there is a Legal Repentance before Conversion yet that which is Evangelical follows upon it and is no further pleasing to God than as it is exercised by faith but in respect to order of time the man repents and believes at once and so they are together It is a penitent Faith and a believing Repentance that is exerted they are therefore conjoyned Acts 20. 21. Testifying both to the Jews and also to the Greeks Repentance towards God and Faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ 7. For the right exerting of these Graces there is the exercise of a Spirit of Mourning and of Supplication There is a principle of this or there is such a Spirit habitually put into the man when he is new made but the improvement of it is in the practising of Faith and Repentance Here then 1. For the exerting of true Repentance he draws out a Spirit of mourning In Repentance we turn from sin to God in which turning there is not only an abstinence from the outward acts but a cordial renouncing and forsaking of those sins which we rightly repent of and for that end we must be made to see them to be evil and mischievous and that we have foolishly turned from God to them the genuine effect whereof upon the heart is to bemoan our selves by reason of them and hence the Scripture annexeth mourning unto Repentance as an inseparable concomitant of â hence that in Jer. 31. 18. I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning of himself c. And for the producing of this mourning God offers the conviction of the evil and bitterness then is in our sins Jer. 2 19. Know and see that it is an evil thing and bitter that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God c. Now there are two passages to be observed in this mourning 1. He bewails all his Sins Godly Sorrow is for Sin that is the procuring cause of all the sorrows that poor man is exposed unto and is therefore that which peculiarly calls for our mourning and this belongs to that sorrow which the Apostle tells us is so serviceable to true Repentance 2 Cor. 7. 10 Godly sorrow worketh repentance not to be repented of It is by this that we embitter sin to our selves and stir up in us an hatred of it for though sorrow be a mixt Affection yet it mainly partakes of hatred which is a separating affection and makes us to reject the Object of it Now if this sorrow be genuine it is universal it bears a respect to all sin because if it be right it is excited by the apprehension of the great evil there is in sin in the nature as well as in the effects of it which evil being in all sin it must needs extend to all hence that Psalm 119. 104. I hate every false way and where this hatred is there will be Sorrow for our having hurt our selves by it and therein dishonoured God 2. He more peculiarly laments the affronts that be hath offered to Christ who hath been set before him in the tenders of Grace This therefore is peculiarly remarked in Zech. 12. 10. They shall ãâã upon him whom they have pierced and they shall mourn for him as one mourneth for an only Son and be in bitterness for him as one is in bitterness for his first born Where the Gospel comes and Christ is exhibited together with the need that men have of him by reason of âin the convictions whereof are laid before men to perswade them of the necessity they stand in of having him to be their Saviour and men have made light of these invitations which have been given them they have not been perswaded of their misery by Sin and brought to accept of Christ to rescue them from it and have accordingly despised him neglected him chosen lying vanities before him and remained in their unbelief This is the great provocation under the Gospel Joh. 3. 19. This is the Condemnation that light is come into the world and men chuse darkness rather than light This Sin therefore they shall peculiarly mourn for and resent with the greatest sorrow 2. For the exercising of Faith this Spirit of mourning is ever accompanied with a Spirit of Supplication The first breathings and breakings forth of faith are in prayer When once Paul was Converted that is the next news we hear of him Acts 9. 11. Behold he prayeth This is the first sign by which the new born Christian discovers that he hath life in him True Prayer supposeth a principle of faith in the man âor only such a prayer as is spirited with it is acceptable to and prevalent with God Jam. 5. 16. The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much compare Chap. 1. 5 6. Let him ask of God but let him ask ââ faith God hath therefore made it a medium for our participation in the blessings engaged in the New Covenant Ezek. 36. 37. I will yet be enquired of for this by the House of Israel to do it for them In which prayer 1. He confesseth and bewaileth his sins before God Confession of sin is if not an essential part yet an inseparable adjunct of prayer by which sinful man addresseth God for mercy hence the promise so runs Prov. 28. 13. He that confesseth and forsaketh shall find mercy And for this reason when God invites back sliders to return and promiseth them acceptance he enters that caution Jer. 3. 13. Only acknowledge thine iniquity Nor indeed can we rightly come to Christ for a pardon and cleansing unless we lay open our malady before him so that there is a tacit confession of Sin in the very petitions that are put up on this account but God expects that in our solemn addressing of him we be explicit in it Levit. 26. 