temptation that they all left Christ and Peter especially Simon sleepest thou whom Sathan desires to winnow For thee now to Sleep is a Lust of the Flesh Let us therefore so look at Sleep and Ease as that we must give account of It s a common fault of Gentlemen that live of their own Means they may Live at Ease and rest they think what is a Gentleman but his Ease and Pleasure God forbid that we should be like that Fool in the Gospel Soul take thine Ease thou hast Goods laid up for many years you must not think that God hath given great means and estate to live at ease the glorious Angells are ministring Spirits doing their duties with all agility and chearfullnesse Adam who was Lord of the world yet was set to till the ground from the highest creature to the lowest all have employments appointed them by God Dangers of Idlenesse 1 It will bring you to poverty that you shall be suddenly Beggars and that without remedy 2 It distempers your Bodies and Stomachs 3 It will make your Souls naked and ragged that is plain the field of the sluggard is over-grown with Thorns and Thistles all your impatience vanity idlenesse all your dullnesse unprofitablenesse in your life it springs from your sluggishnesse of heart you have not stirred up your spirits 4 It will make you a Brother to a great waster you waste your outward patrimony and your patrimony of Grace when Peter was once fallen into drowsinesse how wofully was he bankrout how poor and naked Simon sleepest thou and we see Temptation came on him suddenly and strongly 5 Such as do their businesse with a slack unbent hand cursed be that man if you see a sluggish hand God leaves him to himself he curses both himselfe and his businesse therefore be diligent and fruitful and strengthen your selves you shall finde the blessing of God going along with you prospering your estates and Souls Thus we see what are the Lusts of the flesh they are such as the body affects and is satisfied with as intemperancy incontinency love of pastime and love of idlenesse and sleep these are the lusts of the flesh Now for the Reasons why we should wean our selves from these Lusts which may be as so many motives to disswade us from them Rea. 1 All these Lusts are so many Enemies to our Souls 1 Pet. 3.11 they are the diseases of our Spirits now if we satisfie any disease in our body wee feed the disease and make it worse So wee cannot satisfie any of these Lusts but the more we feed them the stronger they grow They are like the Dropsie the more you drink the more you may so satisfying encreases the disease the more you obey a Tyrant and submit your selves to him the more authority he claims over you and the more will be Lord it over you so if you once give up your selves to obey these lusts and let them reign they will Lord it over you and keep you in greater subjection Rom. 6.12 so that when a man pleads for his Lust but this once that I may fullfill my Lust and I hope I shall never do it again but I will bid farewell to it if I now take leave to go into evil Company for one merry meeting I shall hereafter deal with them no more why take this course against a Lust do but once give way to any Lust and instead of satisfying it you will adde fuell to it this will be a way to ingage you to a further commission of that lust many have a conceit may I but now tipple with a customer and get a good bargain I will give it over why give but once way to a lust and it will make such a gap that all the lusts in the Forrest may break in make but one little crevise in the bank of the Sea thinking to abate the rage of the Sea why it will make it wider and overflow all so if you give but a little way to a lust to a little Gluttony or Intemperancy you will never give over modo modo non habent modum the more fuel you give the stronger the fire of lust burns Reas 2 The heavy distempers that bodily lusts put upon the soul of man they do aggravate the diseases that Christians most complain of it is the common complaint of Christians oh the deadnesse and dullnesse and hardnesse and coldnesse of my heart and spirit oh that I could but get a soft heart why the lust of the flesh so overcharges our hearts and makes them so heavy that we have no desire to good Luk. 21.34 take heed that your hearts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 you shall find that whereas our spirits have been enlarged and comforted in Gods ordinances and in his service it is strange how little affection or comfort we find in these if our hearts be overcharged with Intemperancie or Wantonnesse or Voluptuousnesse or Idlenesse it is like lead at a Birds heels what we feed on we grow into the nature of it let a man feed on earthly things he grows earthly and unsavoury so if a Christian gives way to any sensuality he shall find his spirit grow so sensual and worldly that it is made very unfit for spiritual things Reas 3 From the end of these lusts if we affect any pleasure of the World for it self it is a lust of the flesh to cleave to the Creatures now we shall find that none of these lusts commend us to God neither meat nor drink nor pastime nor sleep if we affect any thing for it self it never commends us to God or makes us draw near to him though we had all these pleasures in the largest measure as Paul saith of them 1 Cor. 8.8 now if these draw us not to God but many a poor soul that wants these hath far more fellowship with God than such as enjoy abundance thereof why then a Christian should thus reason am not I a whit the nearer God for these why then should my heart affect them 4 Nay as they do not commend us to God so 1 Cor. 6.13 Meat for the belly and the belly for meat they are all corruptible both the chear we affect and our bellies both corruptible therefore let us set our minds on eternal incorruptible things Vse May dehort both old and young from affecting the lusts of the World you see from the Father they are not but from the World and the means to help us against these lusts are 1 Abstain from fleshly lusts as Peter speaks Rom. 13.14 make no provision for the flesh take heed of all occasions I have made a Covenant with mine eyes saith Job not
no nor in life it selfe for they are all transitory but intreat God to set your hearts on everlasting things on everlasting life and induring riches and pleasures for from him they flow Psal 16. ult these are an abiding inheritance and will stick close to us this is the vanity of earthly things the fulnesse of them breeds loathsomnesse and fulsomnesse and a man is duld with them they seem full of comfort till we get them and when we have them we are weary of them but grace on the contrary seems hatefull till it be got but when it is once got the more a man hath the more he desireth godly sorrow breeds repentance never to be repented of 2 Cor. 7.10 neither by God nor by them never did christian repent of his repentance or Faith or godlinesse Riches profit not in the day of wrath Prov. 11.4 therefore love not those things which cannot comfort us when we have most need Joh. 6.26 27. Labour not for the meat that perisheth so labour not for the riches or honour or pleasure that perish but labour for that profit and pleasure and honour which endures for ever We come now to the opposition that which is opposed to the transitoriness of these things the World and the lusts thereof viz. He that doth the will of God abideth for ever Doct. Such as doe the will of God are not as the World and lusts of it of a fading transitory condition but they stand in a permanent abiding Estate Q. 1 What is it to abide for ever A. 1 It implies he is not of an unsteady fleeting temper but of a constant and even frame of spirit and life not now in and now out and never of a constant frame but of an even temper as mountaines are not easily shaken or driven to and fro but remaine in their strength and place why so such as trust in the Lord shall be as Mount Zion that shall not be moved Psal 125.1 and he gives the reason vers 2. without any changing or removing 2 He is said to remain for ever because he doth abide in that Estate for ever there is a difference between constancy and perseverance a man may be said to goe to London though he keeps not even on but goes out and in so such a man as aimes at heaven and goes on as evenly as he can and if he goes out he gets in again such a one perseveres in his way to heaven Q. 2 What is it to doe the will of God A He that doth the will of God stands in opposition to the World and the lusts of it and by this will is not m●ant only the will of Gods pleasure but the will of Gods Commandement for all the Creatures doe the will of Gods good pleasure for they all doe things so far as God wills so that if a man doe his own will he sh ll not goe besides Gods will but here he means the will of Gods Commandement Not every one that saith Lord Lord shall enter into Heaven but be that doth the will of my Father Mat. 7.21 t●at is the revealed Will of God Joh. 8.51 For the ground of the point why they abide for ever 1 Because they are born of the unchangeable Will of God of his own Will begat he us Jam 4.18 and he means that Will which is not dependant on the Creature but free Rom. 9.15 There is no cause moving but the only Will of God he will have mercy because he will have mercy therefore when God bestows any mercy on the Creature because he will doe it it puts the Creature on an unexchangeable condition 2 From the vigour and strength of doing the Will of God no man doth the Will of God but the more he shall be inabled and caused to doe it the doing of Gods Will is the ground and strength of a Christian life Joh. 4.34 he means not only he did it chearfully but it was that which refreshed his soul and strengthened his body so that he felt neither hunger nor thirst but it was strength and freedome of spirit to doe his Fathers Will so that though he was thirsty yet his words to the woman did so refresh him that it was his strength and refreshment now if it be so that the more a man doth the Will of God the more strength he hath to doe it nay it conveyes not only strength to the soul but also to the body as a Tree the more fruit it brings forth upwards the deeper rooting it takes downwards so a Christian the more fruit he brings forth to God the deeper he strikes his root in Christ John 14.21 22. if it be thus I say well may he abide for ever 3 From the near union which such have with Christ that doe the Will of his Father Christ came for that end to doe his Fathers Will Joh. 6.38 therefore he that doth the Will of his Father is near to Christ he is Father and Mother and Brother and Sister Mark 3. ult because they are born of the same Father of the same Spirit and they doe the same work if therefore we doe his Will not as Servants but as Children then we are as heirs and remain in the house for ever Joh. 8.35 36. 4 From Gods readinesse ever to hear the prayers of such as doe his Will as the blind man said Joh. 8.34 If any man doe the Will of God him he hears wherein he shews that suitable to our hearing of God God hears us if we hear God in his Commandements he will heare us in our petitions if we take up Gods Word he will take up our prayers that they be not lost if we be sinners God hears not us why because we hear not him God is as ready to doe our wills as we are to doe his Mat. 7 2. with what measure we meet to him he will meet to us if we be careful to attend to his Word and industrious to doe his Will God will certainly doe our wills as we have done his Psal 139. ult he desires to be led in everlasting wayes that is the Will of God for that is only everlasting and a Christian praying to doe Gods Will as the Angels God will fulfil his will and his Will is to abide for ever and so it is Gods Will that he should abide for ever Obj. Doth not David complain I am tossed to and fro as a Grashopper Psal 109.22 Ans He speaks not there of his inward estate which was constant and even but his outward estate which was very unconstant sometimes puld from the Ordinances he hopt from one place to another from Mountains to Woods and Caves from place to place like a Grashopper but his inward frame was constant and even Obj. But was not Davids inward frame s metimes very uneven he that had sometimes shewed much kindnesse to Mephibosheth after took away his Lands he that sometimes was smitten for cutting off Sauls skirt after sticks not to
