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A96523 Three decads of sermons lately preached to the Vniversity at St Mary's Church in Oxford: by Henry Wilkinson D.D. principall of Magdalen Hall. Wilkinson, Henry, 1616-1690. 1660 (1660) Wing W2239; Thomason E1039_1; ESTC R204083 607,468 685

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God did beseech 2 Cor. 5. 20. you by us we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled to God O●r commission may be out of date to morrow Christ now waites till his locks be wet with dew now he calls sinners to repentance He hath sent me on an errand this day to invite thirsty soules to come unto him and he will give them drink to invite those that are heavy laden and he will give them rest It 's my businesse this day to tender Jesus Christ the Fountain opened to presse home the Exhortation of the Holy Ghost Let the wicked forsake his way and Isa 55. 7. the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon Now what answer shall I return unto him that sent me Suffer I beseech you Fathers and Brethren the word of exhortation not to suffer the holy Spirit to spend his sacred breath in vain You have many prizes put into your hands improve them in your several capacities to the glory of God and mutual edification one of another Let Rulers rule with diligence let Governours Tutours Masters of Families all unite their endeavours to promote the Gospel of Jesus Christ and put Joshua's resolution into practise but as for me I and my house we will serve the Lord. O that Josh 24. 15. we could be spirituall Fathers to those that are committed to our charge Governours and Tutours should look upon themselves as Pro-parents and upon the Scholars under them as children and therefore ought to have special care over them and principally to enquire how it fares with their soules what knowledge they have of Jesus Christ What a comfort will it be another day when we can say Behold Lord here we are and the children which thou hast given us Thou ●ord hast made us spiritual Fathers unto these young Pupiss Now whilst the Spirit stayes waiting upon us whilst we have time talents and opportunities vouchsafed unto us whilest we live under the sound of the Gospel and hear admonitions reproofs and many Exhortations to repentance let us not put off the Spirit with any more delatory answers but resolve with the full purpose of our hearts to cleave unto the Lord. I have two or three plain moving considerations to adde for the better setting home of my Exhortation Consider the brevity of our lives What 's our life but a bubble Consid 1. The brevity of our lives John 4. a flower a vapor a shadow By these resemblances the Holy Ghost sets forth the shortness of our lives We had need be a working while day lasteth I must work the works of him that sent me while day lasteth the night cometh when no man can work A night of death is coming wherein no man can work and we must always remember that the Spirit strives not always not during the whole course of our lives It moves when it pleaseth and on a suddain ceaseth yet at the most it moveth no longer nor striveth no longer but this little moment of time whilst we are on this side the grave After death there will be no more warnings no more admonitions no place left for repentance no Purgatory that 's a Popish dream He that dieth filthy will so remain unto all Eternity Now then my Brethren considering you have but a little time and upon this moment depends Eternity and after death there will be no further tenders of Grace and Mercy let us husband this time to the best advantage Let us prize Sermons Sabbaths and all those Evangelical Dispensations vouchsafed to us more then ever we did Let us redeem the time as we are exhorted Eph. 5. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 5. 16. buying out or making a good market of the season Every thing is beautiful in its season there 's a season acceptable and there 's a season perilous Let 's come when God calls that 's the accepted time let 's not prescribe a time of our own that 's the perillous season let 's not account time a slight matter for each minute ought to be valued A second consideration shal be drawn from the uncertainty of the Consid 2. The uncertainty of the spirits striving Nil pretiosius tempore heu nil hodie vilius invenitur Bern. Veniet tempus quo vel unam horam ad resi●iscendum redimere mirum quantum optabimus Otho Casmannus spirits strivings If the holy Spirit be rejected its uncertain whether ever he will come again The Spirit will not always bear reproaches indignities If we refuse to give God the glory of his mercy he will shew upon us the glory of his Justice and Power If we will not open when God knocks at our doors he will not open when we knock at his door Unkindness will drive away a friend from our houses When the Spirit invites himself unto us if we will open he will come and dine and sup with us if we refuse this Heavenly guest how shall we escape our destruction will be inevitable This Spirit is often compared to fire nothing more comforting nothing more consuming than fire If thou wilt not suffer the Spirit to purge and refine thee it will consume thee Nothing more comfortable then light warmth and witness of the Spirit Nothing more terrible then the bondage conviction and condemnation of the Spirit Therefore beware of resisting any good motions that the Spirit of God puts into thy heart this day lest if the spirit have a repulse he may go away and never return any more 3. Thirdly Consider the certainty of the day of Judgement 2 Cor. 5. 10. For we must all appear before the judgement seat of Consid 3. The day of Iudgement Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad Then there will be an account to be given for all the Sermons which we have heard for all the Sabbaths we have enjoyed for all the motions of the Spirit for all the admonitions reproofs Gospel opportunities and advantages that we have received we should therefore hear a Sermon now as for ought we know we may be presently summon'd by death to appear before the Judgement-seat of Jesus Christ Let us imagine that now we hear this day as if it might be our last day We hear for Eternity Preachers and Hearers shall be called to an account at the great Assise The Lord grant that we may all give up our accounts with joy The third Use shall be for reprehension of those who resist or Use 3. For reprehension stifle the strivings and the sweet motions of the holy Spirit To come to particulars 1. How sad is their condition who are contemners of the sweet motions of Gods Spirit Let them read Rom. 8. 9. If any man hath not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Such
borne neither having done any good or evill that the purpose of God according to election might stand not of workes but of him that calleth It was said unto her the elder shall serve the younger as it is written Jacob have I loved but Esau have I hated 4. This love is incomprehensible inexpressible Eph. 3. 18 19. 4. This love is incomprehensible That yee may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge that yee might be filled with all the fulnesse of God 5. It is an eternall love Joh. 13. 1. Now before the feast of the 5. This love is eternall passeover when Jesus knew that his houre was come that he should depart out of this world unto the Father having loved his owne which were in the world he loved them unto the end Jer. 31. 3. The Lord hath appeared of old unto me saying Yea I have loved thee with an everlasting love therefore with loving kindnesse have I drawne thee The second Use is for Examination whether we are of that Vse 4. For Examination number which hath interest in this love We are to distinguish of severall sorts of love There 's Amor benevolentiae Complacentiae For that there is Amor benevolentiae hence appeares munificentia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God doth good to all makes the Sun to shine on the just and unjust That which we are to inquire of is that which is called Amor complacentiae appropriated only unto Gods children What evidences may be given that we have interest in this distinguishing love The 1. Signe is Sanctification it 's God's order and we may Signe 1. Sanctification not break it Rev. 1. 5. Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sinnes in his blood If thou canst prove that thy nature is changed by the sanctifying vertue of God's spirit thou maiest conclude that thou art one that hath interest in the speciall love of God 2. Those that have interest in this speciall love of God feele a Signe 2. Constraining love of Christ constraining power in this love to ingage them to obedience to Gods commands 2 Cor. 5. 14. For the love of Christ constraines us because we thus judge that if one died for all then we are all dead 3. By the sincerity of our love to God we may conclude his Signe 3. Sincerity of love to God love towards us 1 Joh. 4. 19. We love him because he first loved us Gods love to us is the ground of our Assurance our love to him is the ground of our Evidence Let Gods children as Bradford that pretious man of God used to advise lay this down for a foundation That God loves them and where this love is it will shed abroad love in their hearts even love to God love to the brethren love to the Ordinances love and longing for the appearance of Christ 4. Christ manifests his love to his people Joh. 14. 21. He that Signe 4. Christ manifests his Love to his people hath my commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will love him and will manifest my selfe to him Though he may hide himselfe for a time yet he will embrace them with everlasting kindnesse Isai 54 8. In a little wrath I hid my face from them for a moment but with everlasting kindnesse will I have mercy on thee saith the Lord thy Redeemer 5. Those whom God loves with a speciall distinguishing love Signe 5. Christ is Lord and King have Christ their redeemer their Lord King and Ruler their Prophet to instruct them their Priest to make satisfaction and intercession for them This is the greatest evidence of Gods love in giving thee his son as in the place forecited Joh. 3. 16. For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life Which is plainly applyed to believers and takes not in all universally but a peculiar select company even such only as believe And Rom. 8. 32. He that spareth not his own son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things 6. Those who have interest in this great speciall love have Signe 6. Gods spirit dwells in them Gods spirit and this dwells in them Rom. 8. 9. But yee are not in the flesh but in the spirit if so be that the spirit of God dwell in you Now if any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Christs spirit dwells as an Inhabitant and Ruler and this is a witnesse Rom. 8. 16. The spirit it selfe beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the children of God And this sealeth and giveth earnest 2 Cor. 1. 22. Who hath also sealed us and given us the earnest of the spirit in our hearts and where this dwells it may be knowne by the fruits which it bringeth forth Gal. 5. 22 23. But the fruit of the spirit is love joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith meeknesse temperance The third Use is for Exhortation and your duty I shall branch Vse 2. For Exhortat into these following particulars 1. Stand admiring contemplating this great love of God the 1. Admire Gods love Father to give thee Christ and that Christ should becomeman be made sin a curse whilst that greater and nobler richer learneder then thy selfe should be past by and God should give Christ for thee that he should love thee and wash thee and make thee a King and a Priest unto God thou can'st never admire enough this unparralleld love of God Eternity would even be too little to set forth this wonderfull love of God As there is a depth of wisdome so there is a depth of mercy in God which cannot be fathom'd 2. Let thy heart be filled with the praises of the Lord. Lift up 2. Be filled with the praises of God advance what in thee lyeth the honour of God the love of God the Father and of the Lord Jesus Christ God gives his Son Christ's merits are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a price meritorious and the Holy Spirit maketh application How then ought we for ever to abound in praises to the Lord The Samaritan returned back and gave God thanks for his cleansing So should we blesse God that he hath made a difference by his grace between us and the very vilest of men what ever Thus did Paul 1 Tim. 1. 12. And I thank Christ Jesus our Lord who hath enabled me for that he counted me faithfull putting me into the Ministery Now unto the King Eternall immortall invisible the only wise God be honour and glory for ever and ever Amen 3. Love should beget reciprocall love even Love unto God the 3. Love should
ten thousand pounds for a good conscience nay all his estate riches c. but all these cannot bribe death to stay one minute longer nor can they all make any atonement for the soule Riches honours c. are not a suitable proportionable price sor these are materiall and corruptible the soule immateriall and incorruptible and between these there 's no proportion Thirdly The price paid to redeem our soules is infinitely superlatively more worth then millions of worlds what 's that see 1 Pet. 1. 18. The soul was redeemed with the price of bloud even of him who was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not one soule saved any other way not the richest in the world nor the poorest can come any other way to heaven but by Jesus Christ The soule of the poorest saint though his person be trampled on by the world is bought by so great a price as the effusion of the bloud of Jesus Christ Hence it evidently appeares that the soul is more worth then the world Christ died not for the world he prayed not for them John 17. 9. but he died for his own whom his father had given him out of the world O Consid 2. Jesus Christ alone and the graces of his spirit can adorne the soule pretious heavenly-born-being soule 2ly It 's Jesus Christ alone the graces of his spirit that can beautifie enrich and adorne the soule Aske a covetous Mammonist where lies his riches he 'll tell you in such a stock of cattell such lands revennues gold silver c. Aske a child of God where are his riches he 'll tell you his riches are in Christ his treasures are in heaven his high place and preferment is in his fathers house Aske your stately Gallants wh●re their ornaments are They will shew you their necklaces and bracelets of pearles their Diamond-Rings Gorgeous apparrell But what 's all these to the soule The soule is not beautified with golden chains costly raiment pretious jewels I le tell you of a chaine of pearls which will adorne your soules and enrich you more then all the pretious gemmes the Universe can afford read 2 Pet. 1. 5. Ps 45. 13 14. Ezek. 16. 9 10 11 c. Thou mayest be rich in the world yet poor in grace thou mayest have a beautifull face and a polluted soule goodly brave stately apparrell and a foule rotten conscience outward beauty inward deformity fair without foule within Now Christ his graces can alone make thy soule beautifull His graces are the best ornament and therefore beseech him to beautifie thy soule and to adorne thee with faith love and the rest of the Graces of his spirit Thirdly Consider God out of the riches of his free grace and mercy Consid 3 God puts a price into our hands to improve for our souls puts a price into your hands by the Gospell dispensations which he expects you should improve for the best advantage of your soules Force not the Lord to complaine as Prov. 17. 6. you have sermon upon sermon Manna falls frequently round about your tents will you not stir out of your doores to gather it you have the ordinances frequently dispensed amongst you you have bread in the morning and bread in the evening many occasionall sermons All these helpes and meanes are afforded by God for the good of your soules you have publick assemblies continued your eyes behold your teachers you enjoy Sabbaths dayes of humiliation dayes of thankesgiving wherein Gods keeps open market for the good of your soules and it s your duty to husband them all for the eternall welfare of your soules The Spirit knocks at your hearts by the sermons you hear by all the mercies you enjoy to take care of your pretious soules The salvation of your soules is the intention and end of all our preaching It 's the only designe we have upon you to win you to Jesus Christ all the Ordinances are the food of your soules to keep your soules in heart the sabbaths are the market of your souls you have soule-fatting Ordinances Oh take heed lest a leanenesse enter into your soules The markets will not alwaies last the shops will not alwayes be open now come and buy wine c. Improve the Sabbaths Sermons all your Gospel-opportunities for the eternal benefit of your soules Fourthly Consider This present time of life whilst you are in this Consid 4. This is the present time to regard our soules world is the only season and opportunity offered to make provision for your pretious soules see John 9. 4. This is the time to worke out your salvation in as Phil. 2. 12. The time of seeking God Isa 55. 6. This is the time of working the worke of faith the labour of love and patience of hope 2 Thes 1. 3. This is the time of making our peace and reconciliation with God Now we presse upon you the Doctrine of reconciliation 2 Cor. 5. 20. If thou livest and diest in an unregenerate and unreconciled estate to God thou wilt remaine so even to all eternity Now thou must run otherwise thou shalt never obtaine now thou must fight the good fight of faith otherwise thou shalt never obtain the end of thy faith the salvation of thy soule Now thou must wrestle otherwise thou wilt never obtein the blessing Now thy peace must be made whilst thou art on this side hell otherwise it will never be made hereafter There 's no time for purgation in another world for perfecting thy faith and hope this time of life is the seed time and according as a man soweth so shal he reape This time of life is a time of working in heaven there will be a resting from our labours As therefore thou tendrest the eternall welfare of thy soule whilst thou hast life breath space opportunity whilst thou art on this side the grave on this side of eternity set seriously upon the businesse of greatest weight and consequence to make thy peace with God to make thy calling and election sure that so when death separates thy soule from thy body nothing may be able to separate it from the love of Jesus Christ Consid 5. This present life is but for a moment Fifthly Consider This present life is but for a moment and upon this moment depends eternity The longest life is but a mo●ent if compared with eternity and this moment is a short moment compared in Scripture to bubbles vapours spans weavers shuttles flowers things of shortest continuance And this moment is a shortning moment each day each hour each minute shortneth thy life and makes thee nearer eternity each step thou treadest is a step nearer thy Grave each moment thou breathest is a drawing on to thy home And further this moment when once past is irrecoverable all the world cannot call back one minute of time and when this little inch and moment of time is past thou shalt be in eternity in that condition which is unalterable as long