40. If they confess their iniquity and the iniquity of their fathers with their tresâoss c. 2. He requests his Converting Grace There must be a root of Conversion in the man before he can sincerely desire or petition to be Converted and indeed gracious mourning confession and supplication do follow after that inward and transforming work of the Spirit in the man Jer. 31. 19. After that I was turned I repented and after that I was instructed I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed c However in the actual turning of the Soul to God the man finds that it is not in his own power to turn himself but that he must have it given him of God and accordingly he asks it of him thus did Ephraim verse 18. Turn thou me and I shall be turned and God directs Israel to use such words Hos 14. 2. Take away all iniquity and receive us graciously and these cries are drawn forth by the efficacâ oâ preventing Grace 3 He professeth his acceptance of and reliancâ upon Christ for Salvation He acknowledge thâ that Christ is an All sufficient Saviour that there is a fulness of vertue in this founâain to take away all Sin and Uncleanness from
detestation He that mourns for one sin and can in the mean while hug another in his bosome and dally with it doth not mourn aright for any 6. Hath your sorrow lookt back to the sins of Youth Where God doth indeed give a spirit of mourning he will make a thorough work of it he will lead the Soul into a soaking consideration of all that hath been grievous to his holy spirit he will bring to mind old sins those that had been forgotten before and embitter them to us and the reason is because those sins also must be repented of for which there must be a suitable sorrow Time will not wear off the Guilt of any sin but Christ must cleanse it with his blood and in order thereto we must carry it to him for cleansing and we cannot do so aright but by bemoaning our selves before him for it David therefore in his address to God runs up hither Psal 25 7. Remember not the sins of my youth nor my transgressions 7. Have you in you an habitual frame of spiriââal mourning Godly sorrow is not a land-flood that is raised by some storm and is dried up again soon after that is over but it is a living spring it is an habitual Grace in the Soul and for that reason it is called a Spirit of Grace Chap. 12. 10. And this appears in a constant promptitude to mourn for sin upon every occasion Every sight of sin stirs up this Godly sorrow When ever you feel any stirrings of Concupiscence within it makes you to cry out Oh wretched man who shall deliver me Rom. 7. 24. If at any time you are over taken with any sin it makes you to groan and bewail your selves and say as he Psal 38. 18. I will declare mine iniquity I will be sorry for my sin Nay if you see others to sin though they commit it without remorse yet you cannot but mourn for it as he Psal 119. 136. Rivers of waters run down mine eyes because they keep not thy law And Verse 158. I beheld the transgressours and was grieved because they kept not thy word 8. Have you been duly affected in particular with the Affronts which you have offered to Jesus Christ This is specifyed Chap. 12. 10. They shall look upon me whom they have pierced they shall mourn for him as one mourneth for his only son and be in bitterness for him as one that is iâ bitterness for his first born There is nothing more bitter to one that is truly Converted than the ill entertainment that he hath given to a Saviour who came to him and offered himself to be one to him It may be you have led a sober life and cannot charge your selves with the immoralities which others have fallen into but you have lived under the Calls of the Gospel and have been many a time invited and sollicited to come to Christ to take him for a Saviour but you have made light of it neglected him been content without him you have often been inwardly striven with by the motions of the Spirit but you have quenched them and grieved him thereby You have lived in your unbelief and been contented so to do you have had a low esteem of him and of his Salvation you have relied on your own Righteousness and not submitted to his you sought him not would not come to him for life and thus you went on from year to year till he came to awaken and bring you home to himself Now all these things come to mind and they carry an emphatical consideration in them to make you vile in your own eyes and bewail your impenicence If ever you looked to Chrisâ with an eye of faith it hath been with a mournful eye 2. Have you experienced a spirit of Supplicatiâ We observed that it is inseparable from â former and would you be rightly inâmed about this prove your selves by these âings 1. Have you found kindled in you a restless âesire to be delivered from Sin True prayers âe the offering up of our real and cordial deâes unto God and hence by discovering the âuth of our desires we may come to know âhat our Prayers are Now there is none âat prays aright against sin but he that longs âsatiably to be rid of it There are many ãâã pray to have those miseries removed which âey undergo for sin but this is but Howling âd not Praying that is a right expressing of âur request on this account Hos 14. 2. Take âay all iniquity But the heart must go with ââ which it will never do till we are weary ââ sin and the presence of it is an heavy burâen to us 2. Have you found that this deliverance is no âhere else to be had The right prayer which âod hears and accepts is the prayer of the âedy the poor and the destitute Psal 102. 17. Christs Office is to Succour him that hath no âelper Psal 72. 12. As such therefore he exâcts that we come saying as Hos 14. 