commit Adultery and slay Uriah and after that to number the people Ans He may erre through infirmity as a man in a Journey he propounds no other end but to goe on but yet he goes out of the way sometimes through ignorance and carelesnesse but then when he knows it he makes the more hast to get in again so a Christian he aims at a good course even wayes but sometimes through heedlesness or ignorance he falls into by wayes but when he knows it he makes hast to recover himselfe and the cause why he goes aside is because he doth not the Will of God but his own will Vse 1 Justifie the Doctrine of the perseverance of the Saints and confutes the contrary opinion of their Apostacy for every Christian doth the Will of God now he that doth the Will of God abides for ever such make Gods Will their meat and drink and so they lead an everlasting life they feed on everlasting food Joh. 6.26 they have neer union with Christ they are such as fulfill Gods Will and therefore he will fulfil their desire Vse 2. A ground of direction to all such as would find comfort in Life and Death if you follow the lusts of the World they will not last alwayes Conscience accuseth God will judge you Eccles 11.9 Rejoyce O young man in thy youth c. so Riches endure not always nor Honour therefore though a man now pride himselfe in his youth or riches or lusts why these will not hold time will come when you shall be weary of all these but would you abide for ever why this is the way doe Gods will and then thou chusest that part which shall never be taken from thee Luke 10. two last verses Psal 125.1 2. let a man be doing Gods Will he shall never dye there is no man but would have his Estate confirmed to perpetuity from age to age why all the lusts of the World continue but for a while but would you turne all to perpetuity be doing Gods Will and then you shall abide for ever so would you heal all the fleeting unstablenesse of our spirits sometimes you are much inlarged sometimes as much straitned sometimes you have vigour of Spirit and sometimes you are dull and quite out of frame what is the reason all this is because thou art out of the way and therefore the Star hath left thee as it did the Wise men when they went out of the way to Bethlehem to goe to Jerusalem even so when thou art in the way to Bethlehem to seek Ch●ist and give up thy selfe to such courses as leads to him why all this while the comfortable power of the Spirit shall goe with thee but when thou consultest with flesh and blood to satisfie any lust of the World the Star will leave thee till thou come into the way again so if you walke in the even wayes of God you shall find your selves always enlarged though sometimes more sometimes less yet alwayes so much as is sufficient for your present condition Vse 3 Of consolation to every obedient Christian that breaks off from his own will and sets himself with all his power to doe Gods Will and is grieved when he doth any thing against it why this is your comfort that is an everlasting way which leads to eternity He that doth the Will of God shall never see Death that is with fear or danger nay he shall stand as a Mountaine that shall not be shaken which is a great blessing for a poor Christian Obj. May not mountains be shaken and removed are they not shaken by Earthquakes so may not Christians be shaken and removed are they not tossed up and down in the World and never in a setled condition Ans Mountains may be shaken and removed Isa 54.10.11 and Christians may be tossed in their outward Estate but yet though Mountains remove and hills be shaken yet Gods loving kindnesse shall never depart from them Now from the scope the Apostle aims at observe thus much Doct. The disproportion that is betwixt the World and the lusts thereof and the Children of God that doe his Will ought to weane them all from the love of the World and the lusts thereof John 6.27 Labour not for the meat that perisheth as who should say this meat is corruptible and you corruptible but that meat I give you is eternall and will nourish eternall life in you Quest Wherein stands the disproportion between the World and the lusts thereof and those that doe Gods Will 1 The World and the lusts thereof are transitory and fading neither continue at a stay nor last long but all perish But he that doth Gods Will the more he doth it the more he is strengthned and confirmed and supported to everlasting life 2 The World it selfe and all the things thereof are ordinarily bodily and sensuall and not heavenly take all the frame of the Creatures they are bodily things and all the comforts of them tends to sensuall life What will it profit a man to win the whole World and loose his own soul implying a man may have all the World and yet loose his own soul it never feeds a spirituall heavenly life but there is a spirituall eternall bread that feeds to everlasting life it is not for a body to nourish a spirit nor earthly things heavenly not can a transitory thing feed everlasting life Q. 1. Why should this disproportion wean us from the love of the World and the lusts thereof what is the ground 1 From the vanity that is found in all these things they are bodily and transitory it is impossible they should nourish heavenly and permanent life therefore godly men should withdraw their affections from them inordinately Isa 55.2 why doe you lay out your money for that which satisfieth not and for that which is not bread why doe you spend cost and pains about that which is not bread which will never satisfie your souls but your souls in the midst of them may be as Pharaohs lean Kine hungry and empty of grace void of good things Reas 2. From the corruption these things will put upon our spirits if we set our love and lust on them it will be as a running Issue which will empty us of all goodnesse either they will draw us from comming to the Ordinances I have married a wife and cannot come or secondly they will fill our hearts with cares when we come Ezek. 33. ult or else after we are gone they will choak the Word of God so that they draw away our hearts from spirituall food 2 There is a power in them to assimilate us to themselves what we feed on we are like unto feed on wild meats you will be wild men feed on grosse meats your spirits will be more grosse and dull feed on light meats your spirits will be more quick and agill so if a man feed on the World glut himself with the World he can relish nothing but the
of it if your souls desire it in good earnest God accepts of it as done so for your Families if you instruct them and strive to build them up you say it is in vain no truly God will be your reward So it may be a stay to Ministers that desire by all means to convert some and yet finde no fruit of their labours yet thou shalt have thy reward with thy God for if false Prophets that go about to seduce though they seduce not yet God accounts them seducers so God accepts of thy good will and endeavour as much as if thou hadst effected it Obj. Then we may easily flatter our selves and say I desire that my soul and all mine might do well A. If a man have a willing minde to a thing it will much comfort him if he do it and grieve him if he cannot performe it thou sayest thou wouldst have thy selfe and all thine do well is it thy greatest grief that thou canst not effect this and would it be thy greatest comfort if thou couldst then God accepts thy desire but if a man have only some lazie desires if it go well well and good if not he is not much troubled there was no right desire 1 JOHN 2.27 But the annoynting which yee have received of him abideth in you c. Doct. EVery Child of God even the least and the meanest have received the Vnction of the Spirit of this we heard vers 20. But something is to be considered in the varying of the words vers 20. he said they had it here he saith they have received it of him Doct. The Children of God receive this Vnction of the Spirit from God from the Father and from Christ John 14.16 17. John 16.13 Gods sending and our receiving are relata 2 Cor. 1.21 22. Gods giving and our taking mutually agree one to another and sometimes God the Father is said to send the Spirit and sometimes God the Son it is God that sends it but Christ that hath prayed that he would send it John 14.16 17. and by his Death and Ascension hath he purchased and procured the Spirit for us Acts 2.32.33 The Reasons why we must receive this Unction from God and from Christ Reas 1. Because of our selves what we have by Nature is a spirit of errour and falshood and corruption and therefore because we have no Unction from the first Adam no spirit that heales us and softens us and chears us we have no spirit that doth annoynt us but rather besmear us and daub us with base lusts therefore if we have any Spirit of Grace it is needfull that we should receive it from the second Adam 2 We receive it from the Father because by Christ we are made Sons and therefore have need of the spirit of Sons Gal. 4.4 5 6. all of us like Christ his eldest Son Gods Spirit is the mark whereby he owns us it is the earnest penny that we have Rom. 8.14 that we might be comforted therefore called the comforter John 16.13 the earnest penny and first fruits of eternal glory an earnest penny is part of the payment of the same nature with the whole this Spirit is part of the payment which we shall then receive in abundance now in a small measure we have now little love and faith c. but he will make perfect love perfect knowledge perfect strength 3 That Christ should give it is from his death whereby he purchased it Gal. 3.13 14. and by his Ascension he shed abroad his Spirit in our hearts as when Elias was ascending into Heaven he spread abroad his Mantle upon Elisha whereby he was cloathed with a double Spirit so when Christ ascended into Heaven he spread abroad his Mantle as it were his Spirit which every Christian taking is cloathed with the Spirit of Christ with the Spirit of gladnesse and holinesse Vse 1. Shews the wonderfull love of God even to the least and meanest of his Servants that not only gives us his Son to be our Redeemer but his Spirit to be our Sanctifier so large is God in his bounty no wonder then if he give us health and peace and friends and means and maintenance for he that gives us his Son and his Spirit will he deny us lesser things so that this is not only an expression of his love but an argument of our faith and consolation he that gives us his Son and his Spirit will give us all things Luke 12.32 Fear not little flock c. and no wonder for he hath given us the earnest here Vse 2. To teach Gods Children not to be proud of any Spiritual gift that God gives us 1 Cor. 4.7 if all we have we have received what have we to boast And let us not insult over others for they may receive the Spirit of Unction as well as we as Paul did though he were a persecutor so much lesse should we despise weaker Christians than our selves what if they have received but a little measure of faith and love and patience c. why that little is so much that it seals them up to eternall happinesse they have received so much that they are invested with the garment of Christ therefore let there be no striving or contention or contempt among Brethren seeing all have received this Unction Vse 3. Have you received the Spirit then so walk in him rooted and established in him Col. 2.6 7. why have you received it but that you may pray and preach and buy and sell in this Spirit therefore let every one so walk that he may expresse that he hath received the Spirit of God Gal. 5.25 as yee have received the Spirit so walk in him put forth the life of the Spirit in every employment not your own spirit but shew forth the grace of him which hath called you out of darknesse into his marvellous light Doct. 2. The Spirit which the Children of God have received of him dwells in them for ever John 14.16 17. it is an in-dwelling and abiding Spirit 1 Cor. 3.6 6.29 Ephes 2.20 21 22. the Spirit of God builds a Tabernacle in you and dwels in you Reas 1. Now the Spirit is said to abide in us because having knit us to Jesus Christ we are become of his flesh and bone now it were both a dishonour and unseemly for Christ to have any livelesse dead member therefore that God might make us serviceable unto him he continues his Spirit to us that may inliven us 2 God that gives us this earnest penny would have it continue with us till the payment be compleat 3 The same reason that moves God to give us his Spirit moves him to continue it to us we have as much need to be like God in our whole course as at first and have as much need of assurance of Glory Phil. 1.6 the same God that begins the work will also continue it to us Vse 1. A ground of trial of our estates if we have no spirit