Judgement Hac fide vivo the rule of the Scripture is clear and infallible there shall be a day of Judgement All this world shall be dissolved This is a Doctrine most true My Text makes the Application 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Divis. Which words contain a Supposition and an Inference 1. Here 's something supposed Seeing c. It s a Principle undoubtedly 1. to be believed That the Heavens and Earth shall be dissolved and the Elements shall melt with fervent ●eat Compare this with Psalme 102. 25 26 27. Let 's not introduce nor beleive vain Philosophy which holds amongst many other dotages Quod coeli sunt incorruptibiles To me it 's out of question that he that made them by his word will one day by his word destroy them Now whether the heavens are so perfectly made as in their own nature uncap●ble of corruption is not here to be disputed of or whether the coelestiall influences be as vigorous as at first though a learned Dr. of our own holds the affirmative in that excellent Dr. George Hackwill in his Apology book entitled The Power and Providence of God in the government of the world Yet I shall wave this Question being loath to intermixe any Philosophicall dispute in matters of faith We beleive it We have sure ground plain scripture for our assertion that all these things shall be dissolved 2. Here 's an inference 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jts infer'd by way of admiration what manner of persons i. e. we should be eminent in holyness we should act in an extraordinary manner we should be rare singular even a non-such for pietie its Diodats observation upon the place If heaven and Earth be purified by fire what care ought Diod. in loc Calvin in loc we to take to be purged and clensed from our corruptions An ergo nos in terra demersos esse convenit c. saith Calvin on the place The heavens earth shall pass away and shall we be s●allowed up in the earth and not rather meditate on a holy and a godly life The argument I may thus frame There shall at the day of judgment be a dissolution of this visible Globe of heaven and earth therefore we ought in an especiall manner to labour after holyness This is the argument of the Text of incomparable strength But why is it in the Plurall number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This is an Hebraisme when the Scripture would express a thing with a greater emphasis it useth the plurall number so Cant. 1. 4 We will remember thy loves thereby inhancing the greatness and multitudes of Christs loving kindness Likewise we read Psal 20. He is the God of our Salvations i. e. that he is the God from whom all Psal 110. 3. salvations come in the most high and eminent way And the Psalmist further specifies Psal 100. 3. Thy people shall be a people of willingnesse to shew their singular readinesse and willingness as if they were all made up of a willing mind and ready spirit for Jesus Christ Thus in the text in all holy conversations and Godlynesse Which expression some referre to dutyes of both tables it s most true that a godly man respects both and labours to keep a Good conscience both towards God and men For the genuine sense of the text Beza gives me full satisfaction Vsurpatur numerus multitudinis ex Haebreorum more ut pietas significetur omnibus suis partibus constans quam pro viribus sectari nos oporteat The scope of all I conceive to be this as if the Apo●●le should thus inlarge himself You are secure and careless you shall be suddenly surprised The day of the Lord will come as a theefe in the night You commit Idolatry with the world your hearts are married to these outward things on a sudden all shall be consumed all wherein you trust shall be burnt up ●owever you put the day of judgment farre of yet it s a coming it s nigher then you are aware of and the heavens and the earth shall be dissolved At that day none but holy persons can hold up their heads with comfort Therefore seriously bethinke your selves anticipate the terrour and sorrow of that day by an holy conversation Make timely provision for that day Labour for holynesse and then you need not fear notwithstanding the burning up of the present world you that are holy here shall behold that day with comfort Therefore now have that day in your eyes in your thoughts in your frequent meditations in your prayers that you may be found blamelesse at that day The words thus divided and expounded presents unto you one entire plain and practicall Doctrine That the serious consideration of the day of Iudgment should in an especiall Doct. manner ingage us unto an holy life and conversation For the unfolding of this excellent and practicall poynt my work will be 1. To prove it by scripture testimonies Method 1. 2. 3. 1. For Scripture Testimony 2. To confirme it by evidence of Reason 3. To improve all to your consciences by particular application 1. For Scripture it contributes abundant testimony to the proof hereof I shall gather sparingly from so great an heap selecting only some more eminent proofes leaving the rest to be supplyed in your serious meditations Peruse v 14 of this chap. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But can any walk so Yes Zechary and Elizabeth walk'd so they were both righteous before God walking in all the commandements and ordinances of the Lord blamlesse It was Pauls exercise Acts 24. 16. goe thou and doe likewise Labour to make strait paths Labour to approve thy heart to God always walking as in the presence of God Begge strength from Christ and thou canst doe all things through Christ that strengthneth thee Another proof we have 1 Pet. 4. 7. The end of all things is at hand be ye therefore sober and watch unto prayer The consideration of our latter end should be a forcible argument to perswade us unto sobriety and watchfullness That 's a pregnant proofe of the Apostle Paul 2 Cor. 5. 9 10. Vpon this consideration he layeth down those 3 adverbs 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hopeing to gain them over to the practise of them Tit. 2. 11 12 13. This was a motive to him and the rest of the saints to have their conversation in heaven because hence they look for the Lord Jesus Christ You read of a sacred Irony Eccles 11. 9. The meaning is rejoyce in God walk in the wayes of Gods commandements that Ironicall speech commands the contrary Now what 's used by the wise man as a moveing consideration But know that there will be a day of judgment Entertain frequent and serious thoughts concerning it which through the grace of God set home upon thy heart may prevail with the circumspect walking in all holy conversation and Godlyness The consideration hereof should make us look better to our hearts and
that are Masters of Families be exhorted to set up Holynesse in your Families Teach your children and servants to know God keep up your authority give not liberty to them under your roofe to live as they list Abraham gave no toleration he commanded his houshold to keep the way of the Lord. Let all sorts and sexes old and Gen. 18. 19. young learned and unlearned lay this Exhortation to heart I presse holynesse upon you all O that the Priests Motto were writ upon your hearts and lives Holynesse unto the Lord. You cannot say as Sheba the Son of Bichri said We have no portion in David c. as if this concerns not us but holynesse concerns you all you must all follow after holynesse To excite you to your duty I 'll lay down some moving considerations Consid 1. We are elected unto holinesse 2 Thes 2. 13. 1. Consider you are elected unto holynesse not for holynesse nor through praevision of holyness that 's a false Arminian glosse but unto holynesse 2. We are created unto holynesse All the members of our bodies Consid 2. We are created in holynesse Ephes 4. 24. and faculties of our soules should be instruments of holynesse The tongue should speak holily holy communication should drop from the tongue the heart and hand both should be clean as James specifies c. 4. 8. The feet must keep the wayes of Gods commandements Consid ● We are redeemed to be holy Luk. 1. 74. 75. the understanding will affections the whole man all must be holy to this purpose they were created 3. Consider we are redeemed for this end and purpose that we may be holy 4. It 's Gods will that we should be holy 1 Thes 4. 3. Now our Consid 4. It s Gods will that we should be holy wils must be subject unto Gods will He commands us to be holy we should pray for his grace to enable us to perform his command Holynesse is suitable to Gods will and wee have an encouraging promise 1 Joh. 5. 14. 5. ●olynesse is our calling 1 Pet. 1. 15. 1 Thes 4. 7. Wee can Consid 5. Holyness is our calling have no comfort but when we are in a lawfull calling when our wayes are according to Gods wayes wee may hope for Gods gracious protection according to the promise Psal 91. 11. When any commit wickednesse are unclean drunk associate themselves with wicked persons they are out of their calling and so out of Gods special p●ovidence Consider this seriously when you are tempted to Whoredom or any o●her sin God hath not called you unto un●eannesse but unto holynesse 6. Heaven is an holy place only appointed for holy persons Nothing Consid 6. Heaven is a holy place that 's defiled shall enter there Rev. 21. 27. Onely holy persons shall be acquitted before Christs Judgement-seat They only shall enter into the new Jerusalem 7. In heaven there shall bee no other but holy employment Consid 7. In Heaven there is holy employment singing Hosannahs and Hallelujahs to him that sitteth on the throne and to the Lamb for evermore A prophane person hates holy Ordinances and holy employments here on earth Were it possible for him to be in heaven hee would be weary of the employment whereas the Saints shall have their hearts put into such an high and excellent frame as they shall without molestation weariness or intermission be ever setting forth the praises of the Lord. 8. And there will be in heaven the most holy company the holy Consid 8. In heaven there is holy company Trinitie God the Father God the Son God the Holy Ghost the most holy blessed and glorious Trinity There will be holy Angels the spirits of just men made perfect holy Martyrs holy Ministers holy people No company there but all holy company 9. And lastly to close up all Now whilst we live on earth is Consid 9. The present time is the time to labor after holynes the time or never to labour after holynesse now I mean in this time of life we must make provision for eternity This is Gods summons to day if you will hear his voice Delay not a minute longer Resist not the movings of the Spirit great is the danger of resisting the Spirits movings The Lord set home all these considerations upon your hearts and if hereby the Lord should be pleased to gaine any soul to the love and practise of holynesse I should never be enough thankful for the mercies of this day The third Use is for Examination and Tryal Every one will Use 3. For Examination plead for himself and pretend to an holy conversation As it was said When the Son of man comes shall he finde faith on the earth So shall he find an holy conversation a formal Professor a Christian at large are every where to be found like Sycamo●es in the valley for abundance but the power of holynesse an holy circumspect walking are rarely found Now then because its the grand Ministerial duty to distinguish the precious from the vile according to that high commendation and priviledge given as to be the mouthes of God Jer. 15. 19. And because God hath gone forth in a signal exemplary blessing upon this way which hath been so frequently used by old Disciples faithful labouring Ministers whose plain Preaching would it were more revived now adaies It shall therefore be my task to lay forth some distinguishing characters and signs of a gracious sincere heart whose life is accordingly ordered in an holy conversation and by them you may put your selves upon the test and tryal as in the presence of God whether you are such manner of persons in all holy conversation and godlinesse The first sign is spiritual poverty and this consists in the emptying Charact. 1. Spiritual Poverty of the heart of self-confidence self-opinion self-sufficiency and self-righteousnesse whereby a Christian becomes nothing in himself altogether lost undone blind miserable poor and naked He is thoroughly sensible of his own misery and wretchednesse He is apprehensive of his own undone condition and what need he hath of a Saviour such an one Christ pronounceth to be in the state Mat. 5. 3. of blessednesse 2. There followeth the highest prizing and estimate of Jesus Charact. 2. High prizing of Jesus Chr. Christ That soul which is spiritually poor accounts Christ the greatest treasure it apprehends it self blind that Christ may give it eye-salve miserable and lost that Christ may save it naked that Christ may cloath it with his righteousnesse See what an high price the Spo●se puts upon Jesus Christ Cant. 5. 10 11 12 c. He is precious 1 Pet. 2. 7. a plant of renown Ezek. 34 29. Such an high price had the wise Merchant to sell all for him Mat. 13. 45 46. So Moses who preferred the reproach of Christ before Egypts treasure Bradford wept often even at meales because he could not bring his dul heart
1 Joh 3 3. Jam. 14 8 thy self to cleanse thy hands and purifie thy heart this is a needfull study its time well imployed in searching our hearts in washing and purifying of the inward man 3. Be much exercised in divine meditation Meditate frequently Rule 3. Be exercised the divine in art of meditation of the four last things Death Judgement Hell and Heaven Entertain frequent and serious thoughts of ●ternity It 's a poynt of understanding and wisdome to consider our latter end Meditate what a holy place heaven is what holy company and what holy employments aret here Nothing that defileth shall ever come there Get up into the Mount with Moses let thy affections soare aloft being carried aloft with the wings of heavenly meditation This was Isaacs practise Davids and Pauls Were you acquainted with the singular benefit of Meditation you would not lye groveling here below your words thoughts whole conversations would bee in heaven 4. Consider the omnipresence and omniscience of God whither Rule 4. Consider Gods omnipresence canst thou goe from his presence how canst thou escape his knowledge If I sinne saith Job he marketh me Job 10. 14 15. God seeth thy secret sinnes hee knoweth all thy reservations and cunning conveyances All things are naked unto him with whom thou hast to deale and without holynesse thou shalt never see the face of God with comfort The serious consideration of the Omnipresence and Omniscience of God through the grace of God may prevaile with us to a circumspect and holy conversation 5. Set an high estimate upon and frequent diligently the holy Rule 5 Consider Gods Ordinances Ordinances of God They are called The beauties of Holynesse Psal 110. 3. There is a cleansing virtue in the Word of God Psal 119. 9. Gods face is beautifull his holynesse is his beauty Now by the face of God Calvin understands the Ordinances of God Psal 27. 8. Wait then O Christian at the posts of Wisdoms gate lye in the way where Christ comes by tarry at these Bethesdaes The Ordinances are the golden Pipes to conveigh the golden Oyle take heed of sitting loose from them Blesse God that your eyes behold your Teachers and that your Gospel is not driven into corners Improve these prices and spiritual advantages for the good of your precious souls 6. And lastly associate your selves with holy company Love Rule 6. Associa●e your selves with holy company where God loves now the Lord loveth his Saints It was Davids profession that his delight was in the Saints Psal 16. 2 3. Bee a companion to those that fear God If a dead coale be neare a live co●le it may be inkindled by it but if two live coales be together what abundance of heate will they give We read Mal. 3. 16. That they that feared the Lord spake often one to another Let not Christians be strange and shie of one anothers company But let 's unite as one man to conserre all our interests to give each other a lift to heaven Make them thy companions on earth whom thou hopest to enjoy in heaven to all eternity The last Use and so in a few words to conclude is a word of Use 5. For Consolation Consolation unto holy persons true beleevers the adopted sonnes and daughters of God when the day of Judgement comes and the whole world is in a flame they shall bee of good comfort That day which will be a day of terrour and revenge to the wicked shall be a day of refreshing and restitution unto them The Saints that sleep in the grave shall be awakned at the sound of the Trumpet and their bodies and soules shall bee reunited and they sh●ll receive the consummation of their happynesse The Saints that are alive shall be caught up together with those that are dead in Christ in the cloudes to meet the ●ord in the air and so shall be ever with the Lord. The inference the Apostle makes should be ours wherefore 1 Thes 4. 18. comfort one another with these words O but I cannot see this in me I would be holy yet I cannot find this growth of holynesse in me Is this thy case goe thy way to God challenge him with his promise put his bond in suit Hee commands make you a clean heart but doth he not promise to give it Ezek. 36. 25. Comfort thy self with Christs praier to the Father He prayes Father sanctifie them through thy truth And know there may be grace where feeling may be wanting It s an excellent Joh. 17. 17. Eph. 1. 13. saying of Mr. Greenham We hold Christ by faith and not by feeling Feeling is an after thing After ye beleeved ye were sealed with that holy spirit of promise Is it the desire and endeavour of thy soule to be holy Notwithstanding infirmities yet is thy heart single and without guile be of good comfort thou shalt hold up thy head with comfort at that great day of accompt when the wicked shall wish that the mountains might fall upon them and the hills cover them from the face of the Lamb thou shalt behold Christ in the face with comfort when all these visible things shall be dissolved and the elements shall melt with fervent heat thou shalt be glad and rejoice at that day and enjoy eternall felloship with the blessed Trinity in whose presence there is fulness of joy and at whose right hand there are pleasures for evermore Did we but seriously consider of Psal 16. 11. these things wee should desire to bee dissolved and to be with Christ we should cry Come Lord Jesus come quickly we should have the Moon under our feet we should negotiate for the great things of eternity May all things that have been said make deep impression upon our spirits and prevaile with us to the love and practise of holynesse looking for and hasting unto the comming of God Though at that day the world be on fire we shall be safe though there shall be a general Assize wee shall be acquitted and that day of Judgement will be the Saints refreshing day Christ is their Redeemer and Intercessour VVho would not now be in love with holyness holyness will be holyness indeed at that day Only holy persons shall hold up their heads with comfort they only shall be able to stand in judgement God onely that made the heart can cleanse it Christ doth love and wash his people Le ts therefore pray for holynesse follow after holynesse Thus our fruit being unto holynesse our end will be happynesse The Necessity of the Knowledge of Regeneration Discovered from Joh. 3. v. 10. Jesus answered and said unto him Art thou a Master of Israel and knowest not these things THE report of Christs Miracles being famous every where Serm. 5. at St. Maries Oxon. Aug. 14. 1654. v. 1. insomuch that multitudes followed him at last one of an eminent Rank comes to visit and conferre with Christ v. 1. By degree he
fruition thereof There 's great reason to perswade us to labour and secure our everlasting estate if we consider 1. When once wee are in eternity consider what we are freed from There are severall privative Immunities which glorified Reas 1 Saints are partakers of and Militant Saints have onely in their eye heart desires and expectation of that happy welcome day These things are in the desire hope and earnest longing of Militant Saints but gloryfied Saints have their desires accomplished and the fruition of that which on earth they hoped for And what are these privative immunities 1. Freedome from sinne Nothing that defileth is in heaven ● We are f●eed from sinne there is no conflict between the flesh and spirit no struggling against lust no combating with the flesh It 's the greatest desire of Gods children that they may sinne no more In this world the best of Gods children are subject to many infirmities they carry about with them a body of sinne But then there shall be no infirmities no corruptions no lusts to conflict withall as appears more fully from Isai 44. 22. Jer. 50. 20. All which Prophesies have reference unto the Triumphant Church Jerusalem which is above the Mother of us all 2. We shall in eternity be freed from all tentations to sin from 2. We are freed from all tentations the Flesh the Devil and the World 1. There we shall not be troubled with corrupt flesh to lust against the spirit There we shall not be troubled with the deeds of the flesh Envy Hatred Malice Heresies Variances c. Here we are in part carnal there we shall be wholly spiritual 2. There we shall not be troubled with the Devils temptations his methods snares depths shall doe us no harm In this world he is a Lyon let loose running about seeking whom he may devoure there he is a Lyon chained shut up he may like as dogs bark at the Moon rayle against the Saints but he can doe them no harme This Accuser of the Brethren is shut up In this world the Devil is busie to winnow the Saints as Wheat but in the world to come the Saints are like Wheat layd up in the Garner out of his reach and meddling withall as we may read Rev. 20. 10. 3. The Saints shall be freed from all the worlds temptations what 's in the world is reckoned up 1 Joh. 2. 16. viz. the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life But in that day the world shall be burnt up and be dissolved There shall not remaine a wicked world to seduce the Saints The Devil cries come to me but he will deceive thee The flesh cries come to me but it will assuredly faile thy expectation The world cries come to me but it will destroy thee But in the world to come there will be neither a devil to deceive nor a flesh to faile nor a world to flay And lastly we are freed in heaven from all punishments of sin 3. Wee are freed from punishments all sorrows calamities afflictions of all sorts and sizes Rev. 21. 4. Heaven is a place of rest There the weary goe to rest Heaven is a place of security no enemy can pursue thee there no persecutor can reach thee there no slanderous tongue can there do thee harm there thou shalt be hid from the scourge of tongues there shall be neither thirst nor hunger no sorrow nor mourning All teares are then wiped away sorrow and mourning shall flee away In heaven thou shalt not bee troubled with an aking head nor with a sad heart None shall complaine there of fainting fits nor of stone chollick gout strangury tooth-ake or such like pains full of dolour and anguish Nay more than this after once thou art in heaven thou shalt no more tast of death a temporal death thou sufferedst before that was the wages of sinne but a second death thou shalt escape as we may read Rev. 20. 14. When once thou gettest into heaven thou art out of gun-shot out of all dangers out of the rage and malice of wicked men the Whip the Rack the Block the Gibbet all the threats of ungodly men can do thee no harm Thou hast a life secured from the malice of men and devils it 's a hidden life 't is in the safest custody Col. 3. 3. Your life is hid with Christ in God These are privative immunities But in the second place another Reason to perswade us to the Reas 2. Drawn from Positive Benefits search study and inquisition after eternal things shall be drawn from those positive singular benefits which the Saints shall reap in eternity Particularly 1. They shall enjoy the blessed presence of the holy Trinity the vision and fruition of God This is a transforming sight They are like unto God so far as a creature can be capable of assimilation unto a deity Though Saints are not deified become Gods yet they are in an eminent manner partakers of the divine nature They shall see in heaven God the first being of all and their gracious Father reconciled to them in Jesus Christ They shall see Christ God and man in one person their Redeemer and Intercessor and they shall see the holy Ghost their comforter Neither shall they as strangers and travellers see other mens Lands or as men by maps see farre Countries wherein they have no interest But they shall see the blessed Trinity as haveing themselves a special interest therein God as their God Christ as their Redeemer the Holy Ghost as their Comforter Tolle meum saith a Father tolle Deum In My God and my Lord there li●th the great consolation 2. Glorified Saints enjoy the society of Saints and Angels the 2. Glorified Saints enjoy the society of Saints spirits of just men made perfect There they shall see Abraham the father of the faithful David a man after Gods own heart Moses and Job Mirrours of meekness and patience Paul the great Dr. of the Gentiles There the godly Pastor and godly People the godly Husband and godly Wife the godly Father and godly Children shall meet together O what pretious company is there None but holy persons are admitted into the new Jerusalem Whether the Saints shall know one another in heaven who have been so well acquainted on earth is a question much controverted But there are two Scriptures that make much for the affirmative viz. Mat. 17. 4. At Christs transfiguration which was a type and glimpse of heaven Peter knew Moses and Elias who were dead many hundred years before Another is 1 Thes 2. 19 20. For what is our hope or joy or crown of rejoicing Are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming For ye are our glory and joy 3. The glorified Saints shall be busied in a rare transcendent 3. Glorified Saints shall be busied in a high em●loyment imployment In heaven they shall be for ever praysing of