3. Ashur all not save us c. For in thee the fatherless âleth mercy And that we may thus pray it requisite that we have a deep sence imprinted on us that this is our condition God makes the Soul to despair of any succour from any other hand he is not only in a pit where therâ is no water but his eyes fail him Isa 41. 17. He finds himself to be engulphed in the waves oâ destruction and cryes out as they when jusâ ready to be swallowed up Math 8. 25. Lord save us we perish 3. Have you been encouraged to go to God Iâ Prayer for this with hope A spirit of Supplication is a gracious frame that is put into the heart by the spirit of God and there are the Graces that are used in the exerting of it the principal of these is Faith and the first stirring of it is usually in Hope which hope is alwayâ at work and moveth in the genuine prayers oâ the people of God This hope hath not always alike strength in it but yet it hath thaâ degree of it whereby we are enabled to looâ with some expectation of receiving the good we ask for at the hands of God In youâ distress by reason of sin you resolved to go to God for help against it and what was it thaâ drew out this resolution was it not an apprehension that Christ was such a âountain foâ sin and at least a resolve that the thing iâ not impossible thus therefore he argued Jââ 3 9. Who can tell if God will turn and repent turn away from his fierce anger that we perish not 4. Have you freely confessed your sins in the Aggravations of them Right conâession alwayâ ââows from a spirit of Prayer God expects it Jer. 3. 13. Only acknowledge thine iniquity that thou hast transgressed against the Lord thy God c. David therefore tells us in what way he went for and how he obtained a pardon and the healing of his sins
quiet or satisfaction 6. There are many who cheat themselves with false hopes on this account The natural security in sinful man makes him ready to take easy satisfaction about his good estate and the delusions of Satan and the false reports of a carnal mind and the fair shews which there are in a common work of the Spirit aâ snares which they are entangled by there â upon this account great need to be cautioneâ against rash presumption lest otherwise you labour of a pernicious mistake thus the Apostle to them 1 Cor. 6. 9. Be not deceived 7. The Doctrine in hand affords you a sure Rule of Trial. Whatsoever difference there may be in the manner or degree of mourning oâ of the impressions which are made on thâ Conscience by the Terrors of the Lord yet when God makes the Gospel effectual for the application of the vertue of this Fountain to a Sinner he always gives a Spirit of Mourning and Prayer i. e. He gives Grace to mourn and pray after a Godly manner If therefore you can discover this to be in you and are not mistaken about it you have an evidence that will not deceive you Put your selves then upon the trial of them severally and that by such Rules as follow 1. Hath God poured upon you a Spirit of mourning for Sin have you received the Grace of God by sorrow And for proof of this 1. Did you ever mourn at all for Sin if not this Trial is resolved at once He that never mourned for sin did never partake in the saving vertue of this fountain and it is to be feared that a great many forward Professors will fall at this first Trial. There are many that build high but did never dig for a founâtion The stony ground hearers Religion âegins with joy as Mat. 13. 20. He heareth âe word and anon with joy receiveth it It may âe you have mourned for the fruits of sin for âour outward losses bereavements reproachâs pains c. but it hath not been the Sin that procured them but the things themselves âhat stirred up your sorrow and if the Sin it âelf was not bitter to you you never repaired âo the Grace of Christ to take it away 2. Have you mourned after a Godly sort It may be you have been touched with remorâes of Conscience Sin hath been set home upon you with terror but that may be and yet be only a part of the punishment of Sin in this life there is therefore a double sorrow for sin Godly and Worldly 2 Cor. 7. 10. And is yours a Godly one Try it by these things 1. Have you ever felt the bitterness of Sin it self Many an one finds sorrow by his sins and is forced to acknowledge that his Sin hath brought it upon him who yet is not led by it to see and believe that Sin is in its own nature so vile and evil as to be odious It may be he only reads it in the Law and he sees that God will maintain his own Law but mean while he lays the blame not on the sin that procured his sorrow but on the Law that had such a Sanction in it and he is therefore sorry for his sin only because he is sorry that there is such a Law that will not suffer him to siâ with impunity this is no Godly Sorrow it ââ not acted by Humility but by pride anâ prejudice and he saith as they Ezek. 33. 10 If our transgressions and our sins be upon us anâ we pine away in them how shall we then live 2. Have you been deeply oppressed with the burden of siri so as thereby to be made weary of it Though God improves the troubles and mischiefs procured by Sin to bring us to see the evil of it and cry out by reason of thâ bitterness there is in it yet in a kindly mourning sin it self is made to be a burden that we cannot tell how to bear and hereupon we long to be rid of it and earnestly seek after a freedom from it thus it was with Paul Rom. 7 24. Oh wretcheâ man that I am whâ shall deliver the from the body of this death We seek a parâââ for we are undone without it but we âeek the death of Sin too nor can we be at quieâ but in the assurance and experience of the beginning of it in us and a comfortable perswaââon that it will ere long be wholly destroyed hence that groan of his Psal 38. 