but the spirit of the old Adam the spirit of pride and malice and covetousnesse truly this is not the Spirit of Christ that makes us like him this is not that Spirit that Christ purchased for us by his Death and Ascension but suppose we had some of the Spirit of God the spirit of Wisdom as Achitophel the spirit of joy as Herod the spirit of Zeal as Jehu the spirit of fear as Felix had yet we have not this Unction of the Spirit unlesse it dwell in us What is it to be wrapt with a spirit of a Balaam or a Saul it was only for a fit and what comfort was it to them it was a shuttle spirit by starts and did not abide in them therefore let us try whether we have received the Spirit if we have received a dwelling spirit it is a true spirit Obj. But some may say Alas what then will become of me it may be now I pray but ere night wholly unabld now inlarged then straightned I have now a spirit of zeal and courage soon after all cold and weak and dead wonderfull was the zeal and courage of Elias in slaying four hundred of Baals Prophets openly 1 Kings 18.40 he went through it with such zeal and speed as if he had been sent from Heaven yet Cap. 19.1 2. when Jezabel sent to him he fled for his life and was so weary of his life that he wished death now his Spirit was cold and discontent aad weary of his life So David Psal 119.24 David said he had made the word his delight yet ver 25. he saith his soul cleaves to the dust and prays to God for quicking A. This Spirit that is so to abide doth not always abide in the same measure nor in the same measure of expression but we must know though there be several garments yet the Soul is never naked a man hath not always his Holy-day garments sweetly perfumed but sometimes homely mean garments so Elias when he slew Baals Prophets was cloathed with zeal and Holy-day garments afterwards he remitted of it and yet had he the Spirit of God on him he was not naked though he was not cloathed with the Spirit in such a measure even so sometimes we have even poor ragged homely garments and much of our nakednesse appears and sometimes again may be when God hath greater businesse for us to do cloathes us with better richer garments a greater measure of the Spirit but yet consider though we have not the same measure yet always some garment of the Spirit rests on us be it but the spirit of love to our Brethren or grief for the want of it yet we are not left naked Vse 2 May exhort su if we have this Spirit dwelling in us then let us use him honourably and courteously as an in-dweller he is come from farre even from Heaven sent from our Father and he brings joy and comfort with him therefore let us give him honourable entertainment he is sent to guide us in all our ways to be a pledge of our eternall inheritance therefore let us not entertain him like some guest that we are weary of in two or three days you must know this guest came not for a day but to dwell with us for ever John 14.16 therefore take heed of grieving him Eph. 4.13 he comes for your good and benefit for your redemption When a man keeps a Ward and for keeping him keeps a great estate a Kingdome he would be very carefull so the Spirit is such a Guest that if you keep him you keep Life and Salvation you keep an eternall Kingdom by him therefore take part with Gods Spirit joyne with the Spirit of God quench it not what an heavie complaint made Stephen Acts 7.51 Isa 63.10 the Spirit may be so grieved and vexed by men that he will depart from them Q. How shall we keep our selves from grieving the Spirit A. As God hath given him to guide you so look that you be guided by him if you entertain him kindly he will comfort you if you grieve him he will grieve your spirits 2 Be carefull to nourish him do not strave this Guest neglect not the Word and Ordinances which are the food of the Spirit Quench not the Spirit despise not Prophecie 1 Thes 5. as if the despising of Prophecy were the quenching of the Spirit therefore feed the Spirit of God with-draw not food from it prefer not outward things before it it is a wonder how leane our souls will grow if we do not nourish the Spirit 3 Take heed especially of living in any known Sin for that damps and deads the Spirit therefore David wofully camplains Psal 51.8 to 12. Restore c. as if it were quite gone his very bones were broaken that is not of his body but his soul i. e. the strength and staff of his spirit the Spirit is like fire every grosse sin is like water cast on it it quencheth it Vse 3 A ground of much consolation to Gods servants you can never say you dwell alone and want company you cannot want good company if the holy Spirit dwell in you I am not alone saith Christ but the Father is with me so may a Christian say I am never alone the Spirit of God dwells in me he is an in-dwelling and abiding Spirit Doct. 3 The annoynting of the Spirit teacheth us all things of which you heard verse 20. It teacheth all things needfull to salvation needfull to life and godlinesse 2 Pet. 1.3 and not only so but needfull to our places and callings and ages Doct. 4. The anonytment of the Spirit is so plentifull and sufficient that we need not be taught better things nor in a better manner than the Spirit teacheth Jerem. 31.32 not that we need not Magistracy or Ministry but he speaks comparatively you shall not be so helped by any Instuctions without the Spirit as with the Spirit the Spirit shall declare the Truth in Jesus For Explication 1 The Holy Ghost teacheth fully 1 Cor. 3.9 10 11. the spirit of a Christian is inquisitive concerning all things now the Spirit helps him to search even into the deep things of God so that the Spirit is a full teacher 2 The instruction of the Spirit is plain and clear 1 Tim. 4.1 Joh. 16.25 Christ spake in parables but after his ascension the Spirit revealed things clearly Three things go to clear discerning the object must be clear the medium clear and the eye clear and then we may clearly discern now the Holy Ghost plainly reveals the Counsells of God and then opens our judgements to discern it and then cleares all the mediums so that a Christian may plainly discern so that the Tpirit is a clear Instructor no men need be taught more clearly 1 Cor. 2.4 5. 3 The Instruction of the Spirit is a certain Instruction scarce any truth but a Christian can tell it by experience as a woman that is breeding a Child feels such qualmes and
of a Christian is the way of Truth and goodnesse but the wayes of the wicked are deceitfull and will certainly seduce us but a Christian hath fellowship with the Spirit of Truth Vse 2. It must therefore stir up men to labour to be partakers of this excellent Spirit this Spirit of truth the way of righteousnesse will not deceive us It may be many times by following the Spirit we run into dangerous wayes the way of truth is a straight narrow way but it is a safe way keep your way and it will keep you the Spirit of Christ will carry you on strongly Jer. 20 10. men thinke that Christians walk in dangerous wayes set like Christ on the top of a pinacle but we shall find that these wayes of truth will not fail us but lead us on to eternall happinesse therefore get this Spirit of Truth Vse 3. A ground of comfort to all them that have received this Spirit this Spirit will not deceive you if Gods Spirit were not in you you were of all men most miserable but we have a Spirit that will not fail us as Policarpus said These eighty six years have I served Christ and he never deceived me therefore now I will not leave him Doct. 6. The anoyntment of Gods Spirit teacheth us our perseverance in Christ i. e. doth assure us that we shall abide in him Rom. 8.16 17. The same Spirit beareth witnesse with our Spirits two Spirits bear witnesse Gods and ours and both co-witnesse our adoption our spirit that is our renewed regenerate Spirit for Gods Spirit would not joyn with our corrupt Spirit but with our renewed Spirit and this makes us become the Sons of God for there is a manifold difference between the fruits of the Spirit and the flesh but besides this renewed Spirit of ours Gods Spirit witnesseth the other indeed was the fruit and effect of Gods Spirit but Gods Spirit it selfe is some lively and comfortable witnesse which speaks more clearly and fully than the created graces of God in us if you would speak of an immediate work of the Spirit it doth it by such peace of Conscience and joy as passeth understanding Phil. 4.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it shall so guid your hearts this peace that Gods Spirit immediately poures into the heart is without understanding and the witnesse Gods Spirit gives to our spirits makes us that we never doubt more as formerly 2 It works in us joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1.8 there is such a witnesse as fills our hearts with glorious Consolation Rom. 14.17 and this fills our souls so that a man tasts of the first fruits of Heaven in his light we shall see light Psal 36.8 9. there are certain times when God sends this into our spirits and that is usually in the end of many Conflicts God abundantly recompenseth our work 3 Sometimes when we are preparing for some great triall then God sends some more special help of his Spirit as it was with our Saviour when he was to be tempted forty dayes immediately before he had a testimony from Heaven Thou art my beloved Son c. presently after he was led into the Wildernenesse to be tempted of the Devill Matth. 4. and as the Angels rejoyce at our conversion Luke 15.10 so when God hath any great Temptation for us he poures down more enlargement and comfort of the Spirit so when Christ was to be Crucified he was a little before gloriously Transfigured and when he came riding to Jerusalem exulting and rejoycing presently after he went to be Crucified Rom. 5.8 and often in the midst of tribulation so oft after Afflitions and Conflicts God comes to comfort us with happy enlargements 1 Pet. 4.14 not onely a spirit of grace but a spirit of glory as it did on Steven Acts 6. ult 1 John 3. ult hereby we know that we abide in Christ even by the Spirit 1 Cor. 2.9 10 11 12. Reas 1. From the names and titles given to the Spirit in Scripture three names all which witnesse this truth 1 It is called the Comforter Joh. 14.16 17. not so much comforting us in outward Crosses but specialy because he comforteth our hearts by assuring us we are Sons and Daughters of God and Heirs of life for else it were not above the world for the world can comfort us in temporall things but here is a comforter that far transcends the world 2 The Spirit is called the seal and earnest of our inheritance Ephes 1.13 14. Ephs 4.30 2. Cor. 1.21 now a seal hath a three-fold use 1 It hath an use to keepe secret or distinguish 2 Not only so but to confirme us in all Leases Bonds Covenants so the Spirit not only keeps us sure and distinguisheth us from all Hypocrites but seales us by confirming the happinesse of our estate present and future 3 It is a seal alluding to the seals of Princes wherein their person is pourtrayed so this Spirit is the very Character of Gods Image and fashions us after the Image of God and hereby he confirms and establisheth all the Promises to us 2 Cor. 1.20 and Ephes 6. the Article shews that not only the gift of the Spirit but the person of the Spirit witnesseth 3 He is called the earnest whereof three Uses 1 It bindes and asures a man 2 An earnest is part of the payment though small in regard of the whole so the Spirit of grace is part of the payment and shall remain with us till the full payment 3 Because it abides with us after the whole payment Vse May serve to comfort the hearts of all that have received the Unction of the Spirit they have an assurance of their state of Grace here and Glory hereafter Obj. How comes it to passe then that so many Christians are so troubled 1 There is a double Reason First Sometimes by imaginary causes when there is no such cause as 1 In case of desertion we think we have quenched and grieved the Spirit and therefore it hath left us but God doth not assure us that the Spirit in a full and glorious measure shall abide in us but some fruites of it shall alwayes remain 2 Sometimes outward Crosses and Afflictions make us doubt as David Psal 73. surely I have cleansed my heart in vain 3 Sometimes Melancholy may so distemer us that we will hardly be perswaded of that whereof we have no cause to doubt Secondly There are some real Causes as 1 If we live in any known sin that breaks the very bones Psal 51.8 deprives us of the vigour of the Spirit 2 The high prizing of earthly contentments when we exceedingly delight our selves in Husbands or Wives or Children which much benumbs and dims the light of the Spirit Matth. 13.44 45. when a man so prizes this Pearl he keeps it with him in comfort 3 The proud frame of our spirit hinders our peace we are all naturally of proud ●ofty spirits and if God see not in us an
in slippery places And then vers 22. he condems himselfe for his ignorance 2. This should teach the children of God not to misjudge of themselves in regard of their inward estates for some of them will be ready to doubt and say Surely I am not a child of God because I find much of pride in my heart and much rebellion and corruption in my spirit Surely if I were born of Christ I should be like him But what saith St. John here we are the Sons of God even now though there be much unbelief in our hearts and much weaknesse and many corruptions in us But how shall I know that I am the childe of God The answer is laid down in v. 3. Every man that hath this hope in himself purifieth himself as he is pure So that though he seeth much filthinesse in his spirit for the present yet he labours to purge himself from time to time and is ashamed of his hardness of heart and unbelief that he hath so long stood out with God and now he being sensible of his own misery and wretched estate which he lies under by nature he doth strive dayly to get out of it and therefore he labouring to purifie himself as Christ is pure he is the child of God But it doth not appeer what we shall be Doct. 3. That the future glorious estate of Gods children is for the present an hidden estate Col. 3.3 4. It is therefore said to be hidden because it is hidden with the veil of corruption temptation and affliction which do overshadow our future glorious estate A Christian many times hath many desertions in his spirit and hath many temptations from the world the devill and his flesh many corruptions in his nature as hypocrisie lukewarmnsse c. And many carriages which are unbeseeming the Gospel of Christ And therefore in regard of all these well may their present estate be said to be an hidden estate Reas 1. Is taken from the conveniency betwixt Christ the head and us his members Heb. 4.15 Though Christ was without sin yet he was counted a sinner yea a conjurer a friend of Publicans and sinners But as for Gods servants they are oft times overtaken with many grosse sins and God will have them to be overshadowed with much weaknesse that so the glory of his grace may be seen in their weaknesse and also that they might not be too much lifted up with the conceit of their own worth 2 Cor. 12.7 8. If God should have purged and cleansed us from all our sins then we should not have believed that our hearts were so desperately wicked as indeed they are and as we in processe of time do finde them to be in that we see God ever going along and taking pains from day to day to purge and cleanse