Testament unto the New we shall find the whole Church earnest for one man Act. 12. 5. Peter therefore was kept in Prison but prayer was made without ceasing of the Church unto God for him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Intentae So Beza referring to the ardor of the mind Sine intermissione so Erasmus And how speed these prayers Vers 7. The Angell of the Lord came upon him and a light shined in the Prison and he smote Peter on the side and raised him up saying Arise up quickly And his chaines fell off from his hands Upon this Scripture I l'e give you that observation of an excellent Divine lately gone Dr Harris Pet. Enlargement from us to heaven in that rare Sermon called Peters enlargement The Enemies saith he shuts the Prison dore the Church opens Heavens dores so there 's old tugging for the prisoner but the Church will not let him go saith God if you will take no deniall there he is And as the whole Church prayed for the Apostle so did one Apostle Paul pray much for the whole Church Rom. 1. 9. For God is my witnesse whom I serve with my spirit in the Gospell of his Son that without ceasing I make mention of you alwaies in my prayers And Eph. 1. 16 17. I cease not to give thanks for you making mention of you in my prayers that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledge of him 2. To these examples I l'e adde in the next place Scripture precepts for Proofe Ministers are in a peculiar manner in joynd this 2. The Doctrine proved by Scripture Precepts duty Joel 2. 17. Let the Priests the Ministers of the Lord weep between the porch and the Altar and let them say spare thy people O Lord and give not thine heritage to reproach that the Heathen should rule over them wherefore should they say among the people where is their God All are in joyn'd Psal 122. 7. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem they shall prosper that love thee peace be within thy walls and prosperity he within thy Palaces And James 5. 16. Confesse your faults one unto another and pray one for another c. In the third place I l'e assign some grounds and reasons for confirmation and these I shall reduce unto three Heads 3. The Doctrine confirmed by Reasons 1. In respect of God 2. Of prayer 3. Of Jerusalem All these are strong Arguments to perswade 1. In respect of God who both expects and promiseth a blessing R. 1. In respect of God upon the meanes The Lord so expects prayer as that he will not grant great mercyes unto his Church but in and by his peoples prayers God hath ingaged himselfe in a Bond. His promise is his Bond and he will have it put in suit before he pay it See what God promiseth Psal 50. 15. Call upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorify me And Jer. 33. 6. Behold I will cure them and reveale unto them the abundance of peace and truth And I will cause the captivity of Judah and the captivity of Israel to returne and will build them as at the first So Zeph. 3. 20. In that time I will bring you again even in the time that I gather you For I will make you a name and a praise among all people of the earth when I turne back your captivity before your eyes saith the Lord. What a glorious Church is Prophecied and what transcendent beauty will the Lord put upon them Isai 54. 11 12. O thou afflicted tossed with tempest and not comforted behold I will lay thy stones with faire colours and lay thy foundation with Saphirs and I will make thy windowes of Agates and thy gates of Carbuncles and all thy borders of pleasant stones By all these Hyperbolicall similitudes is set forth the glorious condition of the Church in the daies of the Gospell These are great Beauties and excellencies prophesied of the Church yet as they are worth praying for so in good earnest they must be sought of God Jer. 33. 3. Call unto me and I will answer thee and shew thee great and mighty things which thou knowest not c. 36. Ezek. 37. Thus saith the Lord I will yet for this be enquired of by the House of Israel to do it for them I will increase them with men like a flock Now prayer is Gods Ordinance the language of his Spirit the musick which he loveth no Melody in Gods account like unto the prayers of his people Wherefore though God promiseth great things unto his people who will not faile one jot of his word yet he will have his Children plye the Throne of grace He is the great Master of Requests and loves to see his Court full of Suitors He is the great God that heareth prayers and delighteth in prayers and it is his pleasure that his people should be his remembrancers even to spread before him the condition of his Church For though it 's best known to him already yet he will have them call cry and seek with Importunity for the accomplishment of those good and great things which he intends for his own people Though deliverance was promised out of the Babylonish captivity at the expiation of 70 yeares yet they must pray for it Psal 126. vers 4. Turne again our captivity O Lord as the streames in the South A second Reason shall be taken from the great benefit of prayer R. 2. From the great Benefit of prayer It is an instrumentall meanes under God to obtain a blessing By some it is called Clavis viscerum Dei virtus omnipotens Their intentions are good I doubt not who use these expressions yet it is not safe to use them without an explanation of their sence Without question great help comes by prayer yet the help depends not upon what we do but upon God that gives to will and to do It is our duty to pray and the praise and glory of the successe and issue coming of prayer we must ascribe wholly unto the Lord that heareth prayers Now what helpes prayer affords may be represented in these following particular Instances 1. Prayer is an Universall help It 's Solomons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Prayer is an universall help when raine is wanting when enemies get the victory when there is death famine and pestilence then is a speciall time to pray and God promiseth audience 1 Chron. 7. 13 14. If I shut up Heaven that there be no raine or if I command the Locust to devour the Land and if I send Pestilence among my people If my people which are called by my name shall humble themselves and pray and seeke my face and turn from their wicked waies then will I heare from Heaven forgive their sinne and heale their Land This is a Soveraigne medicine of Gods owne appointment for all diseases
begotten of the Father full of grace and truth And this is the great mystery of Godlinesse mentioned 1 Tim. 3. 16. And without controversy great is the mistery of godlinesse God was manifest in the flesh justified in the spirit seen of Angells preached unto the Gentiles believed on in the world received up into glory Christ was God from all Eternity Joh. 8. 58. Jesus said unto them Verily verily I say unto you before Abraham was I am There he speaks of his Godhead A further proofe we have Phil. 2. 6. Who being in the forme of God thought it not robbery to be equall with God Compare this with Zech. 13. 7. Awake O sword against my shepheard and against the man that is my fellow saith the Lord of hosts smite the shepheard and the sheep shall be scattered and I will turne mine hand upon the little ones This is love unparrelleld unexpressible 4. Christ himselfe voluntarily undertook this great work of Proposit 4. Christ voluntarily undertook the worke of our Redemption our redemption he laid down his own life freely And because the Godhead could not suffer death he united our nature unto himselfe and took flesh upon him There are two words setting forth his humiliation Phil. 2. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he made himselfe of no reputation c. Joh. 1. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and he dwelt among us c. He took the man hood as if he should unite a clodde of dust unto himselfe who was God from all Eternity As if the Antient of daies should become the infant of daies the Eternall God become a Child As if he that the heaven of heavens could not containe should be inclosed nine months in the wombe of a Virgin Thus it was in respect of his humane nature he was born of Virgin wrapt in swadling cloathes laid in a manger He who had heaven and earth at his command was laid in a manger Herein appeares the singular love of Christ in condescending to take mans nature to take a body that he might accomplish the great work of our redemption by suffering upon the crosse Heb. 10. 5 6 7. Wherefore when he cometh into the world he saith sacrifice and offering thou wouldest not but a body hast thou prepared me In burnt offerings and sacrifice for sinne thou hast had no pleasure Then said I loe I come in the volumne of the book it is written of me to do thy will O God 5. Christ by his active and passive obedience made full compleate Proposit 5. Christ by his obedience hath made full satisfaction and absolute satisfaction to his Fathers Justice for all those that were given him by the Father Rom. 3. 25. Whom God hath set forth to be a Propitiation through faith in his blood to declare his righteousnesse for the remission of sinnes that are past through the forbearance of God To the same effect the Apostle speaks Eph. 2. 13. But now in Christ Jesus yee who sometimes were farre off are made nigh by the blood of Christ Col. 1. 20. And having made peace through the blood of his Crosse by him to reconcile all things unto himselfe by him I say whether they be things in earth or in heaven Christ gave himselfe a sacrifice to expiate for sinne He trod the winepresse of his Fathers sury By his stripes we are healed who his owne selfe bare our sinnes in his owne body on the tree that we 1 Pet. 2. 24. being dead to sinne should live unto righteousnesse by whose stripes we are healed He is the reconciler Col. 1. 20. The price of our redemption 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 6. 20. For yee are bought with a price Matth. 20. 28. Even as the Son of man came not to be ministred unto but to minister and to give his life a ransome for many See Christ's great end of coming into the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to give his life a ransome for many Christ is the high Priest that entred into the holy of holiest and offered up himselfe a sacrifice Thereby as a surety he paid our debt satisfied his Fathers justice to the utmost Isai 53. 5 11. But he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him and with his stripes we are healed He shall see of the travell of his soule and be satisfied by his knowledge shall my righteous servant justify many for he shall beare their iniquities And this is a thorough satisfaction 2 Cor. 5. 21. For he hath made him to be sinne for us who knew no sinne that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him Tit. 2. 14. Who gave himselfe for us that he might redeeme us from all iniquity and purify unto himselfe a peculiar people zealous of good workes Hereby we are justified Rom. 5. 9. Much more being now justified by his blood we shall be saved from wrath through him Hereby we are sanctified Rev. 1. 5. And from Jesus Christ who is the faithfull witnesse and the first begotten of the dead and the Prince of the Kings of the earth unto him that loved us and washed us from our sinnes in his owne blood Feare not we are now made nigh Eph. 2. 13. But now in Christ Jesus yee who were farre of are made nigh by the blood of Christ By him we are reconciled Col. 1. 20. And having made peace through the blood of his Crosse by him to reconcile all things unto himselfe by him I say whether they be things in earth or in heaven By Christ we are blessed Gal. 3. 13 14. Christ hath redeemed us from the Curse of the law being made a Curse for us for it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree that the blessing of Abraham might come upon us And that Christ doth fully satisfy is evident because he continually interceds for his people and pleads the vertue and benefit of his perfit satisfactionion Heb. 7. 25. Wherefore he is able also to save them to the utmost that come unto God through him seeing he ever liveth make intercession for them And what was the motive that moved him to do all this for his people to be incarnate to live on earth amongst sinners to suffer reproaches contempts and infamies what moved him to drinke that bitter Cup to poure his blood out of his side and become obedient unto the death of the Crosse Nothing moved him but his love his good will his compassion moved him to heale bodily diseases and his compassion love and mercy moved him to heale soule diseases 6. This love of Christ is a distinguishing speciall love for a peculiar Proposit 6. The Love of Christ is a distinguishing Love sort of people He sweat drops of blood in the garden he was afflicted smitten wounded but all this he endured for the transgression of his own people Isai 53. 8. He was taken from prison and from judgment and who
the City of God which St Peter cals 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 5. 4. an immarcessible crowne of glory then thou would'st be transform'd into another manner of man thy tongue will be toucht with a coale from the altar Thy language wou●d bewray thee to be a denizon of Canaan thy love joy and hope would be alienated from the world and wholy center upon God who is the love joy and hope of thy soule Were there no future reward of godlinesse the beauty that is in it selfe is more amiable and desiderable then all the Kingdomes of the world and the glory of them What Cleopatra said Cleopatra to Marcus Antonius It 's not for you to be a fishing for small fish but for townes forts and castles And so for those who have the beames of Gods reconcil'd countenance darted into their soules who have a spirituall acquaintance and a sacred communion with the great ●● God of Heaven and Earth It 's not for them to be trading for meane things for the trash and pelfe of this miserable world but their spirits must aspire unto great things eternall life v. Fox Martyr de Edvardo primo glory and immortality even the price of the high calling that is in Christ Jesus our Lord. It 's story'd of Edward the first that he had a vehement desire to goe to Jerusalem but being prevented by death he gave in charge on his death-bed that his sonne should convey his heart thither and for that purpose he left a great Masse of mony so the Saints though their bodies are not in Heaven yet their hearts are there and their conversation is above though their bodies are here below O that my words might make a firme impression upon your consciences that you would put the highest price upon godlinesse and account it your honour and preferment whilst others labour for corne and oyle and joyne house to house for the perpetuating of their memories let me perswade you to labour for the riches of faith and the riches of Christ that you may be rich in holinesse and may be truly noble by the divine image stamp't upon your soules you that are cald to be Gods Embassadours his mouth to his people how dare ye chuse rather to be schollars to Pythagoras then to Christ by affecting a stupendious silence you that have tooke upon you the charge of soules doe not O doe not maintaine your bravery by the price of blood The time will come when it will be said sheapheard give accompt of the flock committed to thy charge When Andrew shall come in with Achaia by him converted to the saving knowledg of the faith John with Asia Thomas with India Peter with the Jewes and Paul with the Gentiles where then shall the idol shepheard appeare will such an Apology hold I could not brooke the rusticity of the people it would be a crushing of my hopes of preferment if I should spend my spirits upon such illiterate men But how darest thou deny thy breath to those poore soules for whom Christ powred out his pretious blood out of his veines My hearts desire is that all men in place of quality would herein anticipate authority and feed their flocks themselves and labour to approve themselves workemen not to be ashamed not handling the word of God deceitfully Happy were it for us if we could keep a Parliament within our selves and save them a labour by setting upon the worke of reformation every man in his own soule and conscience Hee 's the best Critick who makes a Critica Sacra upon his own heart who labours to understand the Errata of his own life and to wipe them out with the spunge of Godly sorrow Whilst we have an heart and a heart a heart for God and a heart for Mammon whilst worldly pompe and high place come in competition with the glory of God so that we would gladly carry a faire correspondence on both sides if these be our humours we can never 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 walke with a right foote in the waies of godlinesse When thou flatterest thy heart on this wise O if I shone in an higher sphere if I had such and such a place of dignity I should then labour to bring more glory to God thou colludest with thy conscience and art not acquainted with thy selfe-deceiving-spirit how higher places might cause greater precipices If thou art not qualifi'd for the present condition I feare thou wilt be more unfit to manage another This is an hard lesson which I inculcate what shall the wise man deny his wisdome the honourable man his honours the rich man his riches we say t is a strong stomack that can digest much honey so it 's a strong spirit that is not overcome with the sweetnesse of much prosperity It 's a true signe that the Eunuchs were on Jehues side when they cast down Jezebell who had painted her face in pompe and glory so when the world comes in its harlots dresse and inticeth us to all manner of impurity if we can lend a deafe eare unto its syrenicall inchantments if we can bid defiance unto its bewitching allurements this is an argument that we set our faces towards Heaven that we seek a citty which is above whose maker is the Lord of Hosts In the second place I le adde a few directions how we should Use 2 1. For Direction doe to slacken our pursuit after great things and get our hearts estrang'd from them 1. For direction amongst many I shall only advise you to these foure things 1. Labour for a contented mind 2. Learne to deny your selves 3. Study the vanitie of the creature 4. Be acquainted with the fulnesse that is in Christ 1. You must labour for contentation of spirit It 's a lesson worth D●rect 1. Labour for acontented mind the learning Phil. 4. 11. I have learned in what state soever I am therewith to be content what 's the reason that the ambitious never ceaseth climbing the covetous never ceaseth scraping the Epicure never ceaseth swallowing but because he is not contented with his present condition No life to a contented mind it accounts its poore cottage a kingdome it accounts its gleanings a granary its russet beyond all the rufflings in silk and sattin satis est divitiarum nihil amplius velle So Quintilian This is reckned by Seneca Quintil. Orat. 13. Seneca de vita beatâ Solum certe Beatum Cortina Aglium judicavit qui in angustissmo Arcadiae pauperis soli Dominus nunquam eg●essus paterni Cespitis Te●minos invenitur Jul Sol. Polyhist amongst his beatitudes beatus est praesentibus qualiacunque sunt contentus amicusque rebus suis He indeed is a happy man who is contented with his present condition whatsoever it be Imagine thy present condition to be that which is allotted unto thee by God and that best which he in wisdome sees most convenient for thee this was Agars prayer Prov. 30. 8.