4. Mine iniquities are gone over mine heaâ as an heavy burden they are too heavy for me 3. Hath your mourning reached to and fined upon the sin of your nature It is not enough to have bewailed this or that particular actual Sin although God usually makes the conviction âf and the sorrow for such to be leading to âhe other but he that hath truly mourned for Sin hath been led up from thence to the fountain of corruption which is within and that hath driven him to seek after the Fountain of Grace which is in Christ and always true mourning ceaseth not till it cometh hither and lays out its greatest lamentations here thus it did in David in the forecited Psal 51. 5. And in the Church Isa 64. 6. We are all as an unclean thing and in Paul Rom. 7. 21. I find a law that when I would do good evil is present with me 4. Hath this sorrow wrought in you unto a true Repentance from Sin Repentance is one of the saving works of the Spirit wrought in Application and wherever Christ is communicated to any as a fountain of Grace there will be this effect of it Now Godly Sorrow is an ingredient of this Repentance and therefore if it be right it will ever accompany such a thing Repentance is a cordial turning from Sin to God Sorrow for sin is that which helps and promoves this turning if it be kindly for it is a separating Affection and as it derives from hatred of that which procures our trouble so it will express it in carrying us away from it hence that 2 Cor. 7. 9. Ye sorrowed to Repentance for ye were made sorry after a godly manner Iâ then ye have mourned never so bitterly for Sin yet if you have not reached to such a Repentance it hath not been right nor will it evidence your being in Christ 5. Hath this sorrow kindled in you an universal hatred of Sin When God embitters sin to us it is to make us to loath it and if this hatred be of the right stamp it will not only be against that one sin that hath done us the present sensible harm but all of the kind but every thing that bears the nature of sin on it we can say as he Psal 119. 104. I hate every false way And the reason is because if we mourned for sin under the consideration of its being sin we shall be engaged against every other sin in which we see the same grounds of hatred or
Psal 32. 5. I said I will confess my transgressions unto the Lord and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin And this confession hath been full and free and without any covers for he there saith Mine iniquity have I not hid It is a false heart that petitions help against sin and in praying for it pleads excuses and extenuations This proceeds from â spirit of bondage and not from a spirit of Adopâion 5. Have you humbled your selves to Gods foot in your Prayers to him A spirit of Prayer is a Soul humbling a Soul-abasing spirit hence that Psal 9. 12. He forgetteth not the cry of the humble and 10. 17. Lord thou hast heard the desire of the humble thou wilt prepare their heart thou wilt cause thine ear to hear He that prays as he ought to God for pardon and acceptance in Christ is deeply sensible of his great vileness by reason of sin and of his utter unworthiness of mercy and hence he goes with â rope on his head and sackcloth on his loyns i. e. He reââgns himself to God with all the Testimonials of his acknowledging that he hath no dependence on any thing but free Grace that he hath nothing of his own nor can he oblige God he therefore carries that with him in Dan. 9. 8. 9. To us belongs confusion of face to the Lord our God belong mercies and forgivenesses And his address is in that form Psal 25. 11. For thy name sake O Lord pardon mine iniquity for it is great 6. Have you Prayed for the Purging as well as earnestly as for Pardon Doubtless he that knows what it is to be Guilty before God will be very importunate in asking forgiveness and well he may for who can stand before Gods angâ But a kindly resentment of Guilt so as to justify God who condemns will be accompanied with an apprehension of the vileness of sin and that will make us weary of the presence of it and to loath our selves for it which will draw out our cryes to have it taken away both these therefore are included in that Hoâ 14 2. Take away all iniquity 7. Are your Prayers importunate or in good earnest There are many that pray in good words and it may be with much of noise too and yet not from a Spirit of Supplication they are not importunate and cordial requests which they put up He that is in earnest will take no denial but will press with greatest urgency and resolution One of the Ancients complains of himself that when he prayed against his Lusts he was afraid lest God should answer him this was not from the Spirit of Grace and if you are in good âarnest you will watch the answer of your prayers to see what return there is of them Psal 85. 10. I will hear what God the Lord will say 1â0 5. My Soul waiteth for the Lord more than they that watch for the morning 8. Do you persevere in Prayer As it is the duty of all Gods People so to do Eph. 6. 18. Praying always c. watching thereunto with all perseverance So it is one property of the Spirit of Prayer and there is a double perseverance to be eyed in this you are constant and unwearied in your duty you pray without ceasing 1 Thes 5. 17. You resolve as Psal 116 2. I will call upon him as long as I live And you hold on in it against all that would discourage you If you have not a present answer according to desire it doth not beat you off but quickens your ardour and you say as Isa 8. 