our hearts As God did not make the whole fabrick of the world at once though it was not impossible to him being a God Almighty but in the space of six dayes So doth God deal with his children in creating in them a clean heart first he suffers their hearts to be as a rude and massie lump full of darknesse and then God sends his holy Spirit into their hearts and it doth illuminate them and drive away those black clouds of darknesse and ignorance and then breaths in the sweet air of his Spirit that a man may perceive the gracious providence of God leading him along in his Christian course Reas 2. Why God suffers his children to be veyled over with many infirmi●ies in this life is That so they might have a better tolleration to live in the world If God should suffer them to be perfectly holy in this world the men of the world would not suffer them long to live amongst them Deut. 7.22 As our eyes cannot endure to behold the light of the Sun so wicked men cannot endure to see the candle-light of grace in Gods children 3. That God might keep his people in exercise God will have the Canaanites to remain among the Israelites that so they may be stirred up to stand upon their guard and watch that so he may have their graces exercised Vse 1. To teach the children of God not to judge of their spirituall estate by outward appearance but to judge righteous judgement that is to judge as the thing in it selfe and not according to what befalls a man in his outward or inward estate for oft-times a wicked man meets with lesser temptatitions then many of Gods childrens and hence the proud Pharisee judged his estate to be better then the poor Publicans Luke 18.8 to 11. But God judgeth not according to the outward appearance but he judgeth the heart Luke 16.15 16. What though there be a lust of pride or arrogancy in the best of Gods children what though the Canaanites be powerfull within him and he hath much adoe to get from amongst them so that he begins to think he hath cleansed his heart in vain yet if he do but endeavour to keep himselfe pure and unspotted of the world to purge himselfe as Christ is pure he shall at length come to a blessed and happy estate in the heavens Vse 2. Of consolation to all Gods children What though our future condition be hid yet it is safe enough for it is laid up with Christ in the heavens If in this life onely we had hope in Christ then we are of all men most miserable If the Christian should have no more joy and happinesse then he hath in this life then the vilest wretch in the world should be more happy then he But our happinesse doth not depend on our present condition Vse 3. This should teach the children of God to sit down contented with their present estate though a hidden condition What though they do not enjoy so much pleasures riches honors and esteem as many men of the world do Let them be content it will appear what they shall be They shall be Kings and Princes and therefore it must be their daily care and labour to be fitting and preparing themselves for that Kingdome to be purging themselves as Christ is pure Doct. 4. That when Christ shall appear in glory then shall our glorious estate appear with him Col 3.4 This our glorious estate which consists in our likenesse to Christ doth appear 1. In our bodies 2. Our souls 3. Our outward estates For in all those Christ shall be glorious so shall we see him as we are capable 1 Cor. 13.12 1. For our likenesse to Christ in our Body The Apostle saith the body is sown in corruption and is raised again in incorruption Our bodies while we live in this world are subject to many sicknesses diseases agues c. But in the life to come there shall be no noyse of corruption heard of our bodies shall then be so hardened and strengthened as that they shall be no way capable of corruption or change yea the bodies of wicked men shall be so hardened that they
extreame and deadly 3. It is new and rare because they have been wonted to no such thing Vse Let the world know that Gods people have more cause to think strange of the world then the world of them they give the world no cause to hate them Acts 17.6 Doct Gods children are not to marvell at the worlds hatred 1 Thess 3.3 Reas 1. God hath appointed you to it you must take notice of it God hath done it for many ends How else should you shew forth your patience how should you be kept off from bad company God will lay bitter pills to the breasts of the world that so you may be weaned from it Psalm 119.115 2. The world many times doth it out of ignorance The world knows it not therefore we may take it the better that we are ill dealt withall A King takes it not ill to be badly dealt withall at strangers hands 3. The world hated Christ therefore no marvell if it hate us 4. It is no new thing it hath continued from Cain 5 From the inclination of your own hearts if you were in the worlds case you would doe the like Therefore marvell not Tit. 3.2 3. Vse 1. Of instruction to such as live in places of Religion If we be hated wonder we not at it We shall condemne the generation of Gods people The cause is partly from the tempter partly from the wickednesse of the world Vse 2. Do not lay down Religion for fear of the worlds hatred This is not the way fear not the hatred of the world Some Subjects will not feare the body of a State so they may have the Kings favour Much lesse should Gods servants fear though the whole body of a Countrey should fall foule upon them 3. This should teach Gods servants to walk so much the more circumspectly humbly lovingly If a man were to walk amongst his friends he would care the lesse but if he live among his enemies he will looke to every step so soon as you trip you shall have mouthes enough open against you Therefore Daniels course was notable he so walked that they could not taxe him Daniel 6.1 to 7. 1 JOHN 3.14 We know that we have passed from death unto life because we love the Brethren he that loveth not his Brother abideth in death THe Apostle layes down this as a second reason why they should not marvell implying that they that know they have passed from death to life need not marvell though the world hate them Doct. Gods people have passed from death to life Gods people are opposed to the world they are translated out of the world John 5.24 They are redeemed out of the world by death he means a contrary state to life Death and Condemnation are Synonymaes By death is meant death for sin and death in sin the naturall estate in which a man lives whilest he is in this world which is called a state of death in a fivefold respect 1. All death presupposeth life to go before We do not say that a stone is dead Death is a privation of life A man that hath no life but what the world gives he is dead because he had a life at least in possibility in the loyns of Adam Ephesians 2.3 2. Death in the proper notion of it is a separation of the soul from the body We are said to be dead Gal. 2.20 because our souls and bodies which are capable of life are separated from the Lord Jesus the fountain of life Eph. 4.17 18 19. 2.12 3. From the definition of life which is a power to move it selfe in it's owne place When we see a thing to move it selfe in it's owne place we say it is quick and hath life A man may do many things yet not from an inward principle as Judas and Jehu Matth. 27.18 19. 2 Kings 10.15 16. is this life There are some motions from common grace but it is not spirituall life unlesse it aim at spirituall ends and upon spirituall grounds As if a man be humbled for sin because it is displeasing to God Judas was troubled in his conscience not for sinning against God for then he would not have grieved God by hanging himselfe It was not an inward motion and voluntary so Jehu he did it to establish his owne Kingdome he regarded not the commandements of the Lord 1 Kings 10.30 31. 4. In regard of the binding over to eternall death as a condemned man is counted a dead man John 3. ult 5. From the power required to make such a man alive 2 Cor. 5.17 There must be a new a breathing power The state of grace is called life 1. Because we have received fellowship with Christ he lives in us and we in him Gal. 2.20 John 15.1 2. We have an inbred power in our selves to move upon spiritual grounds and for spiritual ends Rom. 8.2 Mat. 5.3 to 10. Passed from death to life from the hatred of our Brethren to the love of them There are these steps of it from one to another 1. A man is a poor man and that 1. In debt 2. Hath nothing 3. An hard creditor 4. No surety 2. He begins to mourn bitterly for this his estate 3. He becomes meek 4. He hungers and thirsts and prayes for grace and cannot be satisfied without it 5. He begins to be mercifull he pities every soul that is in a state of nature and under a spirit of bondage 6. He is pure in heart abstains from sin doth Gods commandements 7. He is a peace-maker he is at peace with God and with his own conscience and now he labours to make others at peace 8. He will now suffer persecution for righteousnesse sake Vse 1. This convinceth all the works of the Heathens as dead works Some are famous for courage justice c. But all these are but dead works Gods pure Martyrs have suffered not for any glory of theirs but Gods glory 2. It refutes a main ground of Popery the doctrine of Free-will which gives a man power to be converted when he will If a dead man can rise from death to life then may a dead man in sin come to the life of grace 3. Gather hence how our estate stands We come to Church it may be repeat Sermons and do many good duties Would we know whether our life be a dead life or no Consider we upon what principles we do good duties if we do good duties because they are pleasing to God if we have respect to all Gods commandements if there be a change in our hearts which makes us willing this is a signe we are passed from death to life 4. To teach us not to rest in our naturall condition for then thou art but a dead man although thou hast all morall grace 1 Cor. 13.2 3. 5. This may be a comfort to every soul that hath passed from death to life God is his God and he shall never come into condemnation Math. 22.23 John 5.24 Doct. The love of our
to expresse and abound in love taken from the great love of God to us Doct. The death of Christ for us is the manifestation of his love to us Such a manifestation as makes it a certain and known truth that he loves us Rom. 5.10 1 Joh. 4 10. He gave his Son to be a propitiatory sacrifice Eph. 4.5 Gal. 2.20 Reas 1. From the greatnesse of Christs self-deniall That which commends love is this to bestow so great matters and to come off freely with it Joh. 15.12 Greater love then this can no man expresse then to lay down his life for his friend But Christ did it for his enemies 2 Cor. 3.8 2 It farther magnifies his love if we consider the great benefit we receive as reconciliation pardon of sins 1 Joh. 4.10 Secondly adoption of Sons Gal. 4.4 5. Such favour as to be accepted as his Sons and Daughters 2. Our corruptions are deaded and mortified Heb. 9.14 Gal. 1.14 Wc are crucified to the world to all objects that draw us to sin temptations and snares 4 Christian liberty that by virtue of Christs death we should be delivered from the curse of the Law Col. 2.13 from the enmity we stood in against the Church Eph. 2.14.15 16. from hell and feare of death Heb. 2.14 that we should have liberty to call God Father enter into his Sanctuary have confidence our prayers are heard have assurance when we dye that we shall enter into the holy place that we shall have right and liberty to the Creation Rrm. 5.1 2 3. Heb. 12.19 This benefit will appear if we consider how miserable our estate had been If Christ had not done this we had been in our sins under the guilt of them and in horror and anguish of spirit 5 How freely hath God done it We gratified God with no kindnesse Some will recompence a small kindnesse with a great reward Rom. 11.35 But all we have done hath been to abuse every mercy of God to his dishonor Col. 1.10.20 Vse 1. It reproves such weaknesse of Gods servants in time of temptations that can see no love of God because he doth not gratifie them with something in this life Gods servants many times doe want necessaries the world abounds withall therefore David hath cleansed his heart in vain Psal 73. But what though Gods servants never see good dayes Yet here is abundant rich and inestimable love that when you were enemies strangers children of wrath Christ dyed for you God hath shewed you more love then the Angels for he laid not down his life for the Angels Heb. 11.14 And if he had done so he had laid down his life for his friends who never displeased him 2 To teach such as abound in outward things not to content themselves therein Eccl. 4.2 We can perceive neither love nor hatred by those outward things Psal 17.14 Labour you to say that God hath laid down his life for you ●●se you cannot say he loves you 3 It teacheth us that the death of Christ was not the cause of Gods love Gods love is more antient then the death of Christ Where shall we lay the foundation of Gods love but in eternity He hath loved me and given himself for me Gal. 2.20 Gal. 3.16 Obj But doth not God attribute his love to the death of Christ 1 John 4.10 Rom. 3.24 25. Eph. 2.14 15 Col. 2.21.27 Answ In a double respect Christs death is said to make this reconciliation Hereby he hath slain the enemy and hatred on our part that we might be no more enemies to him Obj. But Christ is sent not only to make reconciliation on our part but propition on Gods part