ever did nor shall ever goe away a looser by Gods service God keeps the wages 'till afterwards Here we may have an earnest part of payment but the great summe is reserved for another world And they that honour God in bringing converts to the Gospell and making Proselytes to Jesus Christ they are highly honoured of God Them that honour me saith God I will honour 1 Sam. 2. 30. And what honour God will one day put upon them you may read Dan. 12. 3. And they that be wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnesse is the stars for ever and ever such honour hath all his Saints When Andrew shall come in with Achaia by him converted to the truth John with Asia Thomas with India Peter with the Jewes and Paul with the Gentiles and all the Ministers of the Gospell and others whom God hath made instrumentall in this great service when these shall be able to say Behold Lord here we are and the children which thou hast given us then will the Lord say to them well done good and faithfull servants enter into your masters joy And thus I have dispatcht the first head propounded in the second 2. Head The Characters of him that win neth soules Charact. 1. He must abound in love place I am to give in the character of him who of all others is likeliest to win soules how such a one should be qualified I shall represent unto you in these ensuing Characters 1. He must abound in the grace of love his heart must be enflamed with seraphicall love unto Jesus Christ It 's a passage frequently used in Ignatius Epistles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my love is crucified It 's an excellent saying in Paul 2 Cor. 5. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the love of Christ constrains us A faithfull Minister acts altogether from a principle of love to Jesus Christ He prayeth preacheth giveth almes fasteth watcheth and hee 's indefatigable in his labours and what 's the reason or ground of all Because the love of Christ constrains him Then onely are we upon sure grounds when the love of Christ is that primum mobile that sets all the other orbes in their motion and where there 's a principle of love to Jesus Christ there will be shed abroad mutuall love towards our brethren such love was unparalleld in Moses who wish'd himselfe blotted out of the bo●ke of life Exod. 32. 3. And in Paul who wished himselfe an Anathema for the Jewes Rom. 9. 3. Here 's soule love indeed beyond compare O what an ardent affection and tender compassion ought Ministers to have to the soules of their people Love to their soules will make them runne through fire and water grapple with beasts of Ephesus sons of Anak even Herculean labours But where 's love to the fleece onely Mercenary hopes of promotions dignities carnal interest all such self-ends and sinister respects will be but as so many Ignes fatui to lead men away into dangerous and destructive ways It 's onely love to the soul that will set thee a working to good purpose And further he that is thus set on fire with love to Christ and to his Brethrens souls must be a man of such wisdom as to temper all his counsels in love In all his Meditations and Exhortations Love is one main Ingredient in the composition He abhors sin in any and reproves it but whilest he hates the sin he loves the person and whilest he endeavors to slay and utterly to destroy the sin he would gladly be instrumental to save the soul of the sinner This is the rule which the Apostle gives Eph. 4. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some render it speaking some following some doing the truth But if the English word may be admitted it 's rendred most suitable to the Original truthing of it in love 2. He must be a man of a willing minde God expects his offering Charact. 2. A man of a willing minde of the willing hearted Exod. 35. 5. And the people are commended for willingly offering themselves Judg. 5. 2. The question was asked 1 Chron. 29. 5. Who then is willing to consecrate his service to the Lord and it 's said v. 6. Then the chief of the Fathers and the Princes of the tribes of Israel c. offered willingly And Gods people are a willing people people of willingn●sse Psalm 110. 3. Every one set apart for the Ministry must have such a Spirit as Amasiah the Son of Zichri had who willingly offered himself unto the Lord And this was as eminent in Paul And I will very gladly spend 2 Chro. 17. 16. 2 Chro. 12. 15. and be spent for you Necessity and constraint may not put any upon a Ministerial Function Quasi ultimum refugium not an Advowson purchased by the Father and intended for the Son nor an Impropriator who intends his Son for his Substitute at a venture A strange Soloecism saith Mr. Bolt●n that holy man of God a Lay-Rector and not Preach nor a Collegiate Education by Statute enjoyning at such a standing to enter into Orders whereas alass many venter thus upon this calling who have neither heart nor hand to put forth to the work but onely that they might keep their places I say none of those can be a sufficient warrant in point of conscience to take upon them so high a Calling This Calling must be took upon choice and serious deliberation It must be willingly entred upon and willingly performed No thinking of putting thy hand to the Plough and looking back such are not fit for the service of the Lord This must be thy resolution come good report come evil report honor dis honor prosperity or adversity I will give my self up to God as Hannah gave Samuel for a loan all the days of my life 3. He must be a man of a meek spirit such a singular spirit was Charact. 3. A man of a meek spirit in Moses Numb 12. 3. And beyond all parallel in Christ He propounds himself the pattern of our imitation Matth. 11. 29. How must the servant of the Lord be qualified 2 Timothy 2. 24 25. And the servant of the Lord must not strive but be gentle unto all m●n apt to teach patient in meekness instructing those that oppose themselves And how must an erring brother be dealt withal you may observe the rule Gal. 6. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 4. He must be a man of zeal and courage in the cause of God Every Charact. 4. He must be a man of zeal and courage thing is beautiful in its season There 's a season for meekness and a season for zeal Moses who was meek in his own cause yet was highly transported with zeal in the cause of God Some are Boanergesses Sons of Thunder and others are Barnabasses sons of consolation It 's observed that notwithstanding many failings there 's some good spoken of all the
similitudes there lay a mysterious meaning Christ spake with authority not as the Scrib●s each word had weight Whereupon people hearing things which they never heard before were eager and restless in their desires until they understood the Parable and the interpretation thereof The fourth and last Reason I shall mention why Christ preacht R. 4. in Parables was because this was a more prevalent convincing way of Preaching when Reproofs or Exhortations are delivered in Parables under the name of a third person they gain more well-come and acceptable entertainment Thus Nathan reproved David by a Parable of the Ewe-Lamb and set his reproof home by a Prosopopeia David hearing of the rich mans cruelty in taking the poor mans Lamb passeth sentence of death upon him and a fourfold restitution because he had no pitty Now David was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 condemned 2 Sam. 12. 5. 6. out of his own mouth Whereupon Nathan strikes whilst the Iron is hot by making particular Application of the Parable unto David Thou art the man This was a convincing way of Preaching And thus ought the Ministers of Christ to put in practice the most convincing way of Preaching whether in a way of Mercy or Judgement whether to come with a rod or the spirit of meekness whether to be Boanergesses or Barnabasses The most taking winning way we must use Provided always that we make the word of God our just Standard and rule to go by so that we may win souls unto Jesus Christ Now to draw nearer to the words In this Chapter there are delivered sundry choice and excellent Parables as of the sower and the seed a grain of mustard-seed leaven hid in three measures of meal a casting-net I pass from these unto that which hath immediate reference unto my Text v. 44. The Gospel of Christ is a Treasure and the Scripture is that pretious seed where that Treasure is to be found Neither can every one finde it or know the worth of it It 's a hidden Treasure The worth of the Gospel is unknown by and hidden from unbelievers But the true Believer who sindes it 2 Cor. 4. 3. Luk 2. 19. and knoweth the worth of it hides it i. e. he keeps it safe in the secretest recesses of his heart he hides it as Mary did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that hath discovered the incomparable Treasure of the Gospel doth not conceal or suppresse the knowledge thereof from others But first he 'll inrich himself therewith upon the finding of the Treasure he 's so ravisht with joy and so transported with a desire after the purchase as without delay demurs dodgings or abatements he sells all he hath to purchase the field and get possestion of it Now my Text is a further prosecution and confirmation of this Parable The first word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 again specifies a dependance upon what went before Expect no curiosity in dividing the words You have here propounded a Parable and its Interpretation 1. For the Parable and therein are to be considered these six Divis A Parable and its interpretation particulars 1. The Subject compared or ground-work of the comparison The kingdom of Heaven 2. The subject of this comparison or Person spoken of and he is decyphered by his external profession and occupation A Merchant man 3. You have set down what he trafficks for his particular Merchandize He 's not a petty Merchant of small wares and mean Commodities but a Merchant of Pearls And because there 's a difference in Pearls Aliae nobiles aliae minus generosae some are of a greater some of a cheaper estimation he trades for the best not ordinary common but goodly Pearls 4. The success he findes His labor is not lost but answered with good successe a particular instance or specification of his successe is that he findes goodly Pearls 5. What doth he finde of greatest value He findes a Pearl of superlative invaluable price A Pearl beyond compare of more worth then all other Pearls whatsoever and that is The Pearl of price 6. and lastly Here 's set down what the purchase cost him and that 's all that he had Thus far of the bare letter of the Parable according to the dark part of it But there 's a mystical meaning to be considered let 's take off the veil and give in the interpretation I shall open the terms in that order they lie in the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By Kingdom of Heaven in this place is plainly set forth the administration of the Gospel It 's call'd the Kingdom of Heavens in the plural alluding to the other Heaven the habitation of glorified Scopus est commendare Evangel●ū piis à singulari praestanuâ eâdemque opera dicere qu●nti Evangelium a piis fiat Pis●at Saints and Angels The Gospel of Christ is that Heaven on Earth which will bring us to that Heaven above Piscator observes on the place The scope of all is this to inhance the incomparable worth and estimation of the Gospel in the hearts of the godly It followeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Merchant man This Merchant is every true believer who drives a continual trade for Heaven who is industrious and indefatigable in his labors He seeks after faith repentance holyness of life the kingdom of God and his righteousness the reconciled countenance of God in the face of Jesus Christ These are the Jewels for which he searcheth This is his sole imployment to negotiate Instar negociatorum debent conquirere pretiosas Margaritas fidel pietatis Pareus in loc for Heaven He trades not for trifles but weighty precious Commodities His merchandize is particularized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 goodly Pearls the Pearls of faith and holyness as Pareus on the place The Gospel holds forth goodly Pearls goodly Promises goodly Ordinances goodly Graces a goodly recompense of reward the beauty thereof will enamor the soul and the Treasure therein contained will more enrich it then all the Kingdoms of the World and the glory of them And what success he had you may see 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This Pearl of great price is Jesus Christ The Gospel is the Cabinet Margarites as Pliny and other Historians observe are produced out of the dew of Heaven and Shell-fishes draw in that dew They are called Vniones because usually they are found two by two unsevered in the same shell And that which is last to be opened is the price paid to purchase this invaluable Pearl Quis magno emit Margaritam nisi cui notum est pretium Mucul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 None will buy this Pearl who knows not the price saith Musculus T is evident that this Spiritual Merchant was a man of knowledge The knowledge of the worth of Christ made him so willing to sell all for him He stands not dodging and cheapning hoping to bring down the price he knoweth Christ to be
Agag a ruling sinne thou canst not purchase the pearle For if the commodity be worth an hundred pounds he goes without it that bids but fifty pounds as well as hee that bids but twenty pounds There must be no hypocriticall defaulking from the price with Ananias and Saphira no halving of it with the strumpet or partial almost Christianity Act. 5. 2. with Agrippa A divided heart is afaulty heart We must Hos 10. 2. willingly part with all whatsoever is dearest or nearest though it be to the dismembring of our selves the parting with a right hand or a right eye our constitution our accustomed sins We may not be faint chapmen cheapning and hoping to bring the price down The Drunkard cannot have Christ and his cups The swearer cannot have Christ and his oathes The unclean person cannot have Christ and his strumpet The Hypocrite cannot have Christ and his painted glosses The cheating cradesman cannot have Christ and his false weights or sophisticated wares Christ will not bee thus coupled thus unequally yoaked Between light and darknesse Christ and Belial there can be no communion And thus farre having gone by way of Explication and Confirmation of the point give me leave to presse all home unto your consciences by particular Application uses 4. 4 Uses I would make of this doctrine for reproofe Examination exhortation and direction Vses 4. For reproofe For reproof of all such who will not sell all for the purchase of the pearle of price There are 4 sorts especially who will not goe to the price of this pearle Ignorant persons that know not the worth of it Covetous persons who preserre the world before it and open profane persons who scorne and doe what in them lyes to trample this Pearle underfoot These 4 come within the verge of this Reprehension 1. Ignorant persons through blindnesse of mind undervalue the Ignorant persons glorious excellencies of Jesus Christ Their grosse ignorance causeth them to undervalue Jesus Christ So that profane Duke of Burbon prefer'd his Part in Paris before his part in Paradise 1. Wee say Ignorantia excusat à tanto non à non à toto And we usually distinguish between an affected ignorance which is pravae disposit ionis from that which is crasse invincible purae negationis And so their punishments may be inflicted secundum mag●s minus yet neither being excusable These through ignorance resemble Aisop's Cock preferring a barly corne before a gemme And these are lyable to a dreadfull curse mentioned by the Prophet Poure cut thy Jer. 10. 25. fury upon the Heathen that know thee not upon the families that call not upon thy name 2. Idle lazy persons are to be reproved who are so supine and carelesse as will not stirre a foot to purchase Christ The wisemen came from the East to worship Christ and the Queen of Sh●ba from the uttermost parts of the earth to heare the wisedome of Solomon these shall rise in judgment against this lazy generation who will be at no paines and at no cost for the purchase of a Saviour Mannah falls round about your tents You have bread in the morning and bread in the evening will not you take paines to gather it You have a Mart and a market for your soules These places of concourse are open which is no small mercy and will you not come at them Men goe many miles for a gainful bargain and are ye so sick of the lazies as you will not step over the threshold to hear a Sermon Non nisi subla to reperitur gemmula saxo This pearle is not to be had by such as fold their hands in their bosomes nor such as lye at Tavernes and Alehouses nor such as in contempt of the Gospel willfully absent themselves from the publick ordinances for fear lest the plain dealing of the Minister should touch them to the quick 3. Covetous persons are to be reprooved who will not foregoe an Ox a farme not a penny profit in the trade for Jesus Christ Mammon is their god and therefore they 'le give no entertainment unto Jesus Christ Gold and silver corne and wine lands and sumptuous buildings are their God Take away these and they will reply with Mica ye have taken away my Gods and what have I more You may read the absurd Contents of the foolish Gadarens petition that Jesus Christ would depart out of their coasts They prefer'd their swine before a Jesus Judas betrayed Christ for 30 peeces of silver And the young man in the Gospel prefer'd treasures on earth before treasures in heaven Demas for the love of the world turn'd Apostate If a man will allow himselfe in covetousnesse hel 'e be any thing as opportunity offers Hel 'e sell his conscience for Mammon Hel 'e tack about for his best advantage A man that was never drunk with wine nor beare yet may be drunk with the cares of the world as our Saviour expresseth Luk. 21. 34. A Christian's conversation must be without covetousnesse 4. Profane persons are to be reproved such as are of Esau's humor Heb. 13. 5. Heb. 12. 16. who for one morsell of meat sold his birth-right A profane person will not foregoe a lust for Christ The drunkard will not leave his cups The uncleane person will not leave his strumpet nor the swearer his oaths for Christ And why I because they are enemies to Christ Christ and Belial Christ and profanenesse of spirit Christ and lusts cannot be reconciled Use 2. For Examination The second Use is for Examination whether we are willing to sell all for the purchase of Jesus Christ By way of character I l'e propound three queries 1. Doe we exalt and preferre Christ above all besides If so it will appeare by our judgments affections and conversation 1. Doe you exalt Christ in your judgments Have you a spirit 1 Query Doe you Exalt Christ 1. In your judgments 2. In your affections of discerning to discerne more beauty wisdome riches purity and vertue in Christ then in all the world besides observe what a high commendation the spouse gives of Christ upon experimentall knowledg Cant. 5. 10. My beloved is white and ruddy the chiefest amongst tenne thousand Christ was white for his innocency and ruddy for his sufferings 2. Doe you exalt Christ in your affections doe you love Christ with an entire love doth his love constraine you 2 Cor. 5. 14. Doe you set your joy upon Christ when Christ came in the power of his Ministery 't is said there was a great joy in that City Acts 8. 9. That Christian who hath a white stone and a new name O how is his heart ravisht with an exuberant joy And doe you place your desire upon Christ Psal 73. 25. whom have I in Heaven but thee there 's none whom I desire besides thee 3. Doe you exalt Christ in your life and conversation Then 3 Your life and Conversation doe we price