17. I will wait on the Lord who hideth his face If he repulse you you turn his very repulses into arguments as that poor woman did Mat. 15. 25 26. 9 And doth the sense of sin always drive you to Prayer Do your Consciences at any time reflect and charge Guilt on you Doth this always bring you upon your knees and cause you to pour out your hearts in supplication Do you find the stirrings of inward Concupiscence and the Law in your members warring against the law of your mind What course do you take to get it mortified Is prayer now not neglected These are the motions of a Spirit of Supplication in a Child of God This course we find David is on all occasions taking in the Psalms USE III. For Exhortation in several particulars 1. Let this point awakened Sinners in what way to seek after Christ Certainly when God sets Sin home upon the Conscience of a Sinner it calls aloud to him to repair to the fountain And would you go to it so as to participate in the saving efficacy of it then 1. Do it mournfully Dry addresses to God are insignificant things and will find no acceptance Beg of God then to bestow such a Spirit upon you and labour to express it with all suitable deportment Labour therefore to embitter your Sin to your selves with all the proper considerations that may make it vile and fill you with the deepest sense of your misery by reason of it This is the only way for you to give God his glory both of his Righteousness in condemning you and his rich mercy in pardoning and healing you You will never come humbly unless you come mourning and this is the way to obtain the blessing from him God takes distinct notice of this and he is pleased with it see Jer. 31. 18 with 20. I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himself c. Is Ephraim my dear Son c. And we find that Christ was anointed purposely for the relief of such Isa 61. begin 2. Do it with Supplications If ever God giveth you the experience of the vertue of the Fountain in you for the taking away of your Sin and Uncleanness he will make you to pray for it he hath said Ezek. 36. 37. I will be sought to c. Seek his face and favour confess your sins and keep not silence seek to him in Christ's name and present your petition before him this is the right returning to God Joel 2. 12. By thus doing you will acknowledge Christ to be the Fountain of Grace when you do seek it of him and call upon him for it And for your encouragement know it that if you do indeed thus seek him you shall find him If a persecuting Saul prays to him he observes it and accepts it of him Acts 9 11. Behold he prayeth Yea he hath said Psal 50. 15. Call upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorify me 2. Let this stir up mourners to pray Are there any whose sins are made their burden and they are in bitterness by reason of them instead of nourishing despondent and despairing thoughts in you and making you to hide away from God let it drive you to him to seek his face and favour his pity and pardon let it draw forth that request from you in Psa 41. 4. Heal my Soul for I have sinned against
the fitting of him unto this great work Now this he did in his state of Humiliation the application of this belongs especially to his Exalted State Acts 5. 31. Him hath God exalted c. to give Repentance to Israel and remission of sins but he laid in for it in bis humbled state which was therefore introductory to the other as we are told in Phil. 2. 7 8. 9. In this he made the atonement without which Guilt could never have been removed hitherto belongs that â Cor. 5. 21. He was made sin for us that we might be made the righteousness of God through him in this his blood was made cleansing blood for the purifying us from all our iniquities according to 1 Joh. 1. 7. The Blood of Christ cleanseth from all sin 3. That the Reason of this was because there were some that needed it whom God purposed to make partakers in the benefits of it As if mans sin had not brought him to that exigency that without such a fountain he must have perished for ever Christ had not come so if God had not resolved to impart the efficacy of it to some such necessitous ones he would never have been at the charge of providing it God did not only intend the provision and exhibition of this fountain that so if any would come to and make use of it they might be saved from their Sins by it if that had been all Christ had died in vain for it is certain that none of fallen men would ever of their own accord come to him that is true of all till Christ draws them Joh. 5. 40. Ye will not come unto me that ye may have life The natural man loveth his Sin and delighteth to wallow in the mire of his uncleanness but God chose some from eternity to be made the monuments of his rich Grace in taking away all their iniquities and he provided Christ for this end and therefore all such he designed this for shall come to Christ Jâ 6. 37. All that the father hath given me shaâ come unto me they shall be cleansed and washed and healed 4. That they may partake in this benefit there must be a saving application of the vertue of it tâ them These waters quench the thirst of the Soul by being drank of they wash off the Guilt and filth which cleaves to the Soul by being washed with them they heal the mortal diseases which Sin had infected ââ withal by the influence of the sanative vertue of them on the Soul It is not enough that they have all these good qualities ââ them the Gospel therefore acquaints us with an Application consequent upon the Redemptiââ wrought out by Christ whereby he becomes ours and we are saved by him and hereupon life is restrained to our having of Christ 1 Joh. 5. 