Answ 'T is true Christ by his death hath made a way whereby God might shew his love to us whilest sin was in the way he could not shew it Many a Father bears a tender affection to a childe yet will not seem to regard him shuts him out of doores and though he be intreated yet he thinks it not meet for him to expresse his love he will have his childe humble himselfe acknowledge his faults and will send some body to perswade his Son to humble himselfe So God sends his Son out of love to take a course that he might shew us favour notwithstanding his justice 4 Of exhortation to take a view of Gods love that we may be able to say freely We perceive the love of God Rest not in any spirituall duty nor in any common gift till you know that Christ dyed for thee How shall I know this Some will say that Christ dyed for all and so all may know True the sufficiency of Christs death reacheth to all but none can say Christ dyed for him till he find in his soul some fruits of the death of Christ 5 To encourage Gods servants to expect offices of love from God to us and ours all his dayes He hath given his Son what would you have more Psal 84.11 Lay hold on this love of God and plead with him upon his love All blessings are wrapt up in his Son Gal. 4.4 As God in fulnesse of time sent his Son so will he every other mercy 6. To teach us to abound in love to God and to his children hatred against sin Give up all to God work for him suffer for him he loves us being strangers and enemies Doct. Christian men ought to be ready to lay downe their lives for their Brethren The exemplary love of Christ in laying down his life for us ought to provoke us in like sort to lay down our lives for our Brethren Rom. 10.3 4. The Apostle doth extoll the love of Aquila and Priscilla as if all the Church and himselfe were bound to them that were so ready to lay down their lives Phil. 2.17 If I be poured out as a drinke-offering R●as From the example of our blessed Saviour He laid down his life for us This is an imitable practice of Christ this is none of his miraculous works but one wherein he sets forth himself as a pattern to us 2. To this add Christs command which binds us to the imitation of this John 13 34. 3. From the neer fellowship of our brethren with Christ We fulfill the sufferings of Christ for his Body Col. 1.2 4. He calls them Christs sufferings Christ suffered in him and he for Christ in his Saints 4. From the subordination of Gods eminentest servants to the Church of God as Christ is for God so Paul and Cephas for the Church God hath subordinated the life of his servants to the Church and the Church to Christ and Christ to God Christ the head of the Church the Church the head of the Members Phil. 2.17 5. From the rule of love God hath given in ancient time Levit. 19.18 We must love our neighbour as our selves Many a christian will lay down his life for himselfe therefore must in some cases lay down his life for the Church A man will lay down his life for his
where is much forgiven there is much love Luk. 10.43.47 where we have a thousand forgiven we shall be ready to forgive an hundred Ephes 4. ult 2 He purges filth If our hearts be purified from uncleannesse and sinfull distempers there the heart runs clear in love and there dwels 1 Pet. 1.21 But if the heart be full of mud it will run foul in hatred 3 He works love If we love our brethren it must be from the love of God in us if there be love it is from God if there be hatred it is from the Devill Judg. 9.23 it is said That he sent an evill spirit between Abimilech and the men of Shechem Where Satan dwels he will set all on fire all hatred and wrath is from hell and it will so kindle that it will consume one another Fire from hell doth not warm it scorcheth Ephes 4.17 If we give way to sinful wrath we give place to the Devil Love cannot be from the Devil 2 This love is not from the world Jam. 4.4 3 This is not from our flesh Jam. 4.5 Therefore it must spring from God who makes peace pardoning our sins and mortifying our corruptions Quest But may there not be peace where Satan is Luk. 11.21 Answ He dwels in peace but a false peace for the wrath of God lyes on that soul as a mans house when it is on fire he being asleep he sleeps but not securely 2 This peace is a peace of a mans own conception Obj. There may be much peace and much love and I have known much true hearted love amongst men that have nothing but the light of Nature much more where is the light of Gods common grace shall we say God dwels not here Answ The Spirit speaks not of civill love but of such a love as wherein God dwels pardoning sin and mortifying sin which he never doth in natural men there may be found good nature in men but that love which evidences pardoning and healing of sin is not found in natural men this love differs from carnal love 1 This love reacheth not to the body onely but to the soul Lev. 19.16 17. If we love not the soul of our brother our love is not true love 2 Christian love reacheth to strangers and enemies as well as neighbours and friends good natured love may reach to strangers but not to enemies 3 Christian love will be stronger to our brethren then worldly love though Christian love may be damped yet it will over-flow good natured love that comes from a little fountain a little thing will stop it but Christian love springs from heaven and no man can make a dam to stop it Vse 1. Of tryal of Gods fellowship with us whether God dwell in our hearts or no where God once dwels he always dwels John 10.27.28 who shall put him out he is stronger then all Quest How shall I know whether God dwell in my heart or no Answ Ask thy soul whether God dwell in thee or no not good natured love but that love which desires peace of conscience and purity of thy owne heart and of thy brothers 2 Cor. 7.8 9 10. 2 This should teach us all to walk in a frame of brotherly love to abound in tenderness of spirit to one anothers souls not to provoke one another to wrath and seduce from ways of salvation but to be helpful one to another in our spiritual estate God loves to lye in a bed of love God will not dwell where love dwels not therefore keep open house for the spirit of love God is where he loves and he loves to be where love is wrath malice and hatred smoaks God out of doors a man performs no duty pleasing to God while wrath is in his heart Doct. That such as love in brotherly love the love of God is perfect in such vers 16 17. His love is perfect in us he doth not mean that love which God hath shed abroad in our hearts for there is no love of God but is perfect in every man but his love is perfect that is that love by which we love God If our love be not wanting to our brethren our love is perfect towards God What is meant by perfect Perfect is diversly taken sometimes it is taken for sound and unfaigned thus Amaziah did not that which was good in the sight of the Lord with a perfect heart 2 Chron. 15.2 But David and good King Hezekiah did that which was good in the sight of the Lord with a perfect heart 2 King 18.3 that is without hypocrisie and rottennesse Let a man professe love to God and not love to his brother his love is not true but hypocritical but if a man unfeignedly love his brother he doth soundly love God a man cannot finde God pardoning his sins healing his infirmities but he will love his brethren and do good offices to them 2 Perfect is all one with entire as a childe is then said to be perfect when he hath all the parts of a man this perfectnesse is opposed to that which is maimed so his love is perfect which is entire to God and man All our duty is to love God and to love our neighbour as our selves 1 John 4.21 He hath shewed thee O man what is good and what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to walk humbly with thy God that is to expresse thy love to God and to do justice and love mercy that is to our brethren Mic. 6.8 This is perfection of spirit Rom. 13.10 Therefore saith the Apostle He that loves fulfills the Law the law of the first and second Table and God would have the chiefest part of our love to him expressed in our love to our brethren 1 Cor. 13.12 the chiefest of those is love we do God more honour by faith and hope but we edifie the Church more by love so that God requires as we see 1 Cor. 13.1 2 3. our love to him to be expressed by doing good to the sons of men Hence our Saviour will reason with the sons of men at the last day Come ye blessed of my Father Matth. 25.34 to the end so that all the love God expects we should shew to him should be poured out to our brethren if thou be righteous what dost thou then give to God Job 35.6 7 8. 1 Cor. 11.10 I have abounded more then they all saith St. Paul by the grace of God and that good was by doing many good offices to the Brethren hence God would have all the sons of men to serve him in their general callings with such graces 1 Cor. 16.14 as they may shew forth in their particular callings in doing all their duties in love when David was earnest with God for the pardoning of his sins Psal 51.8 vers 18. and 12.13 shewes you that as he would spend himself in Gods praise so he would labour to bring on others in the ways of grace 3 Perfection of degrees which he
means here and though no man is perfect in all degrees yet he is more and more perfecting he is on the growing hand Ephes 4.15 16. As no member can grow in the body except it be knit to the body by joynts and sinews so Col. 3.14 in the body of Christ love is the bond that knits us together to God and our brethren 1 Cor. 18. and 13.1 2 3. 4 A thing is perfect when it is expert thus Ezra 7.8 so is a mans love to God perfect to any good office a loving Christian is a perfect Christian you cannot set him to any good duty but he is perfect to it love oyls the wheels of his affections and sets him on that which is helpful to his brethren and hence it is that when our Saviour would set Peter on to feed his lambs he would lead him on to this work by propounding this question whether he loved him or no John 21.15 16 17. he pressed upon him this love every time he asked him his love required him to feed his lambs 2 Cor. 4.15 The love of Christs constraineth Paul to be ready for doing and suffering A man that goes about a businesse with ill will he always bungles it 5 A thing is then perfect when it is durable so is it with a mans love it is durable if it be nourished with love to our brethren if it make a man ready to be doing good offices to his brethren this will make it not onely grow and continue but also to abound for ever Ephes 2.4 5 6 7. If love continue not the Church will not continue that is the whole body of Christians the body of faithful Ministers and people the Church will be removing if love begin to remove Vse 1. A signe of the truth of our love we must have as great a care of the truth of our love to our brethren as of faith and repentance from dead works How shall we know our love is perfect to God How stands your love to the brethren If your love be closed up from your brethren then your love is very unsound or very sick so much love so much life and so much failing in your spiritual love so much failing in your spiritual life Gal. 5.6 Faith works by love and that avails much with God we must receive the Sacrament oft that we may be strong in love according as our love works so works our faith 2 It exhorts us all to the love one another for by this means God dwels in us and his love is perfected in our hearts As you desire therefore that your love to God may be found entire and thriving in your soules give your selves to the unfaigned love one of another edifie one another in love 3 Comfort to such a man as knows he is of a loving heart his love to God is perfect you may know your love to God is perfect if your love be sound to your brethren 1 JOHN 4.13 Hereby we know that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his Spirit THey that love their Brethren they have a two-fold benefit they have Gods Spirit dwelling in them and they know it Doct. That such as love one another to them God hath given of his Spirit What is meant by this that God hath given us of his Spirit 1 It implies that God hath given us that spirit of grace that accompanies salvation this branch of that spirit that dwelleth in God Numb 11.25 Moses spirit was not diminished though God did communicate it to the seventy Elders God did cause it to be inlarged in them that were in the place of Magistracy with him so who so loves dwels in God and the same spirit of love do they communicate to their brethren so that they walke by the same rule and aim at the same end The fruit of the Spirit is love Gal. 5.27 But the works of the flesh are adultery c. They that walk in love have received of the Spirit they have received of the Spirit of the holy Ghost for the Spirit lusts against envy Judg. 9.22 23. Vse 1. It teacheth us there is no love to be found towards our brethren but amongst spiritual men for if we love one another there is a Spirit of God in us where the Spirit is not there is no love Love is not a fruit that grows upon thorns or on such a stock as nature brings forth the old Olive Object But many of Gods servants bring forth sowr fruit which will neither benefit themselves nor others therefore how is it said that Gods Spirit is in them Answ They have sowr Oyl distilling from the old stock for there are many branches in us that suck sowrnesse from the old stock though there be a spirit of love in Gods children yet many times it doth not run forth But when you see Christian love expressing it self it springs not from nature but the Spirit of God 2 A ground of much comfort to any soul that doth finde his spirit suppled with any compassion If you can finde your spirits mourning for the evill case of your brother it is a signe that Gods Spirit is in you 3 Labour we to preserve our hearts in brotherly love for love is a fruit of the Spirit of God so much as a mans heart runs sowr and hard so much doth he damp the lively Spirit of God which the Lord hath shed abroad in his heart therefore as we desire that God would for ever keep us in a good estate and that his Spirit should not be grieved by us we must keep this Spirit of love that is the Comforter when we grieve the Spirit of God we shall have grief enough If the Spirit of comfort that is in us be uncomfortable how great is that dis-comfort Doct. That such to whom God hath given of his Spirit of love they maintain mutual entire and constant fellowship with God and they know it God dwels in us which is more then to have God to dwell with us if God did but dwell with us it would argue much happinesse but this is more for God to dwell in us We are not onely near one another and branches one of another but one body with another he abides in us as the head we in him as the members Quest What is this We know it Answ This act of knowledge is more then an act of faith men may believe more to be true then they know Heb. 11.3 By faith we understand the world was made faith understands a thing to be done and so we may be perswaded of the truth of a thing Something we know by reason which by sence we cannot know if it be not evident by sence and reason we cannot know it the meaning is we have evident sence and evident reason for it Reason 1. Is taken from the evidence of sence when God hath shed abroad into our hearts a spirit of love we shall see and feel the favour