of Jordan If lesser afflictions cast thee down low will not greater quite overwhelme thee consider of those things in thy most serious composed thoughts The 4th Use and last is for direction The Question will be askt Use 4. For Direction 1. Direction Come to the mankets what meanes must bee used for the purchase of this pearle In the winding up of all I 'le prescribe a few principall means and forthwith conclude 1. You must come to the markets whilst they last and whilst the shops are open To day is the market and the Ministry of the Gospell shewes forth the most pretious wares Now then come here and buy Mary found Christ in the midst of the Doctors and the blind man lay in the way where Christ came by Jacobs sons must goe to Aegypt to fetch corne The five Virgins are bid to goe to them that sell Matth. 25. 9. The Minister tenders these commodities Sabboths are market daies and the publick assemblies market places sit then at the feet of your teachers come frequently to the meanes of grace This coming is accepted as a kind of price though not meritorious paid to purchase Christ Though grace be free and we cannot bring mony in our hands yet come come come t is thrice ingeminated Isay 55. 1. 2. When you are gone from hence give your selves to reading 2. Direction Give your sel●es to Reading and Meditation meditation and conference Read and search the Scripture bring all with the Beraeans to the touchstone of the word John Husse was converted by reading the Scripture then there was no open vision But the word preached is like the breast milke most nourishing To reading adde meditation meditate of the worth of this Pearle What you read or heare labour to digest by meditation and to meditation adde conference Mal. 3. 16. so those old Disciples spake often one to anoth●r c. 3ly Seek the face of God by prayer They that seek have a promise of finding To aske for Christ and his grace is a Petition suteable to the will of God And as king according to God's will wee have a promise of being heard Let us cry after Christ as hid treasures Lord give me this pearle or else I am undone Le ts resolve with Bernard Nunquam 1 Joh. 5. 14. discedam à te Domine sine te Le ts herein be importunate beggars take no nay no repulse resolving never to be driven away from our Fathers doore 4ly Buy the truth Prov 23. 23. Bee at any cost paines or charges for the Purchase of truth and what 's the truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 14 6. I am the way the truth and the life Give all diligence to know the truths recorded in the word of God Bee unwilling to part with the smallest truth Take such a delight and love to the truth as thou wilt leave no meanes unattempted for the purchase of it Every truth is gold and the least shaving of gold is pretious One truth is more worth than a world Not an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of truth shall fall to the ground Therefore thou must study the truth read pray meditate conferre and hear to attain unto the knowledge of the truth 5ly Lastly buy this pearle of price in the season and opportunity when it 's tendred Take the benefit of the present time To every thing there is a season and a time to every purpose under heaven Eccles 3. 1. Let that excellent covnsell make deep impression upon your spirits Is 55. 6. Seeke ye the Lord while he may be found c. And let Jerusalems misery be our warning peece Luk. 19. 42. If thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things which belong unto thy peace but now they are hid fr●m thy eyes Now is the market it yet lasts blessed be God other the opportunity Neglect not these golden seasons now tendr'd to you It 's now day fall a working whilst its day the night cometh when no man can work Joh. 9. 4. You have here a tender of the pearle of price this day you know not whether you shall live to have a second tender The Lord of heaven set home this word upon your consciences and perswade you speedily readily and cheerfully to sell all you have to purchase this Pearle of price the Lord Jesus who is of superlative value more worth then millions of worlds A Suffering Faith Discovered from Philip. 1. 29. For unto you it is given in the behalfe of Christ not onely SERM. 5. At St. Maries Oxon. Decemb. 24. 1648. to believe on him but also to suffer for his sake THe Apostle having encouraged the Philippians to contend for the faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vers 27. prepares them for encounters with adversaries vers 28. And in nothing terrified by your adversaries which is to them an evident token of perdition but to you of salvation and that of God he tells them plainly what they must meet withall in the reason of the Text. The words containe three generalls A Duty An Object An Ability to performe the same 1. For the duty and that is double to believe and to suffer or Thetext divided it 's but one even a suffering faith 2. For the Object it s twice repeated but one and the same on Christ and for Christ Christ is the object of faith and for his sake we must be willing to suffer 3. Here 's the abilitie to performe both duties of believing and suffering To you it is given None can believe in Christ nor suffer for Christ except it be given from above Before I draw forth the Doctrine I will insist a while in the explanation of the words It 's said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it s gratia gratis data gratia gratum faci●ns Faith is no hearb that groweth in our gardens but it s a plant of our heavenly Father's plantation It s an habit infus'd by the spirit the supernaturall worke of God No morall perswasion no principle of nature no volumes of glimmering Philosophers can make discovery of this pearle Nature is as dimme-sighted as a mole in divine mysteries It s beyond the kenne of a naturall man to discerne spirituall things 1 Cor. 2. 14. But the naturall man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned As John gave Testimonie of Christ John 3. 27. That a man can receive nothing except it be given him from above so it may be said of Faith except it be given thee from above thou canst not receive it It followes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hence its evident that every faith is not a suffering faith when the sonne of man comes shall he find faith on the earth A temporary verball dogmaticall or historicall faith are every where to be found like the Sycamores in the valleyes for abundance But a true saving justifying faith that
made conformable unto Christ the head and Captaine of their salvation in a way of suffering Heb. 2. 10. And sayth the Apostle Peter For hereunto were yee called because Christ also suffered for us leaving us an example that yee should follow his steps I Pet. 2. 21 and this is that which the Apostle did so earnestly desire to know even the sellowship of Christs sufferings Phil 3 10. Now between the head and the members there ought to bee a conformity Christ went into his glory by the way of sufferings Christ suffered in his name hee was called a Wine-Bibb●r a Deceiver a Samaritan an Heretick a Devill hee was scoft at scorn'd crucified And his singular patience is upon record 1 Pet. 2. 23 who wh●n hee was reviled reviled not again when hee suffered hee threatned not but committed himselfe to him that judgeth righteously Yea hee suffered in every place hunger in the desert resistance and reproaches in the temple an Agony in the garden contumelies in the judgment hall crucifying without the city likewise hee suffered in every part his eyes ran down with teares his temples with blood his eares tingled with buffetings and the hearing of their blasphemies and glowed with their reproaches they afflicted his tast with gall and vinegar pierced his hands with nailes his sides with a spear his heart was full of sorrow his soule of anguish hee gave his back to the smiters and his cheeks to those that plucked off the hair Isai 50. 6. Never was any sorrow like unto his sorrow the wrath of God was powred upon him in a full bitter cup and all was to this end that hee might leave us an ensample to follow his steps Heb. 12. 3. For consider him that endured such contradictions of sinners against himselfe lest yee bee wearied and faint in your minds Now then let us expostulate the case did our master suffer and shall not wee his servants did the head suffer and shall not the members sympathise Learne therefore to follow Christ to Golgotha and bee conformed to Christ in the vaile of his misery in his temptations if ever you look to abide with him in his kingdome Look for it make account of it whoever thou beest that art a Disciple of Jesus Christ Thou shalt one time or other drink of the Fathers cup of affliction in via before thou shalt drink a cup of new wine in Patria Doe you look for better usage and entertainment than Christ and all his witnesses have met withall before you Herein Man hath a priviledge above Angels hee hath a body and can suffer and so hath not Angels The 4th and last reason shall be drawn from those singular benefits Reas 4. Drawn from the benefit of suff●ring for Christ 1. that accrew unto God's people from their sufferings 1. Their suffering places are furnaces not to consume but to purify and refine them Dan. 11. 35. And some of understanding shall fall to try them and purge them and to make them white even to the time of the end because it is yet for a time appointed and likewise the same Prophet tels us Dand. 12. 10 many shall be purified and made white and tryed but the wicked shall doe wickedly and none of the wicked shall understand but the wise shall underst and. To the same effect the Prophet speaks Zech. 13. 9 and I will bring the third part thorow the fire and will refine them as silver is refined and will try them as gold is tryed and to purge them and to take away their dresse and Tinne Is 1. 25. Suffering places are Gods framing houses wherin he fashions and casts his people into a new mold hee makes their graces shine the the brighter as candles doe by snuffing Wee had not got so great knowledge of the patience of Job and courage of Paul Jeremy and Daniel were it not for their sufferings Their suffering places are as so many consecrated Oratories Act. 16. 25 and at midnight Paul and Silas prayed and sang prayses unto God and the prisoners heard them In prison Manasseh fell a praying Hee got more good by a Prison then by a Throne how sweetly did the Martyrs pray in prison what ravishing letters did Bradford Philpot Carel●sse and others write out of prison Men may imprison the body but cannot imprison the spirit The hearts of God's children are enlarged though thir bodies are imprisoned The Lord Jesus Christ is the supporter of the Saints in their sufferings and applyeth his cordial comforts to them in their languishing condition An Angel comforted Jacob when he was afraid of his brother Esau and hee saw a vision at Bethell An Angel comforted Elias when Jezabel had designed him to destruction an Angel delivered Peter out of Prison and supporting grace strengthened Paul 2 Cor. 12. 9 and hee said unto mee my grace is suffici●nt for thee for my strength is made perfect in weakness most gladly therefore will I rather glory in mine infirmities that the power of Christ may rest upon mee Suffering is the way to prevent sufferings suffering loss of goods liberty life for Christs sake is the way to prevente eternal sufferings For 6ly and lastly suffering for and with Christ hath an ample reward Rom. 8. 17 if so bee that wee suffer with him that wee also may bee glorified together Compare our sufferings and glory together vers 18. For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be rev●aled in us 2 Cor. 4. 16 17 For which cause wee faint not but though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renew●d day by day For our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory And thus much for explication and confirmation of the doctrine Applic. I now descend to particular application In the first place this reproves the paucity of those that will suffer Vse 1 for Jesus Christ you know how Peter boasted of his courage and how lamentably he was foyld Many pretend valour and resolution For reproof for the truth and are voces praeterea nihil Ther●s a notable story in the book of Martyrs concerning Dr. Pendl●ton and M. Saund●rs Mr Saunders was timerous and affraid lest he should deny Christ The Dr was confident and sayd being a corpulent man that each gobbet of fat in his body should fry at the stake but this Braggadocian turn'd Apostate and the other timorous Christian suffered Martyrdome I may not shoot at Randome but levell at some particular persons these ' I le single out that are of all others unlikely to suffer when persecution comes 1. They that will not endure a lesser evill for Christ will never endure 1. They that will not endure a l●sser suffering are unlikely to to suffer greater a greater If thou hast runn● with footmen and they have weari●d thee then how canst thou contend with horses Jer.
to Christ that onely constrains us to suffer for him Thirdly They cannot sympathize with the sufferings of Gods people they are so far from being afflicted with them that they rejoyce in their afflictions and adde affliction unto affliction They that are of this temper will never suffer for Iesus Christ The second use shall be for Tryal and Examination whether you Vse 2. For Tryal and examination have a suffering Faith yea or no Many springs move many to suffer as a natural Conscience and a natural Pride and stoutness of Spirit A man may give his Body to be burnt and yet want love to Iesus Christ Here 's the grand Question What 's that Faith which will be a true Q. What 's that faith which wil be a suffering faith A Faith is a Christians life effectual suffering Faith For Answ 1. That Faith which is thy life amidst all deaths thy supply amidst all wants thy supportation consolation amidst all troubles thy meat and drink houshold-stuff thy Riches and Revenues this will carry thee through sufferings that Faith which makes thee live upon Christ in all straights srovvns crosses losses and hardships this will make thee undergoe the worst of evils for him who is the chiefest good It 's not said that a man shall live by his Wits Lands or Labours but by his Faith Hab. 2. 4. The Just shall live by Faith 2. That Faith which is rooted and grounded upon the love of Christ will constrain thee to suffer for him Love made Jacob endure 2. Faith is grounded upon the love of Christ his hard service chearfully for his beloved Rachel Love made Moses wish himself to be blotted out of the Book of Life And Paul wisht himself Anathema for the Jews none so ready to die for Christ as the love-sick Spouse Many waters cannot quench her love Cant. 8. 7. It s love to Christ that will make thee willing to do and suffer any thing for him 3. If thy Faith can carry thee well through the temptations of 3. Faith carryeth through temptations of Prosperity and Adversity Foelix ille quem nec fortuita attollunt nec adversa deprimūt Senec. 4. Faith keeps up the heart in the use of means prosperity it is probable that it will carry thee through the tryal of Adversity If Faith will keep thee from swelling in prosperity it will keep thee from breaking in adversity 'T is a strong Stomack that will digest much Honey It 's a strong Faith that will not be allured by the sweetness pleasures and profits of the world He 's happy whom prosperity lifts not up nor adversity breaks 4. That Faith will make thee suffer that keeps thy heart up in the use of good means even then when all things goe against thee David then most repairs to the Sanctuary Psal 73 17. Vntil I went into the Sanctuary of God I knew it not but hereby I understood their end And see his behaviour at Ziglag 1 Sam 30. 6. And David was greatly distressed for the People spake of stoning of him because the soul of all the People was grieved every man for his sons and for his daughters but David encouraged himself in the Lord his God Rabshekah falls a railing and Hezekiah falls a Praying Observe well if Faith keep you in love to frequent Exercise of holy Duties though as yet you feel nothing coming in yet still continue in the practice of them and dare in no case sit loose from them but follow Christ from Ordinance to Ordinance and enquire every where after your Beloved this is that Faith questionless that will carry you through sufferings 5. That Faith which purifies thy Conscience reforms thy Life 5. Faith purifieth the heart and resigns thy Will wholly to the will of God this will make thee suffer for Christ Onely an holy unfained Faith will make thee to suffer Such a Faith the Apostle had which made him not be afraid of the King of Terrors Phil. 1. 21. For to me to live is Christ to die is gain That Faith will prove a sound suffering Faith that will engage thee to venture soul estate and body upon the free grace of God in Iesus Christ This will make thee to cast thy burthen upon the Lord and flie to him as a Sanctuary as a refuge from the Storm and as a shadow from the heat Examine whether thou canst produce these Symptomes of thy Faith The third Use shall be for Exhortation Be willing to undergoe Vse 3. For Exhortation any hardship loss or cross for Jesus Christ Consider what times you live in what contempt is powred out upon those great Ordinances of Divine Institution viz. Magistracy and Ministry Perhaps God intends thee for a Martyr A few preparations I conceive seasonable 1. Make account of suffering We may fear God is bringing confusion Prepar 1. Make account of sufferings and desolation upon the Kingdom If we consider the Ataxies and Anarchy's thereof we may take up that complaint Ezek. 19. 14. A fire is gone out of a rod of her branches which hath devoured her fruit so that she hath no strong rod to be a Scepter to rule this is a lamentation and shall be for a lamentation I neither profess my self Statesman nor Politician neither do I intermeddle out of my own Sphear and Calling onely as a Minister of God I counsel you in the Language of the Holy Ghost Jer. 6. 8. Be thou instructed O Jerusalem l●st my soul depart from thee lest I make thee desolate a land not inhabited Prepare for troubles and afflictions for the end of one trouble may be the beginning of another as when a man hath escaped a Beare a Lyon meets him and after he hath escaped the Lyon and leans his hand upon the wall a Serpent out of the Wall comes and bites him know then that you are fore-appointed unto sufferings so saith the Apostle 1 Thess 3. 3. That no man may be moved by these afflictions for your selves know that we are apointed thereunto Praecogitati mali mollior ictus Xeno suffering Ship-wrack said Jam didici Philosophari By our sufferings let us learn to be better Christians The second preparative is to get a self-denying spirit 't is self Prepar 2. Get a self-denying spirit that makes us shye of the Crosse selfe must be first denyed Severall selfes must be denyed selfe-opinion selfe-counsels selfe-righteousness self-excellencies self-will self-comforts self●ends All these selves must be denyed for Jesus Christ let it suffice onely to mention these at present I proceed to another Preparative And that 3. Is to set upon the practice of Mortification The Apostle protesteth Prepar 3. Set upon the practice of Mortification that he dyeth daily 1 Cor. 15. 31. I protest by your rejoycing which I have in Christ Jesus our Lord I die daily Strive to get thy corruptions mortified thy ill humors purged thy affections crucified thy filthy garments took away