12. He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life 5. It is savingly applied to those only who comâ to him by saving faith in him for it Faith is the uniting Grace by which we are made one with Christ and receive him to be our own for all the ends of his Mediatorship This therefore is the great Gospel condition on which Christ is offered to be made ours and we are given to understand that if thus we do not receive him we shall not partake in his saving mercies Mark 16. 16. He that beâieves shall be saved and he that believes not shall âe damned And as faith comes to Christ so it draws the waters out of this fountain it fetcheth in supplies from Christ continually Heb. 10. 38. The Just shall live by his faith 6. God himself is the Author of this Faith in order to our participation in these benefits Faith is not of our selves it is the gift of God Eph. 2. 8. God by his Spirit puts this grace into us and enables us to exert it and that which he aims at in this is to bring us to Christ by it and so give us a title to these living waters that they may be ours and we may challenge a property in them and make use of them for all our occasions continually 7. Hence all that do thus come to him shall receive this vertue from him Whosoever is united unto Christ the fountain of life shall live by him Where God gives faith he gives all that is connected in the proâise with it All saving good is firmly promised to believing God therefore on our believing pardons our sin the Guilt of it passeth off our persons are freed from Condemnation and he sanctifies our hearts by laying a foundation of holiness in us which though imperfect at present and mixed with deââlement yet shall in due time aim at entire holiness without spot or blemish Hence we have that title put upon believing Heb. 10. 39. We are of them that believe to the ãâã of the Soul USE I. This may serve to Commend Chriââ to the Sinful Children of men as a desiraââ object And surely there is nothing that ãâã more set him forth as a suitable and necessaâ one than this consideration In nothing coââ he have been more accommodable to the coâdition of fallen man for his relief Let thâ the contemplation of this draw your eyes aâ your hearts after him and render him in yââ esteem most precious and desirable And â this end Consider 1. You are all by nature under the Guilt and â filement of Sin This is the state of all mankind and indeed if we look upon Sin in its relaââons it will infer this As it relates to the ââvenant of works and the Sanctions of that â it involves Guilt Sin is the Transgression of ââ Laâ and that Law hath ordained Death to â the wages of every Transgression of it Rom 6. 23 The wages of sin is Death And by vertue of this Ordination the Sinner is held a faâ Prisoner of the Law obnoxious to destruction And if we look upon Sin as it relates ââ the Sanctity or purity of the Law of God ââ it pollutes the man stains him with uncleanneâ Now there is none of you but besides the imputation of the Guilt of the first Transgression have a corrupt fountain of Original Sin in yoââ and innumerable actual pollutions which you have made your selves odious withall hence that Prov. 20. 9. Who can say I have made mine ââart clean I am pure from my sin 2. Your misery is unconceivably great whiles you are under the Dominion of these Indeed all mans misery began upon his Sinning and âhere are two springs from whence all this inââlicity flows viz. Guilt and Filthiness nor can ââ be taken off but by the removal of these And one would think the greatness of your misery should rouse you up to seek a deliverance from it and you may know that it is ââcomparably great by viewing the effects of ââ which are 1. By Sin you are exposed to the whole Curse of ââ Law And that is of the
not ly 5. These happy Times are to be ushered in by Prayer God is well pleased in our Praying for them Psal 122. 6. Pray for the Peace of Jerusalem they shall prosper that love thee And he hath told us that such a spirit shall be preparatory to that happy day and help to bring it in Isa 62 6 7. I have set watchmen upoâ they walls O Jerusalem which shall never hold their peace day nor night ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence and give him no rest till he establish and till he make Jerusalem a praise in the earth When therefore God shall pour out such a spirit of Prayer on his people in this regard it will be a blessed Prognostick of that glorious time hastening 2. Let it encourage all that are Godly to leaâe their Children behind them with Faith and Comfort We are some of us going off the stage and are very sollicitous what shall become of ours when we are gone There are many sadning considerations that appear in our view which do sometimes fill us with perplexity but let such as fear God look through and beyond the present discouragments and comfort themselves with such thoughts as these not only do we leave our Children to a good God a Covenant keeping God whose truth and faithfulness we may safely rely upon but it is comfort for us to think that that day is not far off and though we may not live to see the dawnings of it yet our Posterity may see the breaking of it and partake in the happy benefits that it shall bring to the Church of God to nourish our âaiâh with the contemplation of the glorious dispensations which there shall be in that day when God will bring his Church out of darkness into light and take them out of the horrible pit and set their feet upon the âock and then to remember that the Children of the faithful have a special interest in the blessings of that day according to the promise Isa 54. 