in the Scripture that bears such strong witnesse to Christ Zech. 4.6 It s not by might or power but by my Spirit that any building of grace is built Answ There is in the Scripture 1. A Spirit of power 2. Of Perfection First Of power Luke 24.49 and it s that power that fell on them on the day of Pentecost which our Saviour intimated to them expresly John 20.21 22. so that their words remit sins and ease the conscience and bind it 1 Cor. 14.24 25. 2 Cor. 13.3 4 5. Now then the Spirit breathing in the Apostles though their outward man was base and weak yet their words were mighty and powerfull and even as Christ was most full of power when he was most debased There is a threefold power in the Scripture 1. There is a mighty power therein to convince men of their sinfull estate and of their need of Christ John 16 8 9. 2. A power to comfort the hearts of Gods servants in sence of his favour Rom. 8.15 hence the Spirit is called the Comforter John 14.15 and when the soule findes this successe it witnesseth that no writings are like them to cast down to hell and lift up to heaven again 3. There is a Spirit of power in the Scripture to cleanse us from all defilements to purifie our hearts to overcome the world to strengthen us against all temptations and discouragements This Spirit breathing in us let● us see that Christ came fully furnished for our redemption I can doe all things through Christ that strengthneth me Phil. 4.13 by the power of Christ I can learn to stand even in every condition of life and to walk in his fear Ezek. 36.25 26. Secondly In the Scripture there is a Spirit of perfection whereby the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished to every good work 2 Tim. 3.16 17. There is no calling but a man may finde abundant directions for it in the Scripture the Heathen Moralists have written concerning our carriages towards men but little towards God so the laws of men a man may fulfill them all and yet live an hypocrite and die a reprobate which shews their imperfection and therefore mens laws are often changed and altered if therefore a man find such a word as that when he understands it he finds sufficient directions to lead him in all his wayes and bring him to Heaven this shews the divine perfection of the Scripture that what once it delivers that is absolutely perfect and this Spirit bears witnesse to it 1. The Spirit bears witnesse to Christ as it breaths in our hearts for though the Spirit should breath never so strongly yet if we have not the evidence of it in our hearts we shall not know the truth of such a thing Now the Spirit breathing in our consciences is a Spirit of peace and purity both springing from Christ the Spirit of peace perswades our consciences of the vertue and power of Christs bloud had it not been for Christs bloud we should never have had peace but have been like Cain living in Nod in continuall agitation but Christs bloud speaks peace 2. As he came by bloud so he came by water and this is witnessed by the Spirit of Sanctification and there is in this Spirit a threefold work sutable to this water 1. A Spirit of refreshing as water refresheth the dry and thirsty soule Isa 44.3 so doth the water of the Spirit allay the heat and scorch of Gods wrath 2. As springing water washes and cleanses along as it goes so doth the Spirit of God wash us with clean water Ezek. 36.25 unlesse it be troubled with some obstructions which yet it will overgrow and run clear 3. As water hath a power to make trees fructifie about it Psal 1.3 so the water of life gives a Christian such supplying strength unto his heart that it makes him strong and fruitfull that whatsoever God or man requires he in some good measure is inabled to perform it so that a Christian soule by this Spirit breathing in him can plainly discern that Christ came by water and bloud Vse 1. May be a just refutation of Popery that places the ground-work of our faith upon the testimony of the Church ask them how they will be saved they will say by Christ ask them how came you to believe in Christ By the testimony of the Scripture But how know you the truth of the Scripture by the testimony of the Church say they But may not the Church erre Did the whole Church so dangerously erre as all to consent to the crucifying of Christ and may not they as well erre in putting on us false Scripture Are not all men subject to errours and therefore a Christian dares not build his faith upon humane testimony for their testimony can give but humane credulity but a Christian tels them be therefore believes the Scripture because the Spirit of God breaths in them by a Spirit of power and perfection and withall Gods Spirit breaths in him such peace as he knows Christ came by bloud and such purity as he knows Christ came by water Object Thus you will pi● the Scripture upon your own private spirit Answ This is not our private spirit but the same spirit that breaths in the Scripture which witnesseth to our conscience the truth Vse 2. To teach Christians never to rest in any Scripture they read or Ministers they hear before they have examined things by the testimony of the Spirit it 's not the saying of all men that can assure you of this but it 's the Spirit of God in the Scripture and in your hearts that must testifie that Christ came by water and bloud if you doe not discern this Spirit in you all your faith is but humane credulity no● divine faith Vse 3. For tryal of our faith whether it be the faith of Gods elect or no. Dost thou believe that Jesus is the Son of God Yes thou wilt say But what witnesse hast thou to believe it Is it from the Scripture or because thou hast been taught so and so takest it up as a Principle Why this is no divine faith But dost thou find a Spirit within thee which convinceth thy conscience purifies thy heart Why this divine witnesse testifies that Jesus Christ came by water and bloud Vse 4. Of consolation in the testimony of the Spirit whereas the world 〈◊〉 ●est you ● is but a delusion and a fancy he not deceived This spirit 〈◊〉 truth and such a Spirit as witnesseth that true faith only trust not thy private spirit which ag●ees not with the Spirit breathing in the Scripture and therefore both are to be joyned together the Spirit breathing in the Scripture and the Spirit breathing in our hearts 1 JOHN 5.6 the latter part Because the Spirit is truth THe Spirit which beareth witnesse to Christ is amplified by the effect witnesse bearing and by 〈◊〉 junct of truth which is the cause of his bearing witnesse he br●●s witnesse
it which speaks in the heart of every believer John 6.44 No man can come to me except the Father which sent me draw him as none come to Christ except the Father draw him so he draws none but by the same power whereby he sent Christ and that was by his Soveraign authority if God should draw us onely by the cords of men we should break through all as the Israelites did Hos 11.4 But when God shakes our hearts by an Almighty power and lets us see the danger of our estate and after enlightens us to see the wayes of salvation then he draws a man on to Christ take a naturall man all the world cannot perswade him of his dangerous estate but he is perswaded of his good nature and good heart towards God Secondly If he be convinced of it all the world cannot perswade him that any promise belongs to him and therefore here God must put forth an Almighty power of a Spirit of adoption whereby he is brought on to believe the promises before he had onely an humane credulity now he believes it from a testimony within himselfe John 6.45 2 The Son of God bears witnesse in our hearts of this truth by speaking freedome and liberty to our souls from the guilt of sin John 8.36 If the Son shall make you free then shall you be free indeed that whereas before we were bound to our sins and lusts and wayes Christ comes and sets us free from all so that now we serve not our selves or men but the Lord Christ by this a Christian knows that surely Christ is the Son of God that hath made me a son of God my selfe 3 The Spirit bears witnesse to our hearts of this truth by convincing our hearts of it John 16.9 Secondly By working a Spirit of faith and a spirit of joy in believing John 14.16 17. Hence he is called the Comforter Thirdly By giving us a spirit to make us overcome the temptations of the world and the lusts of our own hearts 2 Tim. 1.7 1 John 4.4 and this testimony is divine 1 Because it is the revelation and will of God himselfe 2 Because it is above all humane power thus to draw us and convince us and strengthen and comfort us against all temptations For the three witnesses on earth they likewise bear witnesse to this truth in our hearts 1 The Spirit that is the Spirit breathing in the Word hath such a mighty power to enlighten and quicken and strengthen a soul that whatsoever the Spirit speaks in the Scripture the same it witnesseth in our souls 1 Cor. 14.24 25. 2 Water bears witnesse in our hearts to this truth that is the water of Sanctification doth so cleanse and cool and refresh the conscience of a man and make him so fruitful in his Christian course that it 's plainly a divine testimony it passeth all the power of the creature thus to pacifie and quiet the conscience it is only the Spirit of God that is able thus to pacifie a guilty soul thus to cleanse an impure heart and to make these dry barren stocks as we are fruitful this is a divine work of Gods Spirit 3 The bloud of Christ witnesseth this truth to our hearts by being sprinkled on our consciences and so speaking peace to us this is a divine work 2 The same bloud purifies every Ordinance and creature there would be no vertue in any Ordinance nothing would doe us good but for the bloud of Christ sanctifying it to our use now this testimony is of greater force then the testimony of all the sons of men together There be three things needful in a testimony 1 That it be certain 2 Evident 3 Powerfull and Effectuall 1 This divine testimony is more certain then all the testimonies of the world because God is greater in knowledge and so knows more then men can 2 Because he is greater in truth men may erre but God cannot lye Tit. 1.2 3. Rom. 4.2 2 This testimony is more evident to make a thing evident is required 1 Objectum perspicuum 2 Organum bene affectum 3 Medium apte dispositum Now God doth make this truth evident by the concurrence of all these 1 He lets us plainly see the danger of sin and the vertue and worth of Christs bloud God reveals his Son to our hearts John 3.12 Gal. 1.46 so what the Gospel speaks of his Son the same is plainly revealed and so he makes the object perspicuous 2 He opens the eyes of men to discern it to long after it to tast of his vertue and power Acts 26.18 1 Pet. 2.3 1 Cor. 2.14 15. A natural man sees nothing of this work 3 He clears the Medium that is the Word and Sacraments Prayer Christian Communion so that whereas before we lookt at them but as beggerly rudiments of little power or worth after God hath once enlightned us we see the power and vertue of God therein so plainly as if we had been touched by the Sun beams 3 This divine testimony is far more powerfull then any humane testimony Heb. 4.12 13. 2 Cor. 10.4 5. The Ordinances of God are mighty and effectual through God so to change and renew our hearts that no humane power is able to reach them Vse 1. To refute two doctrines of the Romish Church 1 That the last ground-work of faith is resolved on the testimony of the Church Ask them if they believe Jesus to be the Son of God they say yes ask them why Because the Scripture say so ask rhem But why doe you believe the Scripture From the testimony of the Church say they so that their best faith is but humane credulity But ask a true Protestant why he believes Jesus to be the Son of God he tels you because the Scripture say so ask him why he believes the Scripture he saith not because the Church believes so but he believes it from a testimony within himselfe What say they you trust a private spirit of your own nay his private spirit is common with him to all believers ever since the world was and that spirit is no other then the Spirit of God that breatheth in all his children Besides he hath other witnesses in his heart the Spirit the water and the bloud and this is a divine testimony greater then the witnesse of all the world so that here is a double errour of theirs 1 In grounding their faith upon the Churches testimony 2 In blaspheming the Spirit of God for a private spirit Fundamental errours That Doctrine that lifts the Church from Christ and builds it on the testimony of the Fathers and the Schools that doctrine overthrows the foundation for other foundation can no man lay then what is laid already even Jesus Christ 2 It refutes another uncomfortable doctrine of the Romish Church that teach that a man cannot by divine faith have assurance of his estate in grace and salvation for say they all divine faith is generall thus he that repents