have seen this duty tracked by the foot-steps of Gods people let us goe and doe likewise In the third place to give in the demonstration of the Point I shall 3. The Doctrine demonstrated draw a threefold Argument from the necessity equity and utility of the duty 1. From the necessity of the duty Ye have need of patience that Arg. 1. Drawn from the necessity of this duty after ye have done the will of God ye might receive the promise And that is necessary Necessitate praecepti medii For Precepts the Psalmist exhorts R●st in the Lord and wait patiently for him fre● not thy self because of him who prospereth in his way because of the man who bringeth wicked d●vices to pass For evil deers shall be cut off but th●se that wait upon the Lord they shall inherit the earth And the Prophet Zephaniah exhorts Therefore wait ye upon me saith the Lord until Zeph. 3. 8. th● day that I rise up unto the prey for my determination is to gather the nations that I may assemble the Kingdoms to p●ur upon them mine indignati●n even all my fierce anger for all the earth shall be devoured with the fire of my jealousie Wait on the Lord be of good courage and Psal 27. 14. he shall strengthen thine heart wait I say on the Lord. Solomon counsels Say not thou I will recompence evil but wait on the Lord and he Prov. 20. 22. shall save thee David layeth a strict charge upon himself My soul Psal 62. 5. wait thou only upon God for my expectation is from him David could have taken opportunity to have revenged himself on Saul he had him as we say at his mercy but he waited Gods time The Lord 1 Sam. 24. 23. 1 Sam. 26. 23. saith he render to every man his righteousness and his faithfulnesse for the Lord delivered thee into my hand to day but I would not stretch forth mine hand against the Lords anointed David though he had an opportunity yet considered Saul was Gods anointed therefore he would not embrue his hands in his blood 2. Necessitate m●dii For waiting is an instrumental means Gods way of obtaining a grant of the thing desired Simeon waited for the consolation of Israel And behold there was a man in Jerusalem Luke 2. 25. whose name was Simeon and the same man was just and devout waiting for the consolation of Israel and the holy Gh●st was upon him The sons of God waited for their adoption And not onely they but our selves Rom. 8. 23. also which have the first-fruits of the spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our body And they wait for the coming of Christ So that ye come behinde I Cor. 1. 7. in no gift waiting for the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ Waiting prepareth us for the receiving of a mercy whereas murmuring querulous speeches do indispose us for a mercy Whineing strugling and quarrelling provoke God to lash us more but a quiet composed behaviour an humble submission to the will of God is a ready way to obtain the thing desired even a comfortable fruition of our expectation God is most ready to help his people when their hearts most long after him for so runs the Promise I will pour Isa 44. 3. water upon him that is thirsty and floods upon the dry ground I will pour my spirit upon thy seed and my blessing upon thine off-sppring After the Church was in pain and travel and endured many throws and hard labor in expectation of deliverance read the gracious answer Thy dead men shall live together with my dead body shall they arise awake and sing ye that awell in dust for thy dew is as the dew of hearbs Isa 26. 19. and the earth shall cast out the dead So that waiting works two things 1. It prepares us for a mercy it seasoneth our hearts and disposeth them for the entertainment thereof so that we are as Vessels throughly season'd 2. It sets a higher price and estimate on the mercy when it comes A mercy beg'd by Prayer waited for with Patience will of all others be the sweetest to us in the fruition Hannah had more children after Samuel but none so valued as Samuel the childe of her Prayers Now if deliverance and settlement to the Kingdom come as an answer of our Prayers O how welcome will the deliverance be It 's a comfortable experience recorded of the Church And it shall Isa 25. 9. be said in that day lo this is our God we have waited for him and he shall save us This is the Lord we have waited for him we will be glad and rejoyce in his salvation 2. The second Argument shall be drawn from the equity of the Argu. 2 Drawn from the equity of the duty duty It 's all the equity and reason of the World that we should wait upon God we are Creatures and is it not equal that the Creature should wait upon the Creator we are Servants and should not Servants wait upon their Masters Behold as the eyes of servants Psalm 123. 2 look unto the hands of their masters and as the eyes of a maiden unto the hand of her mistress so our eyes wait upon the Lord our God until that he have mercy upon us We are children and should not children wait upon their Father These relations intimate the equity of the duty we say that Relations though they be of least entity yet they are of greatest efficacy Doth not the Husband-man wait for the Harvest Doth not the Mother wait for the time of her deliverance Doth not the Patient wait upon the working of the Physick Now God is giving the Kingdom strong Physick a Purge to some a Vomit to others nay have we not just cause to fear that by reason of our Laodicean luke-warmness God will vomit us out of his mouth Let 's wait and see what God will do though we know not yet he knows the reason of his own proceedings God made Nebuchadnezzar a scourage to the Jews and God calls him his servant but because Nebuchadnezzar acted his own malice and revenge God will turn the wheel upon him Jehu was made an Instrument to root out Ahabs Family but because his heart was naught he aimed at the Kingdom for himself God threatens to avenge the blood of Jezre●l upon the house Hos 1. 4. of Jehu God may raise up one to punish another and when they have done God may find out a scourge to punish the punishers themselves These are Gods Acts his strange Acts for so are his judgements Isaiah 7. 20. God will have a razor for that purpose In the same day shall the Lord shave with a razour that is hired namely by them beyond the river by the king of Assyria the head and the hair of the feet and it shall also consume the beard And notwithstanding greatness of
shee highly deserved it as being one of the worst of Haereticks An ingenuous spirit relents with teares Ille dolet qu●ties cogitur esse ferox Iudgment must bee given with abundance of humanitie and commiseration And now Right Honorable and the rest beloved in the Lord Iesus give me leave for a close of the whole to apply all in a word of exhortation Let mee divide to every one his portion You that sit in Iudgment remember the text Establish judgment Vse for exhortation c. Consider your Authority in what an eminent place you are set lay out your dignity to doe God and your Countrey good service You are a Beacon set upon a Hill the whole country gazeth upon you There are many eyes upon you and if you swerve from the rule of Iustice the people will serve you as the Levite served his Concubine they will quarter your faults and send them up and down the Kingdome with a was it ever thus I commend Jehoshaphats counsell to your serious consideration 2 Chron 19. 6. 7. Hee said to the Judges Take heed what you doe for yee judge not for man but for the Lord who is with you in the judgment wherefore let the feare of the Lord bee upon you take heed and doe it for there is no Iniquity with the Lord our God nor respect of persons nor taking of gifts You are summoned and have a charge given you by the spirit of God Psal 2 10. Bee wise now therefore yee Kinges and bee instructed yee Judges of the earth You have the name Elohim Psal 82. 6. I have said yee are Gods and all of you are children of the most high Doe you as God would doe Hee would relieve the oppressed acquit the innocent condemne the nocent stand for the poore man in a righteous cause Hee would have Achans Zimri●s Cosbies Blasphemers Murderers Idolaters Adulterers punished Remember I humbly entreat you that Iustice is God's Legacy and you are Executours and Administratours thereof be carefull to have the will of God performed I beseech your patience in a few humble requests which I shall make unto you before I conclude I intreat you for poore Prisoners for their soules and bodies For To the Judges their soules that they may have some to teach them the Knowledge of God And for their bodies that they may not bee starved in prison lye in a pit wherein is no water Prisons are oft times Nurseries of all wickedness and that which is a place of restraint is imployed in all manner of licentious outrage so that none are more vile and wicked than Iaylours and their Prisoners 2. I intreat you to incourage the faithfull ministry of the Kingdome As for Baals or Bacchus Priests that make God's sacrifice to be abhorred I wish an Ostracisme to them a tumbling out of their places if they evidence not signall Repentance I plead only for men pious orthodox learned help them to bread help them to bookes If the nurse bee starved the child will bee starved Help them to encounter with the mighty who refuse to pay them their dues because they dare not give the Sacrament to them that are Scandalous when as many times such as they refuse are fitter to go a grazing with Nebucadnezzar amongst the beasts of the field Because some Conscientious ministers have refused to give the Sacrament to drunkards swearers and adulterers some have detained their maintenance from them 3. I have a word to speake in behalfe of this University I speak to a Person of learning my argument is maintaine that my Lord which maintaines you Wee desire no Prelaticall Pompe or domination but only our just rights and priviledges that Religion and learning may be countenanced by your Authority 4. I have a word to speak for the Town I beseech you subdue the Ale-houses the Nurseries of the Divell Ther 's a good expedient and a pious worke begun very lately a work-house and some poore are set to worke in it I humbly crave your incouragement and counsell that it may not be crusht in the Bud nor sinke for want of your assistance And you the honourable Bench the Iustices of the County I beseech To the ●ono●●ble bench you to lay forth all your Interests to promote the Kingdome of Iesus Christ Labour to bee as so many instrumentall Saviours for your Countrey punish swearing and blasphemies There is an Act in the beginning of Q. Eliz that such as maintained Heresies condemned by the foure Generall Counsels should be burnt to ashes You have a late Ordinance of Parliament for your warrant nay rather the Ordinance of God Levit. 24. 16. Hee that blasphemeth the name of the Lord h●e shall surely bee put to death and all the congregation shall certainly stone him as well the stranger as hee that is borne in the land when hee blasphemeth the name of the Lord shall bee put to death Try your skill and put forth your skill to subdue the lewd Ale-houses Mr Bolton said in an Assise sermon that it was easier to take Dunkirke than put down an Ale-house Dunkirke was not long since taken would the Ale-houses were put downe You must seare these Hydras else new heads will spring up Give not any just cause to any to complaine that the Justice sweares himselfe and will not punish swearing that the Justice is a good fellow himselfe and will not punish drunkenness I hope better things of you Purge your families keep no swearers drunkards adulterers sabath-breakers within your roofe Give them not harbour for secular Interest but resolve that if they will not serve God let them not serve you according to Joshuas practice chap. 24. 15. If it seeme evill unto you to serve the Lord chuse you this day whom you will serve whether the God's which your fathers served that were on the other side of the flood or the Gods of the Amorites in whose land yee dwell but as for mee and my house wee will serve the Lord. Set the 101 Ps as a just standard rule to go by TheMaxime of Constantius was He cannot be faithfull unto mee that is unfaithfull unto God Remember the National Covenant taken in a day of distress for which there will bee a day of account to goe before each other in a reall example of reformation That Covenant is not an Almanack out of date but obligeth us as the Tenour runs all the dayes of our life You the learned Lawyers I have a word to say to you To the Lawyers Doe not patronize unrighteous causes Set not your tongues to sale to bolster a bad cause See Isai 5. 20. Woe unto them that call evill good and good evill and put darkness for light and light for darkness that put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter Doe not wire-draw Clients suites Doe not snarle and intangle a cause with needless perplexities to tire out the poore Client with tedious attendances Take heed likewise of base mercenarie silence
And such were some of you but yee are washed but yee are sanctified but yee are justifyd in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the spirit of our God You then that are washt in this fountaine rejoyce and bee glad that your names are written in the book of life that you have received a white stone a new name the hidden Mannah Stand then admiring and praising God that hath done so graciously for you that when many even the greatest part of the world are shut out cannot find the Dore are denyed the right key and the fountaine is lockt and barr'd against them yet it 's opened wide to thee thou art washt and cleansed in this fountaine Not any goodness in thee but free grace and mercy makes the difference Whatever aspersions calumnies reproaches thou meetest withall in the world from ungodly men bee of good comfort all is washt away by the bloud of Jesus Christ The world casts dirt on thee Christ washeth thee cleane O then doe not desponde doe not droop as without hope by reason of hardships sufferings evill entreaties in and from the world Drinke of the waters of this fountaine They are the Restorative to revive and refresh thy spirit Thou meetest with diseases corporall spirituall oh come to this fountaine It s a medicine made up of the blood of Jesus Christ It will cure both diseases of soule and body Thou seest by experience that the Cisternes of the creatures are dried up Honours Pleasures Profits decay and faile tarry not at these cisternes goe to the fountaine it 's inexhausted Thy manifold sinnes trouble and torment thee sinne is a havy burden upon the conscience thou art afraid to come O! bee not afraid to do good unto thy own soule This fountaine workes miracles cleanseth the Aethiopian and the Leopards spots even a persecuting Paul a perjur'd Peter an adulterous David and it is not shut against thee unless thou shut out thy selse Bee then of good comsort you that are God's children amidst your fainting fits you have this Aqua vitae In your diseases and sores you have this soveraigne plaister Amidst your pollutions and defilements you have a fountaine opened wide to wash and cleanse you in In diseases afflictions pollutions and all conditions whatsoever repaire to this fountaine the streames are healing reviving refreshing streames O but my sins are a barre against mee Ans Art thou sensible of sinnes thou art the fitter to goe bewaile thy sinnes allow not thy selfe in them Though sinne lockes the Fountaine dore yet free grace will open it wide againe O! But I have been there and have not found any virtue Ans Goe againe The virtues of medicines are not presently discerned Medicines may worke when thou least thinkest of them A sermon preacht now if the Lord work by it may doe good many a yeare after Imitate Eliah's servant who went over and over againe at last a cloud was seen which maskt the whole Heaven O but I question whether I have any right to come it 's opened only to the house of David Ans Doe not shut out thy selfe doe not destroy thy selfe the Invitation is very large Isai 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth let let him come c. If thou dost but thirst thou hast an invitation To this purpose I proceed to a second use which is for Vse 2. for Examination Examination Let 's search andtry whether wee have right to come whether wee are so qualified as to receive benefit and virtue by this fountaine I shall therefore propound 7 Qualifications 1. Wee must see fully and discerne the emptiness of all creature Qualif 1. Wee may see the emptiness of creature Cisternes cisterns Jer. 2. 13. My people have committed two evils they have forsaken mee the fountaine of living waters and hewed them out cisternes broken cisternes that can hold no water Creature cisternes are broken they run through as a sive le ts water fall to the ground or are quite drawne dry Honour could not satisfie Haman Riches could not satisfie Solomon Luther would not so bee satisfied valdè protestatus sum me n●lle satiari ab co 2. Discerne their vanitie and emptiness wee must forsake them Qualif 2. We emust forsake Cisterne Comforts Isai 55. 2. Wherefore doe doe you spend mony for that which is not bread and your labour for that which satisfieth not hearken diligently unto mee and eat yee that which is good and let your soule delight it selfe in fatness Wee must forsake these lying vanities wee must not stay by them wee must relinquish them and leane no more to broken staves but value the world at it's own rate and breake off all carnall confidences wee must bid honours riches profits pleasures adieu so farre forth as they stand in competition with or opposition unto Christ 3. Wee must bee sensible of the want and necessitie wee have of Qualif 3. Wee must bee sensible of the necessity of Christ Christ that wee are poore blind miserable and naked Wee must apprehend our selves stung with the fierie Serpent 4. Wee must discerne fulness and Excellency in Jesus Christ Qualif 4. Wee must discerne fulnesse in Christ beauty wisdome holiness abundance of virtue flowing from him There are cleansing and healing streames in this fountaine Emptiness discerned in our selves will enhance Christ's wroth Scarcity raiseth the market 5. Wee must come with faith to bee healed In the whole dispensation Qualif 5. Wee must come with faith to be healed of Christ's miracles ther 's a question premised believest thou or a condition interposed be it unto thee as thou believest 6. Mourne for sinne like the mourning of Hadadrimm●n in the valley of Megiddo They who mourne for sin are prepared to wash Qualif 6. Wee must mourne for sin in this fountaine Their eyes are blubbered for sinne and they come and wash themselves in this fountaine 7ly and lastly Wee must come in the strength of Christ Wee Qualif 7. Wee must come in the strength of Christ can doe nothing without him Cant. 1. 4. Draw mee wee will run after thee Noe man commeth unto mee except the father draw him Wee must performe our duties in the strength of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through Christ that strengthneth us The third use shall bee for exhortation This hath two parts Vse 3. For Exhortation Generall and speciall 1. In generall My invitation from God is for all to come in and wash in this fountaine Christ is here offered and tendered to all The Brasen Serpent is erected upon a pole The free grace of the Gospel is enlarged mercy is exalted O come come in quickly and accept of Christ O! that God would worke upon your hearts this day to imbrace the free tenders of the Gospel of Iesus Christ Now the fountaine is open come unto it but you must bee thirsty have a spiritual appetite else you will never come It is not a bare comming Take heed least