13. All thy Children shall be taught of God great shall be the Peace of thy Children Let us then in faith do our duty to them whiles we live and when we dy let us rejoyce in this hope that there are better times coming on when God shall bring back his peoples Captivity when he who cannot ly will give being to that precious word in which he hath made us to hope Psal 69. 35 36. God will save Zion and will build the Cities of Judah that they may dwell there and have it in possession the seed also of his Servants shall inherit it and they that fear his Name shall dwell therein DOCTRINE VI. When God hath brought his Chosen to bewail their Sins especially the Affronts which they have Offered to Christ and to Pray to him for Mercy he will then make a gracious Discovery of this Fountain to them THE rise of this Doctrine is from the Coherence of the Text with that which went before God had promised to pour out such a spirit upon them Chap. 12. 10 c. And here he tells us that in that day this Fountain shall be Opened In the former Doctrine we considered this benefit as it refers to the Church in general and particularly to Gods Ancient people considered as a People In this we come to take an account of it as it refers to Persons and is applyed to men in Conversion which we are to suppose to be included in the former as the spiritual aim of it And that we may come at the right sense of this Doctrine observe these Conclusions 1. That there are those whom God hath choseâ in Christ to be made partakers in his saving beâfits We before observed that if we would take the Consideraâion of the great affair of Gods grace appearing in the good will that he manifests to sinful man at the rise of it we must follow it up to the eternal purpose oâ God in which the whole Scheam of it was laid out Now in this purpose of his there was a designation of them that should be the subjects in whom this Grace was to shine forth and accordingly all was accommodated for the illustraâion of it in such a subjâct When therefore the Apostle discourseth of these Spiritual Blessings he runneth them up hither Eph. 1. 3 4 According aâ he hath chosen us in Christ c. 2. That Christ must be Opened to these as a Fountain for Sin and Uncleanness in order to their being Saved by him Salvation supposeth something that they are to be Saved from which is their present misery He that is under no evil needeth no Salvation they are only the distressed that want it or will be advantaged by it And this Salvation must be applyed to the removal of that from which the evil derives now that which is mans inââliciây derives from Sin and Uncleanness it is the Guilt and the Pollution of sin that hurts them As therefore Christ is appointed for this so he must be discovered to them as such a one how else shall they accept of and entertain him as âo which they must do if ever he profit them for it is by faith that they receive him and so are advantaged by him 3. That there is a time when God will Open and Apply Christ to these They are born in their natural estate strangers to Christ and far from Salvation Eph 2. 3. We were Children of wrath even as others They may live a great while in their Alienation from him and refuse him though he offers himself unto them they ever do so till he comes with power But because he hath chosen them to obtain Salvation by Christ he will therefore bring them to this Fountain and make them to partake in a title to it and effectual influences of it upon them Our Saviour hath plumply asserted that in Joh. 6. 37. All that the Father hath given me shall come unto me Iâ Election hath pitched upon a person Vocation will without fail sooner or later find him out and bring him home 4. That in order to his so Opening this Fountain he will produce the fore cited effects in them by the power of his Spirit viz. a spirit of Mourning and a spirit of Supplication This is the way in which he makes Christ Effectual in men for the ends of his being a fountain to them Now for our right taking up of this order Let us observe in general That we are considering of such as are converted to God under and by the dispensation of the Gospel and Ordinances and the effectual applicatioâ of them As for Gods proceeding with Electâ Infants who dy before they are capable oâ being so treated we are not now enquiring after that Here then more particularly ãâã these things be considered 1. That we must distinguish between the Opââing of the Fountain Doctrinally and Savingly As to the outward discoveries of Christ which are made in the Gospel and Ordinances
him he answers the Call of the Spirit in the Word and embraceth the promise annexed to it and Echo's back to it with acceptance and gratitude as Psal 27. 