the fruits of his mediation 2. In our hearts and wills we have Christ when we look at him as our chiefest good that there is nothing in heaven or earth that we desire in comparison of him this is an act of the will and affections Psal 73.25 Psal 42.1 2. this is called hungering and thirsting after Christ No hunger is satisfied without eating of that we hunger after so when a soul hungers and thirsts after Christ give him pleasures and profits yet they satisfie not except you give him Christ and this is an high point of worship Gal. 6.14 when our hearts are set on him that our chiefest care is to get him our greatest griefe to lose him our chiefest delight in him why if we be thus affected to Christ we have him Object The Church earnestly desired and sought after Christ yet found him not Cant. 3. 1 to 4. Answ 1. She could neither have sought after him nor desired him except she had had him 2. When she sought him and said She found him not she means I found him not in that measure of peace and comfort and fellowship I desired but yet she had him for she said She sought him whom her soul loved Secondly Such a soul as it thus highly prizeth and desireth and hungers after Christ so it debased it selfe the more we esteem him the more we debase our s●lves the more we love him the lesse we love our selves when Christ once revealed himselfe to J●b Job 40.3 What laid he Behold Lord I am vile see Job 42.4 5. No soul that highly prizeth and aff●cteth Christ but the more he d●saffects and loaths himselfe as unmeet to come into the presence of Christ Isa 6.4 5. Then said I woe is me for I am undone because I am a man of unclean lips for mine eyes have seen the King the Lord of Hosts the more he sees Christ the more he abhors himselfe as an unclean and abominable thing that if he could he would goe out of himselfe this selfe-denyall is the first principle in Christianity Luke 9.23 3. We worship Christ in our lives by our obedience in doing his will and by patience in suffering for him Our obedience is a true worship of Christ 1. When a man hath such respect to all Gods Commandements in his heart that there is not one of them but he hath respect unto and submits his heart to it this is a principall part of Gods worship Psal 119.6 2. When he hath respect to them all in his conversation 2 Cor. 10.4 5. The Gospel of Christ brings every thought into subjection now this is a marvellous worship of Christ when a man hath not a thought in him but it is subjected to Christ 4. We worship Christ in our lives by our patience in suffering if the Lord call us to suffer for him when we can sit down quietly and rest well contented to endure his good pleasure with patience this is a principall part of Gods worship 1 Sam. 3.18 It was a good testimony of Elies sincerity when he heard of a wofull judgement denounced against him It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth good in his eyes we have the Lord for our Lord when we give him leave to rule us as he pleaseth and patiently submit our selves unto him in every thing Job 1.21 an argument we have God for our God otherwise how should we complain and murmur at the instruments Psal 39.9 Lam. 3.29 The Church complaining of her misery tells us the frame of her Spirit in such a time it is good to bear the yoak in our youth she sits alone and keeps silence Psal 62.1 2. Micah 7.7 8. This is a solemn worship of Christ if God call a man to suffer for his Name divers evills he is so far from being ashamed of it that it is his glory and rejoycing if any man suffer as a Christian let him rejoyce in that behalfe when a man is thus framed to obedience in doing and patience in suffering the will of God such a soul is a true worshipper of Christ and by worshipping him we have him if contrary we look at Christ as no such excellent thing but are ashamed of him if we can look at our selves as great men in the world and scorn to seek and mourn after Christ when we will not be under Christs yoak but scorn to stoop to him in every thing and by no means we will endure any hardship for him why then we doe not worship Christ and if we doe not worship him we have him not and not having him we have no life 5. We are said to have Christ by purchase this is exprest partly in that parable Mat. 13.46 One way to have this Pearl is to buy it see Isa 55.1 2. Come and buy yea without money why without money Cant. 8.7 If a man should give all the treasure of his house for Christ they would be greatly dispised Acts 8.19 when Simon Magus offered money for the gift of the holy Ghost Peter tells him Thy money perish with thee yet many times without parting with money we cannot have him the holding fast of money oft-times looseth Christ upon this ground the young man went without him Mat. 19. 21 to 25. Upon the poynt of money Christ parted with the Pharisees Luke 16.14 In three cases money must be parted with else you shall not purchase Christ First When the Lord upon some speciall command requires it as he did the young man expressely now for him to stick for money for want of parting with it he lost Christ upon the same point Ananias and Saphira lost Christ because they kept back some of the price Acts 5.1 2 3 4. a fearfull judgement felt on them to shew how dangerous it is to stand upon tearms with Christ in this case money must be parted withall Secondly When in times of persecution a man cannot have Christ with peace and purity unlesse he be willing to part with all for him as sometimes the m●rket goes higher sometimes lower but at what rate soever it goes a Christian is resolved to take Christ at the highest rate sometimes unlesse a man be content to be spoyled of all his goods he cannot have liberty of conscie ce in this case set money and goods and lands and all goe and suffer joyfully the spoyling of your goods Heb. 10.34 Thirdly When sometimes by laying out money we may win Christ as in case we want a good Ministry among us and cannot have it unlesse we be willi●g to lay out money for obtaining the Gospel and this he calls sowing to the spirit Gal. 6.8 As a man by laying out money provides things needfull for him so when a man layes out for spirituall uses he shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting In these three case money must be parted with and yet if you think money can purchase Christ you are not worthy of him 1. Christ must be purchased by parting with all those strong
of a promise which is fed by a promise Many times a word of grace and wise admonition sinks so deep into the heart as that it makes many a one amend his wicked wayes and take better courses and reform his life but this is no evident signe of spirituall life So an hypocrite may be so far convinced as to turn the stream of his life and yet without all power of godlinesse and the ground is we cannot receive life from the words or works of the Law it 's altogether impossible Gal. 3.21 All true spirituall life is from some word of promise that hath been dispen●ed to us in the Word The word of the Law may reclaim us from giving outward offence but yet without all respect or obedience to God But when we are quickened by a word of promise then the love of God constraineth us Obj. Is it not ordinary for the word of the Law to cast down and humble us before we can lay hold on a promise Answ True Yet this is not that which makes a man a new man this may reach to the reformation of many outward sins but yet it gives not spirituall life till we begin to think of and long after Christ and meditate and talk of him till at length the sight of Christ doth so work on us that we do not only long after him but we so receive him and imbrace him that we are inlightned by him A third cause of life is the Spirit of God John 3.6 There is a shedding abroad of the Spirit into the heart of every regenerate man that he hath not the same spirit he had before Now a mans spirit is the bent and inclination of the soul Eph. 4.23 Be ye renewed in the spirits of your minds The soul and the body is the same But there is another spirit they see other things they never saw before judge otherwise then they did before now they have new thoughts and judgements and affections so that their heart is far off from earthly things and let on spirituall things All things are become new A new heart new conference new imployment new company the whole man hath another frame of spirit in him He that finds it thus hath life For application Consider therefore how you finde your hearts speaking concerning your estates Do you finde indeed that sometimes you have had good motions cast in but before God was pleased to call you to his grace nothing did you good Doe you finde your life wrought by a spirit of promise Do you finde that you are renewed to a new inclination and frame of spirit then you have life Your life springs from true causes if not you have not life A second sort of signes of life is from the effects of spirituall life And 1 Justification or pardon of sins is a principall part of our spirituall life Psal 32.2 3. And this is called justification to life Rom. 5.18 Even as a condemned mans pardon is the life of the man so is the pardon of our sins the life of our souls Now the first effect flowing from the pardon of our sin is 1 Some inward peace of conscience some inward satisfaction that he never found before My sin is not pardoned at least not manifested so to be till I finde some measure of inward peace Rom. 5.1 What was it that burthened thy conscience but guilt of sin If therefore God say to my soul Son thy sins be forgiven thee upon this follows the tranquility of the mind and sometimes in that unspeakable manner that passeth all understanding Phil. 4.7 Though this be not so ordinary yet they alwayes finde a secret peace and ease as if you had cast off milstones from the heart Isa 32.17 The effect of righteousnesse is quietnesse and assurance for ever if sin be pardoned peace and everlasting assurance follows A 2. effect of this life of Justification is that look as you see in a morall life no man hath received life but he strives to maintain it so that all that he hath will he give for his life So if thou hast received the life of the pardon of thy sins thou shalt finde a serious and constant care of preserving that life and peace so that you will let all go rather then the peace of your conscience Thy loving kindnesse is better then life Psal 63.4 And therefore if I finde a tender care in me to maintain my peace it 's a signe I have received life seeing I am so carefull to maintain it A man that hath been in a great debt and lately paid it he is carefull to run on the score no more so when God hath blotted out the score of our sins a Christian is very sollioitous to sin no more but that he may live an holy and spotlesse life all his dayes Notable is the example of Joseph Gen. 39. How shall I commit this great wickednesse and sin against God How shall I break my peace of conscience and run on a new score Sometimes indeed Gods children have received pardon of sins and yet afterwards turned Gods grace into wantonnesse but withall observe if they have been overtaken with some grievous lusts the losse of their peace and favour of God hath been more bitter to them then death it self and if the Lord give us hearts follicitous to maintain our peace it is a sign that he hath given us peace those sins are pardoned which we abhor it 's the nature of life to preserve it self and to expell what may be an enemy to life And this is a signe our peace is not counterfeit but sound if we be carefull to preserve it A 3. effect of our life of Justification is that which our Saviour gives Luke 7.47 Her sins which are many are forgiven her because she loves much He that loves much hath much forgiven him The love of God in some measure proportionable to the sin pardoned is a good evidence of the pardon of our sins Gods pardons are lively pardons they leave not a man as he was but whom he pardons them he heals This woman was a notorious Harlot her loving much shewed that her many sins were forgiven her according to the multitude and measure of sins pardoned such is the measure of our love to God and his Saints And indeed there is none hath so little forgiven him but he thinks it a great deal as indeed well he may and thinks himselfe bound to love God abundantly For application Consider therefore what peace thou hast Perhaps thou wilt say I have had peace all my life long but such peace is ill rooted it springs not from a word of God And 2 It 's fruitlesse Thou sayst thou hast peace but what care hast thou to maintain it and to expell thy sins which hinder thy peace And again if thou hast such peace where is thy love If that be wanting pardon of sin is wanting If thou wouldst have good ground of the pardon of thy sins try thy self