receive benefits by others and are beneficiall to others 4. To these I adde a fourth Bonum Honorabile Riches and honour are with wisdome None so honorable as God's servants Noe such honourable wayes as the wayes of Religion The pathes of wickedness are base and ignoble Antiochus is cal'd a vile person Dan. 11. 21. And in his estate shall stand up a vile person to whom they shall not give the honour of the Kingdome but hee shall come in peaceably and obtaine the Kingdome by slatteries But godliness is honourable Honor est in honorante What shall be done to the man whom the King of Heaven delights to honour And wee read Act. 17. 11. These were more noble than those in Th●ssalonica in that they received the word with all readiness of mind and searched the scriptures dayly whether those things were so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hence Ignatius sayd Nobilitas antiquitas mea Jesus Christus Godlinesse is an honourable service The wayes of Wickednesse most ignoble and dishonourable 5. It 's bonum conveniens a good suteable and commensurate to the desires of the soule The soule is a heavenly borne being spirituall immateriall and nothing can bee suteable but that which beares a like proportion The soule is not nourished with huskes pleasures profits delights of the world No earthly thing can satisfie the vast and boundless desires of an immortall soule when the Depth says It 's not in mee the sea it 's not in mee the easterne and westerne treasures of gold spices say It 's not in us from God alone commeth satisfaction Hee alone can fill up the Angles of our heart Psal 90. 4. O satisfie us early with thy mercy that wee may rejoice and bee glad all our dayes Wee may eat and not bee satisfied that 's a curse threatned Micah 6. 14. Thou shalt eat but not bee satisfied and thy casting downe shall bee in the mid'st of thee c. Wee may see varieties of delightfull objects and yet not bee satisfied Eccles 1. 8. The eye is not satisfied with seeing nor the eare fild with hearing Wee may love silver and yet not bee satisfied Eccles 5. 10. Hee that loveth silver shall not bee satisfied with silver nor hee that loveth abundance with increase But Jer. 31. 14. And I will satiate the soules of the Priests with fatness and my soule shall be satisfied with goodness saith the Lord. Pleasures riches honours profits are not suteable goods But holyness is suteable and satisfactory to the soule 6. Bonum perman●ns Riches make themselves winges and fly away Friends are perfidious Creature comforts are like Job's deceitfull brook But godliness is durable Prov. 8. 18. Riches and honour are with thee yea durable riches and righteousness Holynesse lasts to eternity When all leaves thee a good Conscience keeps thee company in Heaven Doe you then desire an eternall permanent good get the feare of God principled in your hearts Demonstrat 6. Drawne from incouraging delight which God hath promised The 6th and last demonstration shall be drawne from the many incourageing delights that God hath provided for them They enjoy the garden of Eden a paradise of delights here upon earth their lives are sweet and delightfull for they have a God to goe to to call him Abba father They have Christ their Mediatour the spirit of truth their comforter They have thee the sweet springes and Rivers of Ordinances to refresh them and rich and precious promises They have in them a grand Charter full of immunities and glorious priviledges And they have a Christ the tree of life and what hee hath is put forth for their good Hee 's a counsellour to instruct them a fountaine to cleanse them a mighty God to defend them so that having all these helpes and Incouragements from the holy Trinity from the promises from the ordinances they must needs suck sweetness out of these breasts of consolation Review all these demonstrations and from them learne to set a high price of and delight your selves in the wayes of Godlynesse Therefore this doctrine serves 1. For an Use of conviction to convince Use 1. For conviction the world of their exceeding great folly in their prejudicate opinions against the wayes of godlyness They are unacquainted with the amiable beauty sweet refreshings of divine wisdom and therefore they speak evill of that which they know not prejudging and rashly censuring God's people for melancholy dumpish spirited persons These deale with the wayes of God as the Pagan Persecutors with the primitive Christians They put them in Beares and dogges skinnes so to render them odious to the multitude then they baited and worried them Just so prophane men now adayes put religion into ugly conceits they censure Professours of religion for dissemblers and hypocrites and the profession it selfe sowre unpleasant and burdensome and thus they revile the wayes of God But these peoples tongues are no slanders They even fight against their own shaddowes or else make a man of clouts and then fight against him This is their fancy their conceit and their groundlesse misprission Not that ther 's any such thing as they fancy in the wayes of godliness For all the wayes of Godliness are lovely and excellent sweet and delightfull unto the Saints of God only thou judgest ignorantly and rashly Thy eye is like one that hath the yellow Jaundice which seest all things yellow Thou hast a naturall eye and therefore canst not discerne aright of the wayes of God 1 Cor. 2. 14 15. But the naturall man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can h●e know them for th●y are spiritually discerned But hee that is spirituall judgeth all things yet hee himselfe is judged of no man Thou hast a dull eare therefore wilt not hear the voice of a spiritual charmer charme hee never so wisely Thou hast a carnal tast and therefore canst not relish and tast sweetness in God's wayes Thou hast all thy affections disordered and out of frame thy love joy desire are upon the world Thou followest other lovers pleasures lusts profits These have bewitched thy heart and took up thy delight and therefore thou art a mere stranger unto the wayes of godliness I would gladly convince carnall men that ther 's no delight in carnall sinfull pleasures I have proved largely that the wayes of godliness are the only wayes of pleasantness I le propound some convictions that the wayes of sinne and wickednesse have no reall solid pleasure no true delight and contentment in them 1. The wayes of wickedness afford only sensuall fleshly pleasures Convict 1. The wayes of wickedness afford sensuall pleasures The drinking gameing epicurizing of ungodly men only reacheth to the sensuall part And what shall I pamper a carcass that which must bee wormes meat and shall I neglect my precious soule what shall Christ heaven eternity bee neglected for satisfaction of a base lust a few paltry
Mourning for others sins p. 82. 6. The heart approves it self to God ibid. 7. There will be a pressing forward towards perfection p. 83. 8. A strict watch over the heart ibid. 9. The desire and endeavour must be universally extensive ibid. 10. The Spirit is without guile p. 84. 11. There will be the practise of Mortisication and Vivification p. 85. 12. A burning in love to Jesus Christ ibid. Use 4. for Direction in 6. Particulars 1. Pray for the spirit of sanctisication p. 85. 2. Wash and cleanse thy heart ibid. 3. Be exercised in Meditation p. 86. 4. Consider the Omnipresence and Omniscience of God ibid. 5. Set an high estimate on Gods Ordinances ibid. 6. Associate your selves with holy company p. 87. Use 5. for Consolation SERM. V. Joh. 3. 10. Jesus answered and said unto him art thou a Master of Israel and knowest not these things The Text divided and expounded p. 91. Doct. There may be and are many men otherwise of great Learning yet grosly ignorant in the maine Fundamental Doctrine of Regeneration p. 92. This is proved by Scripture Instances p. 92. and by 3. Reasons 1. From the nature of Regeneration p. 93. Reas 2. Drawn from the Nature of Unregeneracy in a foursold estate 1. Of Impurity p. 94. 2. Of Enmity ibid. 3. Of Blindnesse ibid. 4. Of Death p. 95. Reas 3. From the Free workings of Gods Spirit Application in 5. Uses 1. For Exhortation and that to Teachers p. 96 97. and to Disciples p. 98 99. Use 2. For Information 1. What Regeneration is not 1. Not in Nicodemus his sense p. 100. 2. Not in a new Physical Beeing ibid. 3. Not in Civility and Morality ibid. 4. Not in great parts and abilities p. 101. 5. Not in common graces ibid. 6. Not in a bare Profession of Christ ibid. 2. What Regeneration is 1. The new Nature p. 102. 2. A new Vnderstanding ibid. 3. A new Will ibid. 4. New Affections ibid. 5. A new Heart ibid. 6. A new life ibid. Use 3. for Excitation Mot. 1. From the Necessity p. 102. 2. Unregenerate persons can obtaine no acceptance p. 103. 3. Nothing defiled shall ever come into heaven ibid. Use 4. for Direction 1. Pray hard for Divine Wisdom 2. Wait upon God in his Word 3. Pray for the Spirit Use 5. for Consolation And their duty is 1. To pra●se God 2. To walk as becommeth Converts 3. To set an high price on Gods love SERM. VI. Esth 9. 27 28. The Jews ordained and took upon them and upon their seed and upon all such as joyned themselves unto them so as it should not faile that they might keep these two daies according to their writing and according to their appointed time every year c. The Text divided and expounded Doct. That it 's the duty of a delivered people to keep mercies upon Record and make a thankfull remembrance of signal deliverances and perpetuate the Memorial thereof from Generation to Generation p. 108. Reas 1. Because Gods name and honour is from Eternity to Eternity p. 109. Reas 2. Because Thankfulness is Gods Tribute ib. Reas 3. Drawn from the excellency of the Duty Reas 4. Drawn from many obligations viz. 4. Vinculo Creationis Redemptionis Gratitudinis Gloriae divinae promovendae p. 110 111. Vse 1. For Information In the Popish Treason eight particulars are considered 1. Length of time in projecting p. 112. 2. Vnwearied pains p. 113. 3. Cunning conveyance ibid. 4. Inveterate malice ibid. 5. The persons acting p. 114. 6. The persons against whom p. 115. 7. The place ibid. and 8. their cruelty ibid. Observe 1. The Means of discovery by Auricular Confession p. 116. 2. The seasonablenesse p. 117. 3. The just Retribution ibid. Vse 2. for Caution 7. Popish opinions 1. That the Pope is Christs Vicar p. 119. 2. That he hath power of b●nding and loosing 3. That he may depose Princes ibid. 4. That Protestant Princes may be Excommunicated ibid. 5. That they may be murthered ibid. 6. That Faith is not to be kept with Hereticks ibid. 7. That Equivocation is lawfull Protestants Principles 1. That the Pope is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 120. 2. That a Papist cannot goe beyond a Reprobate ibid. 3. That the e●ought to be no peace with Rome ibid. 4. That a Papist living and dying in the opinion of his own merits cannot be saved p. 121. 5. That Babylon is Rome ibid. Vse 3. for Exhortation 1. Remember and transmit the memory of this day to Posterity p. 121. 2. Praise God for the Deliverance p. 122. 3. Remember and be vigilant ibid. SERM. VII Rom. 2. 16. In the day that God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my Gospel The Text divided and expounded p. 124 125 126. Doct. 1. There shall be a day of Judgement p. 126. Doct. 2. At that day the secrets of all mens hearts shall bee judged Doct. 3. Christ shall be Judge at that day Method of handling The first Doctrine proved by Scripture out of the Old and New Testament p. 126. and confirmed by six Arguments 1. From Gods Decree p. 127. 2. From Gods Iustice ibid. 3. From conviction of conscience p. 128. 4. From the dependance and connexion between the Resurrection and day of Iudgement ibid. 5. From the generall expectation of the Saints p. 129. 6. From Gods glory ibid. Vse 1. For Reproof to ungodly persons p. 131 132. Vse 2. for Instruction to Magistrates and Ministers 6. Lessons commended 1. Entertain serious thoughts concerning the day of Iudgement p. 134. 2. Let this consideration engage us to holynesse of life and conversation ibid. 3. Let this read us a Lecture of Patience p. 135. 4. Le ts be engaged to watchfulnesse 5. Le ts learn to fear God ibid. 6. Le ts learn compassion and charity ibid. Vse 3. for Consolation 1. From the nature of the day p. 136. 2. From the Iudge Christ ibid. 3. From the sentence ibid. 4. From the eternal happinesse ibid. Doct. 2. That at the day of Iudgement the secrets of all mens hearts shall be judged p. 136. Reas 1. Drawn from Gods Omniscience p. 136. Reas 2. From Gods justice p. 137. Reas 3. For the acquitting of the godly ibid. Reas 4. For the further condemnation of the wicked p. 138. Vse 1. for terror unto the wicked ibid. Vse 2. for comfort to the godly p. 139. 3. For counsel to both p. 140. Doct. 3. At the day of Judgement Jesus Christ shall be Judge p. 140. 1. Proved by Scripture p. 140. 2. By 3. Reasons 1. From Equity and Retaliation ibid. Reas 2. For the comfort of the godly ibid. Reas 3. For the terrour of the wicked ibid. Q. 1. Is the Father excluded A. p. 141. Q. 2. How shall Christ appear A. p. 141. Q. 3. Whom shall Christ judge A. ibid. Q. 4. What will be the manner of Christs judging A. ibid. Q. 5. What signs are there of this day A. p. 143. Q. 6. Why God defers the day
exprest It 's wrote in such legible Characters 2. A Mercy as he that runs may read it Yet his days c. The words have need of a Paraphrase I shall open them briefly in their order By Spirit Ainsworth understands that holy Spirit of Christ by which he Preached in the Patriarchs and especially in Noah to the disobedient spirits of the old World and exhorted them by the Fathers to amend their lives so I take the Lo-iiddon Non vaginabit Pagninus Grotius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 70. Lo-jadon sense to be It followeth Shall not strive The 70 read it My spirit shall not abide But this I take not to be the meaning the word hath many significations it signifies to judge to chide and dispute As if the Spirit of God should say I have set Judges over you I have chid you reproved you argued the case with you sent my servants Noah Enoch Methuselah exhorting you to come and repent but you are incorrigible impenitent you are never the better notwithstanding all my patience forbearance waiting on you trying you therefore now my spirit shall no longer strive with you I will take no more pains with you I will dispute the case no longer but send a Deluge to decide the controversie And so I understand the words In seculum so the 70 read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here you may see an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Abyss of kindness to mankinde So Chrysostome That the Spirit hath ever strove with any is a great mercy But if the Spirit strive by Messengers rising early and going to bed late and by its motions and whispers if the Spirit be still resisted and abused it will leave striving and leave a people inexcusable Luther speaking of this Text saith This was a publick Sermon preached in a Fuit publica concio in publica Synodo proposita Luth. publick Assembly When those that were Gods Messengers spent their spirts in vain and saw that the people were desperate past all hopes of reclaiming they let them alone to take their course and to be filled with their own ways Then here 's a Reason given For that he also is flesh The word sets forth the corrupt nature of mankinde and is here put by way of opposition unto the Spirit It is the same with Animalis or Conqueritur Deus tantopere turbatū esse ordinem d●se positum ut image sua in carnem transformata esset Calv. Centum viginti annos si fo●te conver●antur Cald Paraph Carnalis homo Man that was created after the Image of God hath defaced that Image hath corrupted his way and is become fleshly This God complains of That the order which he put is inverted and his Image transformed into flesh as Judicious Calvin observes Lastly Here 's a gracious reprieval and space allowed for repentance Yet his days c. This is not to be understood as if an hundred and twenty years were the limited term of years for mankinde to live in this world It 's apparent that many after the Flood lived longer But the meaning is that an hundred and twenty years shall be given them if haply they be converted This space God allows them for repentance and they had Noah a Preacher of righteousness and they saw the Ark a building and every stroke strucken The building of the Ark should have been a Monitor of repentance this was great and wonderful long-suffering as we read 1 Pet. 3. 19 20. By which he went and preached unto the spirits in prison which sometime were disobedient when once the long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah The words thus opened contain two fundamental Doctrines 1. That it is a most dreadful judgement upon a people when the Doct. 1 Spirit of God refuseth to strive any longer with them 2. That it is an exceeding great mercy to a people when the Lord Doct. 2 vouchsafeth them time and space for repentance I resume the first and I shall cast the Heads of my Meditations Method of handling the Doctrine into this plain and familiar method 1. I shall assert the truth of the Doctrine from Scripture Testimonies 2. I shall particularly represent unto you how the Spirit may be said to strive with man 3. I shall enquire into the Grounds and Reasons for confirmation of the truth And lastly Conclude with particular Application unto our selves 1. To prosecute the first Head propounded time would fail me 1. The Doctrine proved by Scripture Testimony in Scripture Quotations but I shall gather sparingly from so great a cloud of Witnesses mentioning some select Proofs and leaving the rest to be supplyed in your Meditations Now that this is so great a Judgement for the Spirit of God to leave striving with a people may be exemplified in several persons recorded in Scripture as signal Spectacles of Divine vengeance to Posterity The Lord spared Sodom and Gomorrah a long time Abraham undertakes though dust and ashes to intercede for them He intreats That if fifty righteous persons be found there that they may not be destroyed His request is granted he abates five of fifty and then comes down to forty after that to thirty from thirty to twenty and at last to ten and it is to be observed that God never left off granting till Abraham left off begging They had good Lot to reprove and exhort them and they vexed his righteous soul day by day with their unclean conversation he spent his spirits his counsels admonitions all in vain Now God will spare them no longer the Angel delivered Lot from them and as soon as ever he was gone the Lord destroyed Sodom Gomorrah with Fire and Brimstone Gen. 19. 24 25. The Lord rained upon Sodom and Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the Lord out of Heaven and he over-threw those cities and all the plain and all the inhabitants of the cities and that which grew upon the ground The Lord waited a long time upon Jerusalem sending his Prophets and warning them he puts them in remembrance of his exemplary Judgements upon others Jer. 7. 13. I spake unto you rising up early and speaking but ye heard not and I call'd you but you answered not therefore I will do to this house c. as I have done to Shiloh He expostulates the case with them Jer. 13. 27. I have seen thine adulteries and thy neighings the lewdness of thy whoredom and thine abominations on the hills in the fields Wo unto thee O Jerusalem Wilt thou not be made clean When shall it once be and Ezek. 18. 32. I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth saith the Lord God wherefore turn your selves and live ye The House of Israel was the Vineyard upon which God had bestowed so much pains cost and charges Isa 5. 1 2 3 4. My well-beloved hath a vineyard in a very fruitful Haec omnia usu venisse populo Judaico cum in Babylonica