8. When then saidst seek ye my face âine heart said unto thee thy face Lord will I seek Jer 3 22 Return ye baâksâiding Children and I will heal your backslidngs ââhold we come unto thee fâr thou art the Lord our God And tâus is the Everlasting Covenant past between God and him now is he Unitâd with the Fountain or Grace and all thâ saving vertue oâ it is derived to him and this is the usual method of Divine Grace iâ bringing a Sinner to participate in the saving Benefits which were purchased by the Lord Jesus Christ for him USE I. For Information in two or threâ particulars 1. We have here a Rule to judge of the Efficacy of the Gospel in the dispensation of it Theâ is a great deal of reasoâ why the People â God should observe not only who enjoâ ãâã Gospel in which Christ is opened to men ââd where it is that Christ is most clearly and âstinctly declared in his whole work but alâ what fruit or efficacy there is of it how âr the vertue of this fountain for the ends of ââ being opened is made evident by the effects âf it upon men and though the work of Apââcation wherein Christ is made to us Righââousness and Sanctification for the pardoning ââd cleansing of our sin be a secret work and â man can certainly know it of another exâpt by extraordinary Revelation and though ââ things which are the concomitants of this ââd evidence to it viz. A spirit of mourning ââd supplication are not so obvious but that ââ may be mistaken about them inasmuch â there may be secret Prayer and bewailing â sin that is sincere and accepted with God âhich makes no noise and there may be a âew of much of this but whether it be sincere ââd proceeds from such a spirit given to us ââ be judged of only Charitably yet there â usually so much to be discerned on âis account by such as observe the times as âay make the hearts of such as fear God Glad â Sad and many times there are too awful âidences of the general prevailing of the conâary spirit by the notorious appearance of âch things as are inconsistent with this If âe speak on a publick account when God inââds to pour out much grace upon a People he will give a spirit of mourning and prayer and therefore when there is but a little of thiâ and much of the contrary to be observeâ when it is as Isa 22. 12 13. In that day diâ the Lord God of hosts call to weeping and to mourâing and to baldness and to girding with sackcloth and behold joy and gladness sâaying of oxen anâ killing of sheep eating flesh and drinking wiâe â let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall dyâ When instead of reforming the sins that aâ among men there is nothing mended but theâ rather grow worse it saith that if there wââ a spirit of mourning it would not be so Aââ when Prayer is neglected particularly in Families and there are so many houses withouâ it as is complained it is to be supposed tââ secret Prayer is neglected too and mucâ more that the spirit of Supplication is greatlâ wanting Nay though there be many Fasâ kept for the bemoaning of the prevailing sââ making of humble confessions of them uââ God and asking of his pardon and healing â yet if this be all and there is nothing amendeâ nor is the work of the present day in this râgard pursued it will bespeak that the day âoâ the plentiful accomplishment of this promiâ that we have under our present consideratioâ doth not as yet commence And let serioâ Christians judge by such Rules and say whâther they do not see great occasion for Lamââtation on this account The same observatioâ is also applicable to particular persons 2. We may hence learn what little reason the âost have to boast of Christ as a Fountain of Salvation to them It must needs be a sad sight âo see with what security and confidence the generality do nourish themselves as if they âothing doubted of a title to Christ and life ây him and take it amiss to have the reality âf it so much as questioned who yet cannot âear the test of the truth in hand but must ââeds fall before it and stand condemned by it ââ it be as it is a great truth that where God âpplies Christ to men in the benefits which he ââth purchased for Sinners he pours out upon âem a spirit of mourning and supplication âertainly then all such as are without such a âirit must needs be strangers to such an Apâlication and without doubt where such a âirit is put into men there will be the exerting âf it in their lives and practices When thereâore there is nothing of this but the quite âontrary notoriously appearing such mens âith must needs be presumption and their âoasting is of a false gift Think of this then âl you who are so far from mourning for âour sins that you can live in them quietly âontentedly nay you Rejoyce in iniquity and âke the greatest Satisfaction in gratifying of âour carnal lusts who are never well but when âou are Devising mischief on your beds and putâng it in practice as soon as opportunity affords you that can make a mock of sin that can Drink your stollen waters and eat your bread in secret and wipe your mouths and say we have done no wickedness You that can boast of your lewd pranks and shew your sin as Sodom and hide it not you that joyâ hand in hand with your lewd companions and encourage one another in your wicked courses surely you never had the healing vertue of this fountain applied to you and to hope to have your sins pardoned and yet not cleansed is a vain hope Think of this also all you Prayerless ones who instead of calling upon Gods name abuse it and take it in vain by your profane taking it into your mouths who can live days and mouths and years without so much as a formal addressing of God whose houses will one day rise up against you and testify that you never Prayed in them either by your selves or with your families who never carried your iniquities to God as a burden too heavy for you to bear and with strong cryes besought him to take them away by a free pardon and powerful purging Let all such know that how presumptuously soever you may now cry Lord Lord there is a time coming if mercy prevent not when he will say I never knew you depart from me all ye workers of iniquity And be not deceived for God is not mocked 3. This shews us who they are that are like to enjoy the clearest discoveries and most plentiful applications of Christ to them certainly they are such unto