the whole man the understanding will and affections 2 Cor. 7.1 1 Thess 5.23 Well then may it be called a lively fruitfull hope Reas Hope comes to all the ordinances of God with expectation that it shall finde benefit from the Word prayer and good company Hope waits on God for good in every ordinance and then it never goes away empty it strive before it comes to prepare the heart and to cleanse it from all filthinesse Vse 1. This may discover unto us the wonderfull loathsomnesse of sin If sin were not an excrement why should we purge it out We purge out nothing but filthy loathsome things and therefore when hope is said to purge it implyes that sin is loathsome 2. Hence discern the soundnesse of our hope Do you finde your hearts daily striving to ●leanse your selves if not thy hope will make thee ashamed If thy hope do not set thee on work every day to cleanse thy heart truly thy hope is nothing but a vain delusion and nothing will more sting thee at the last day when thou shalt hope for heaven thou shalt be cast out of Gods presence 3. Let it teach all Christians as they would not be ashamed of their hopes to make their calling and election sure Let their hopes make them purge and cleanse themselves And let not Christians think it is enough to purge themselves but they must purge their families A Christian must suffer none in his family to be uncircumcised God would have killed Moses because he had one uncircumcised Magistrates must cleanse their Towns and places where they live Good Josiah when he was to celebrate the Passover he set himselfe with all his heart to purge Jerusalem and Judah Doct. 3. The purity of Christ is the pattern of every Christians purity Or thus Every hopefull Christian makes Christs purity the pattern of his 1 Cor. 11.1 Heb. 12.12 Be ye followers of me as I am of Christ Set before you a pattern of a cloud of witnesses 1 John 2.6 He that abides in Christ ought to walk as he hath walked Why should every Christian make Christ the pattern of his purity 1. From the end of Gods predestination He hath predestinated us to be conformed to the image of his Son Rom. 8.29 And God in all things requires that we should grow up to the fellowship of the stature of Jesus Christ 2. From the perfection of the pattern All other patterns of godly men will fail us in some things but Christ is a perfect pattern he will fail us in nothing Vse 1. This should teach us to reject the society of such men as inwardly loath the name of Puritans alas if they cannot endure the name of purity in poor weak Christians how would they hate the purity of Christ If they cannot endure the brightnesse of a candle how will they endure the brightness of the Sun and yet they say they love Christ But if they have not purity how can they love Christ and if they love not Christ they are accursed for ever 2. This reproves those who though they do not hate purity yet they think themselves very well if they exceed the worst sort of men they are no whore-mongers nor theeves nor deceivers Alas if there be no more then morall honesty they shall come far short of Heaven 3. This reproves the Romish Church that think ordinary Christians are not bound to so strict a pattern as their regular Christians Did ever any of them reach higher then Christ and is not every Christian exhorted to set Christ as a pattern 4. This reproves another sort of Christians who if they have got but such a measure of grace as they are assured to be in a state of grace they never look further but now they look out for themselves in the world as if they might rest in what is behinde and never presse forward to what is before them contrary to Paul Know O Christian it is not enough to get truth of grace nor some purity but you must grow pure as Christ is pure Vse 2. This may exhort us all as we would maintain our hope to be made like Christ hereafter so to strive to this exactnesse of purity to purifie our selves as he is pure If you would be hopefull Christians you must be growing Christians growing up to the measure of the purity of Christ decay in growing and you decay in hope No Christian so full of joy and hope as he that is every day getting something and growing up to perfection 1 John 2.6 Phil. 3.12 13 14. Motives to stir us up to grow in grace 1. So soon as you slack this care your hope faith and grace waxeth weak If we see our bodies do not voyd excrements for many dayes we think our bodies are not in a good state but some diseases lye on us How can we have an healthfull soul when we purge not our corruption many a day 2. From the great uncomelinesse that is in us if we do not strive to be pure Is it not an uncomely thing to see the head to be of gold and the members partly brasse partly clay and dirt 3. It 's very grievous to the Spirit of God that we should be no better for all it hath dwelt so long in us When Christ had been long with his Disciples and they were not bettered by him he up braids them O foolish and slow of heart to believe how long shall I be with you It was a griefe to Christ that he should be long with his Disciples and they not to grow up to strength of grace Obj. But doth not virtue consist in a golden mean Ans Virtue consists not in a mean between two degrees but in a mean between two extreams You may exceed the bounds of righteousnesse and so be unrighteous but you cannot exceed the degrees of righteousnesse Christ saith Be perfect as your heavenly father is perfect Can you then be too pure and holy No you cannot though you were as full of g●ace and holinesse as Christ himselfe 4. As ever you desire to be worthy partakers of the Sacrament then labour to purifie your selves The reason why many a christian comes to the Sacrament and finds no comfort is because they grieved the Spirit of God before they came by neglecting to cast out those obstructions which hinder the influence of the head to the members 1 Cor. 11.30 31. Means to help us to purifie our selves 1. Be perswaded that you are not in a safe estate till you are grown up to some good measure of purity You would think him in a poor case that should live 200 years and yet for want of evacuation should live in sicknesse and weaknesse And so a christian is in an uncomfortable estate unlesse he purge himselfe 2. Be very watchfull over thy wayes 3. Use the ordinances of God constantly Say not after conversion It is no matter whether we be alwayes conversant in Gods ordinances but at some times when the
Spirit moves us Labour we to carry our selves not as idle hearers but as faithfull doers labour we to see our spots and deformities and strive to purge them labour we to practise new duties as they are renewed to us 1 JOHN 3.4 Whoso committeth sin transgresseth the Law IN the words and in the following to verse 7. he useth four motives to stir up to self-cleansing The 1. is from the danger of committing sin proved from the proper definition of sin Sin is the transgression of the Law 2. From the end of Christs coming and that was to take away sin 3. From the pattern of Christ who was without sin 4. From the practice of such as have any fellowship by union with Christ Whosoever abideth in Christ sinneth not Set out by the contrary He that committeth sin he hath neither seen Christ nor known him Doct. It is and ought to be a sufficient motive to every hopeful christian to abstain from sin because it is the transgression of the Law Numb 14.41 Why will ye goe up why will ye transgresse the Law The Rechabites were commended because they kept their fathers commandement And he hereby convinceth the Jewes of rebellion that the Sons of mortall men should make more conscience of obeying their dead fathers then his people of his Laws Dan. 9.11 Neh. 9.34 35. Rom. 2.22 23 24. Jam. 2.9 Reas 1 From the Law-giver he looks at every sin as an abrogation of his ordinances Deut. 27. ult He that walks in his Law confirmeth it sets his seal to it They who breake it would make it of no force This is one act of high rebellion against God 2 Sam. 12.7 8. 2 From the wrath and displeasure God pronounceth against every transgressor Jer. 7.19 44.4 3. God takes it as a dishonour to the power and efficacy of his word Jer. 5.22 23. God looks at it as a more boysterous and unruly passage in a man to break the bounds of his Law then for the Sea to breake its bounds 4. From the delight God takes in the keeping and keepers of his Law 1 Sam. 15.22 He more delights in obedience then in the cattle of an hundred hills Prov. 23.26 My Son give me thy heart That is more acceptable then all the Sacrifices Transgression is as rebellion and the sin of witchcraft Reas 2. Feom the Law it self 1 It 's holy just and good and therefore it is abominable to transgresse it For this is a sin against Holinessc Justice and Goodnesse 2. From the vigour and efficacy of this Law offering life to the obedient Psal 19.11 1 Tim. 4.8 Psal 119.16 death to the disobedient Gal. 3.10 Isa 59.1 2. 2 Chron. 16.11 Vse 1. To reprove such as are afraid to breake mens Laws for feare of penalty and are sensible of such dangers but are not afraid to violate and breake the holy and righteous Lawes of God This argues a most rebellious and revolting heart Such are not hopefull christians 2. To teach and exhort us to make conscience of all our wayes and to take heed to our paths lest we transgresse the Law and sin against God Prov. 28.9 If we turn away our ears from hearing Gods Law even our prayers are abominable The consideration of this should keep us from secret petty sins For though man seeth not yet God seeth and will punish 2 Sam. 12.11 12. If we think to get honour profit or pleasure by sin we deceive our selves Is it not as grievous a thing to have our soule wounded by our darling childe as our mortall enemy It is all one to be stabbed to the heart with a pen knife and with a sword Every sin wounds and rents our hearts Abstain we from all sin even the least sin is the transgression of the Law 3. This refutes such as think the Law is not given to the regenerate The Apostle here encourageth hopefull christians not to transgresse the Law Obj. But we are not under the Law but under grace Answ He means we are not under the covenant of works but of Grace Psal 119.105 Obj. As Christs passive obedience freeth from the curse so his active obedience freeth from the commanding power of the Law Answ 1. Christ hath done this and therefore those that are in Christ fear not death by their disobedience nor look for life by their obedience but we look at the Law as a rule of obedience that we may walke according to God and shew that we live by endeavouring to keep his commandements Take heed of Satans slights that would make the Gospel a Supersedeas to the Law in certain things pray not preach not but when the Spirit moveth Thus you shall set up a Spirit of delusion For sin is a transgression of the Law This is a perfect definition of sin transgression is the genus the Law the difference By Law in Scripture without addition is meant the Law of the ten commandements Jam. 4 11 12. 2.10 11. Obj. 1. What if a man sin against the Law of nature is not that a sin Answ Ir is in effect and substance the same Rom. 2.15 Though the Law of nature was more dimly and darkly known Moses law was but a new draught of the Law of nature in innocency Heathen Law-givers Philosophers and Poets have expressed the effect of all the commandements save the tenth Rom. 2 14.15 Obj. 2. Was it not a sin to transgresse the Ceremoniall and Judiciall Law Answ To the Jewes it was The ceremoniall Law was but an examplification of the second Commandement and the Judiciall Law doth but explain the second Table The Judiciall in regard of the equity is included in the morall Law the Ceremoniall stood in force till Christ dyed Obj. 3 Is it not a sin to transgresse the Gospel and is not unbeliefe a sin Joh. 16.9 Is not new obedience required in the Gospel Joh. 14.21 Ezek. 36.27 What say you to the commandements of the Gospel that we should walke as Christ walked Answ The commandements of the Gospel are all of them reduceable under the commandements of the Law God commanding perfect conformity and obedience to his whole will not only revealed but to be revealed If God command David to bring in musick into the Temple 2 Chron. 29.25 though Moses speake nothing of it yet this was expressed to heare and obey God in all things Deut. 18.18 God commanded to hearken to Christ Moses improperly and hiddenly delivered the substance of the Gospel partly in the ceremonial Law partly in the Sacrament of circumcision and the passover Christ was veyled under them Rom. 10.5.6 7 8. with Deut. 30.12 The word of faith spoken of by Moses Gal. 3.24 Transgression is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 want of Law and absence of it when a man speaks and doth without Law what we doe against it or beside the Law it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reas Taken from the end for which God gives the Law to be the means of perfection 2 Tim. 3.16 17.