a new pretended light or revelation from the old Prophet he forsook the true word and believed a lying word what a sad Catastrophe befell him v. 24. When he was gone a Lyon met him by the way and slew him and his carcase was cast in the way and the 1 King 13. 24. Ass stood by it and the Lyon stood also by the carcase Yet notwithstanding extraordinary Revelations Dreams Visions Extasies Enthusiasms though they have ceased long ago and we have no warrant to expect them because we are to keep close to the revealed will of God written in his holy word Yet I say we are to take notice of the sweet motions and spiritual illapses upon our souls Though Prophesies cease yet there are manifold discoveries of Christ unto the soul The secret and intimate acquaintance of the soul with Christ the souls ravishing consolations the breaking in and flashes of heavenly light upon the soul the heavings aspirings and harmony of the heart with Christ experience of mercies issues out of temptations protections of Angels all these are Heavenly constant revelations out of the Word of God manifested to the souls of the faithful by the Spirit according to the word Let us therefore embrace and cherish the gracious motions of the Spirit of God Where the spirit of Grace is in the heart it cannot be idle or lie dead but it 's exceeding operative The Spirit gives light to teach thee it gives heat to warm and comfort thee It is a spirit of burning and purging to burn up the stubble of corruption to purge out thy sins It is a spirit of refining and purifying Therefore when the spirit of God strives by its gracious motions inlightning purging inflaming comforting wooing thee to walk closely with God bidding thee beware of wounding thy conscience of resisting the light and going against known truth O beware of grieving this holy Spirit of God! Do not O do not force the spirit to depart sadded and grieved from thee This is one way whereby the spirit strives viz. by its motions and whispers A second way whereby the spirit strives is by the Ministry of 2. The Spirit strives by the Ministery of the Word the word It is said Rev. 3. 20. Behold I stand at the door and knock if any man hear my voice and open the door I will come in to him and will sup with him and he with me The Spirit of God knocks at the doors of your hearts by the hammer of the word The spirit knocks louder and louder and the Ministers are to cry aloud and spare not Isa 58. 1. Cry aloud spare not lift up thy voice like a trumpet and shew thy people their transgressions and the House of Jacob their sins The Lord calls upon us by every Sermon we hear Why will ye die Why will ye bolt the door against the frequent knocking 's of the Spirit of God The Spirit of God hath strove with some of us ten years some twenty some fo●ty some sixty years How many years have we lived under the sound of the Gospel having heard the voice of the Turtle crying in our Land How many powerful Preachers have spent their strength their breath wasted their spirits wooing intreating beseeching us to be reconciled unto God many of them are gone to their rest their works praise them in the Gate their memory is blessed and their name is like sweet Oyntment poured forth How many are yet alive to this day who Preach Jesus Christ faithfully and experimentally how do they pray and wrestle with God how zealously do they preach how many admonitions reproofs exhortations warnings do they give us And if we will not take warning the Ministers shall deliver their own souls and our blood will be upon our own heads and the time will come when it shall be known that we have had Prophets amongst us I shall make an allusion to that Scripture Deut. 20. 11 12 13. It shall be if it make thee answer of peace and open unto thee then it shall be that all the people that is found therein shall be tributaries unto thee and they shall serve thee And if it will make no peace with thee but will make war against thee then thou shalt besiege it and when the Lord hath delivered it into thy hands thou shalt smite every male thereof with the edge of the sword Just so God proclaims peace and the Ministers are Ambassadors of Peace and deliver their commission after this manner Into whatsoever house ye enter first say Peace be to Luke 10. 5 6. this house And if the son of peace be there your peace shall rest upon it if not it shall turn to you again The Lord now bese●●eth your hearts by the Ministry of the word and offers you peace and reconciliation if you will submit unto his Scepter and cast down your rebellious weapons the Lord will have mercy on you but if you hold out the flag of defiance and will not come in to Jesus Christ what remains but utter ruine and destruction Every Sermon you hear is like the water of Jealousie when he hath made her to drink the water then it shall come to pass that if she be defiled and hath done trespass against her Husband that the water that causeth the curse shall enter into her and become bitter Num. 27. 28. and her belly shall swell c. but if she be not defiled she shall be free When the word is received into an honest and good heart it doth it good and makes it fruitful when into a corrupt heart it rots it and makes it worse It s an observation of a Reverend Divine That it is an indignity beyond all apprehension to the spirit of Dr. Ed Reynolds grace when we suffer him to wait daily at our Bethesda's our houses of mercy and all in vain to spend his sacred breath in the Ministry of reconciliation in doubling and redoubling his requests unto our souls that we would be content to be saved Yet all this while we harden our hearts and stop our ears and set up the pride and stoutness of our own reasonings till we even weary the spirit of God chide him away and cause him to depart sadded and grieved from us O my Brethren despise not prophecying undervalue not the Ministry of ● Thess 5. 20. reconciliation An indignity or affront offered unto Christs Messengers Christ takes it as done unto himself Luke 10. 16. He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me Be then exho●ted to set an high price of the Gospel and make much of the motions of Gods holy Spirit in the Ministry of the word Ursin relates in his Preface to his Catechism That those godly Vrsini Praf Catech. Protestants that fled beyond the Seas for their Religion in that Marian quinquenium of Persecution ackno●ledged That that great innundation of misery
came justly upon them for the neglect and unprofitableness under the Gospel in King Edward the sixth's days And if they were so severely punished for a few years unprofitableness under the means of Grace of how much forer punishment shall we of England be accounted worthy who well nigh a hundred years have enjoyed the purity of the Gospel and yet we are barren and unfruitful Let us every one acknowledge his own unfruitfulness that notwithstanding fatning Ordinances we have lean souls and let us every one pray in particular Lord lay not my unfruitfulness under the Ministry unto my charge The Spirit will not always strive and wait at those Bethesda's God may in judgement say I will take this kingdom from you and give it to others who will bring forth the fruits of it I will no more suffer my servants to be abused no more suffer my word to be despised I 'le rain Mann●h no more round about your tents if you have so cheap an esteem of it Let us all deprecate this dreadful judgement which the P●ophet Amos threatens Amos 8. 1. Behold a basket of summer-fruits and he said What seest thou and I said A basket of summer-fruit then said the Lord unto me The end is come upon my people of Israel I will not again pass by them any more This is the second way whereby the Spirit ●●rives viz. By the Ministry of the word A third way whereby the Spirit strives is by the checks and 3. The Spirit strives by the conviction of conscience Multi habent scientiā pauci vero conscientiam Bernard de interiore domo In corde puritatem In ore veritatem In actione rectitudinem Bern. de interdomo convictions of conscience Bernard makes a sad complaint in that excellent Tract De interiori domo Many haue knowledge but few have conscience He lays down there three choice qualifications of a good conscience To have sincerity in the heart truth in the mouth and rectitude in the conversation These are distinguishing Notes for tryal and examination Now the spirit of God strives by the checks of conscience Conscience flew in Judas his face a legal qualm came upon him I can call it no better It sprang from the horror of the wrath of God and Hell fire flashing in his face It was no Evangelical repentance Judas got thirty pieces of silver but conscience forced him to a restitution Conscience is a reflect act it looks back upon a mans self It is like a Musket over-charged it will recoil upon a sinner It is like a Blood-hound that will follow by the scent and will never leave searching till it hath descryed the Delinquent Wherefore Brethren let us take special notice of the checks of Conscience Let us keep faith and a good conscience joyn'd as the Apostle exhorts Let us not break Gods link Let Pauls Herein I exercise be our continual Monitor Acts 24. 16. Herein I exercise my self to have a conscience void of offence towards God and towards men A Christian may have a pardon in the Court of the Judge and yet not discern it in the Court of his conscience In case of desertions withdrawings and suspensions of Gods gracious countenance a Christian may not be able to apprehend Gods reconciled countenance but in this case there are incouraging supporting promises Isa 50. 10. Who is among you that feareth the Lord that obeyeth the voice of his servant that walketh in darkness and hath no light let him trust in the name of the Lord and stay upon his God We read likewise Psal 97. 11. Light is sown for the righteous and gladness for the upright in heart and Psal 112. 4. Unto the upright there ariseth light in the darkness God is gracious and full of compassion and righteous in all his ways But what shall we say when a sinner is condemned both in the Court of the Judge and of conscience how great is that condemnation Spira had a check of conscience and a voice forbidding him O do it not He paid full dear for the wounding of his conscience It 's an observatian of an excellent Divine in a precious Book called Moses self-denyal We had better saith he have all the world Mr. Burroughs Moses Self-denyal cast shame in our faces and upbraid us then that our consciences should cast dirt into them It 's better to endure all the frowns and anger of the greatest Potentates on earth then to have an angry conscience within our breast It 's better to want all the pleasures that earth can afford then to loose the delights which a good conscience will bring in O let the Bird in the breast be always kept singing whatsoever we suffer for it We all subscribe to this in The● whether we do thus in Hypothesi let 's examine our awakned Conscience Let us every one deal impartially with his own conscience All our hearts are naked unto him with whom we have to deal Let every one pray study confer for the information of his own Conscience nothing may be done doubtingly for that is not of faith and whatsoever is not of faith is sin In the whole course of our lives let us bring all our actions to the rule of the word of God and let that decide the controversie Here 's a four-fold infallible rule Let A four-fold rule for the examining of conscience 1. Every one be perswaded in his own heart 2. Let us abstain from all appearances of evil 3. Prove all things and hold fast that which is good 4. Hold faith and a good conscience Let us keep close to these known plain rules discarding carnal policy carnal interests which are the devised ways of men and then let our resolution concur with Luthers I bear this title I Hūc gero titulum cedo nulli Luth. yeild to none Now then when the Spirit thus strives by the checks of conscience let us not resist nor stifle those motions let us not shut our eyes against known light breaking in upon us This is a third way whereby the Spirit strives viz. by the checkings and convictions of Conscience A fourth way wereby the Spirit strives is by the tenders of 4. The Spirit strives by the tender of mercies mercies and loving kindness openings of bowels of compassion towards poor sinners These mercies are tender mercies and there is a multitude of them Psal 51. 1. Have mercy upon me O God according to thy loving kindeness according to the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions They are the sounding of Bowels the fountain opened Zech. 13. 1. In that day there shall be a fountain opened to the House of David and to the Inhabitants of Jerusalem for sin and for uncleanness Here is a free tender of Jesus Christ and the riches of his mercies The spirit makes many Proclamations and Invitations to come in to Jesus Christ One is Isa 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters and
men will not hearken to the voice of this spiritual Charmer though he charm never so wisely what then remains but utter ruine and destruction but that the Spirit should leave striving and fall a destroying rebellious sinners and carnal minded persons This is one reason He also is flesh the spiritual part that is obliterated he hath degenerated from his original hee is become corrup●●d he also is flesh Another reason may be because the Spirit is a most free agent Reas 2. Because the Spirit is a most free Agent This holy Spirit moveth when and where it pleaseth The Spirit of God is bound to none The Spirit is not at our command and beck yet vile man puts the Spirit of God to the condition of a slave for so the Lord complains Is 42. 24. Thou hast bought me no sweet cane with mony neither hast thou filled me with the fat of thy sacrifices but thou hast made me to serve with thy sinnes thou hast wearied me with thine iniquities It 's more than the Spirit owes any of us to move once he may move once and may never move more he may chuse whether he will move at all God now shootes warning-pieces the Spirit woes you to come in and make your peace with God to break off your sins by Repentance no longer to stand out in opposition unto Jesus Christ if you will not take warning God may suddenly shoot his Murdering-pieces and destroy you The Spirit cries to day to day now is the accepted time now is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 6. 2. day of salvation if we accept not of this golden opportunitie and now ●e come not in and embrace this great salvation tendered for ought we know the Spirit may be gone and never make a further tender of grace unto us Though the Spirit it self is most free and limits not nor ascribes to it self when and where to work but calls some sooner some later into the vineyard yet the Spirit limits and prescribes us a time of repentance Again he limiteth Heb. 4. 7. a certain day saying in David To day after so long a time as it is said to day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts It 's a common observation He that hath promised time to the penitent hath not promised a morrow for repentance Wherefore wee are Qui poenitentibus promisit veniam diem non promisit crastinum Gerr. Medit. Isa 55. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Antipat. Act. 24. 25. commanded Seek the Lord while he may be found and call upon him while he is near and Acts 17. 30. The times of this ignorance God winked at but now commands all men every where to repent The Spirit now knocks by its motions by the Word by conviction of Conscience and invites you to come presently to Jesus Christ When a Treatise of Happynesse was brought to Antipater he answered I am not at leisure a lamentable case not to be at leisure to read a Treatise of Happynesse Felix would hear Paul at a convenient time we never read that he sent for him any more In proverbial speeches we say Strike whilst the Iron is hot When there is a fair gale hoyst up thy sayles and delayes are dangerous Shall we then neglect the present opportunity upon a presumption of a future Shall we presume either of space ●● grace neither of them being in our power God is not bound to give space he struck Vzzah dead in the place for meddling with the Ark It 's said the 1 Chr. 13. 9. Oxen stumbled Vzzahs intention might be good but a good intention cannot justifie a bad action He invaded the Priests function his work was to drive on the Oxen not to touch the Ark. God struck Ananias and Saphira dead for their hypocrisie So often times God strikes dead the Drunkard in his vomit the Lyar Swearer Blasphemer with the lye oath blasphemy in each mans tongue But suppose which is uncertain God gives thee space yet often times where he gives space he denies grace as it was said of Jezabel Rev. 2. 21. I gave her space to repent of her fornication but she 2 Tim. 2. 25. repented not There is a peradventure put in 2 Tim. 2. 25. In meeknesse instructing those that oppose themselves if God peradventure may give them repentance unto the acknowledging of the truth My brethren consider in your most serious and composed thoughts that we deal for life and immortality and our negotiations are for the great things of Eternity Shall we dally in such weighty matters Shall we procrastinate our Repentance And shall we stop our ears bolt the doors of our hearts when the Spirit calls and knocks In matters of worldly employments what post-haste what expedition do men make they fear delayes may much prejudice them And shall we be thus wise for the world and such errand fooles for our soules Shall we be penny-wise and pound-foolish Shall we be so industrious to grasp the trash and pelf of the world and neglect our soules Every ones soul being a precious jewel is more wo●th than the world in all its pomp and bravery Let us lay hold on the golden season of the present time the time which the Spirit limits If thou neglectest this day for ought thou knowest thou mayst be in hell to morrow Whilst thou art dallying and delaying God may be a swearing in his wrath that thou shalt never enter into his rest The third reason and the last that I shall name shall be drawn Reas 3. Drawn from the rule of divine Justice from the rule of divine justice It 's most just when people neglect Gods limited time for God to allow them no more time when people squander out Gods seasons and mispend their choice opportunities it stands with justice to deny any further opportunity When the season is past it is like an Arrow out of the Bow like a swift stream not to be called back There 's a dreadfull judgement threatned Prov 1. 24. because I have called and ye have refused I have stretched out my hands and no man regarded therefore I will laugh at your calamity and mock when your fear commeth God usually payes sinners in their own coyn and punisheth them by way of retaliation As appears in Adonibezeks confession who said Threescore and ten Kings having their thumbs and great toes cut off gathered Judg. 1. 7● thered their meat under my table as I have done so hath God requited me God punisheth number with number according to the number of their cities so were their gods Jer. 2. 28. Where are thy Gods which thou hast made thee let them arise if they can save thee in the time Jerem. 2. 28. of thy trouble for according to the number of thy cities s● are thy gods O Judah And the Lord numbred them out to the sword and left them few in number God punisheth choice with cho●●e they chose new gods
as quench the Spirit which is forbidden 1 Thess 5. 19. such as deride praying by the spirit such as slight and scorn men of the spirit I mean such as are of a pretious annointing in whom the Spirit of Christ dwells O how sad will their Audit be 2. It reproves barren and unprofitable hearers who notwithstanding all the strivings wooings and waitings of Gods Spirit by the Ministry of the Word yet remain barren and unfruitful The Apostle tells their doom The earth that drinketh in the rain that Heb. 6. 7 8. cometh oft upon it and bringeth forth herbs meet for them by whom it is dressed receiveth a blessing from God but that which beareth thorns and bryars is rejected and is nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burned When Christ found nothing on the Fig-tree but leaves he said unto it Let no fruit grow on thee henceforward for ever and Matth. 21. 19 Luke 13. 7. presently the Fig-tree withered away And the Vine-dresser said Behold these three years I come seeking fruit on this fig-tree and finde none cut it down why cumbreth it the ground 3. It reproves secure persons setled on their Lees Let Gods Spirit strive never so often it is all in vain They think all is well with them they conceive their Estates very good Multitudes now adays are possest with a spirit of slumber and drousiness and this is a dreadful sin and a judgement both Rom. 11. 8. God hath given them a spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and ears that they should not hear to this day Is not he a desperate fool that dares sleep upon the top of a Mast Is not he much more that notwithstanding judgements threatned in Gods Word against rebellious sinners yet is secure heedless and satisfied in his present condition This is that carnal security mentioned which is under such terrible woe Deut. 29. 19 20. It shall come to pass when he heareth the words of this curse that he bless himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of mine heart to adde drunkenness to thirst the Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoak against that man and all the curses that are written in this book shall lie upon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from under heaven 4. And lastly This reproves all impenitent persons who notwithstanding all the Sermons they hear notwithstanding all the reproofs admonitions wooings knocking 's of Gods spirit yet remain impenitent Impenitency is that great soul-damning sin Christ tells us Rev. 3. 20. Behold I stand at the door and knock Rev. 3. 20. Ezek. 18. 31. if any man open to me I will come in and sup with him And the exhortation of the Prophet runs Cast away from you all your transgressions for I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth wherefore turn your selves and live So God expostulates the case with them Though by our own strength we cannot stand not by our own powe● will any good thing yet we may doe much more good then we do Can not the same legs carry a man to the Church which carry him to an Ale-house o● Tavern It s want of a good heart and love to the Ordinances of God that make men so negligent of the good of their souls Who forceth thee to swear thou saist thou can●● not leave it custom is become another nature Is it not thine own corrupt heart that causeth corrupt communications The Devil cannot compel to sin he perswades and enticeth neither doth God tempt any man Jam. 1. 13 14 15. But every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lust and enticed then Jam. 1. 13 14 15. when lust hath conceived it bringeth forth sin and sin when it is finished bringeth forth death Tremble and stand amazed thou impenitent person that resiste●● so many strivings of Gods Spirit so many checks of conscience so many warnings from the word O that thy heart might be touched with remorse and repentance for thine impenitency yet thou livest under the sound of the Gospel who knoweth but the spirit may this day once more move woe and beseech thee to be reconciled O do not refuse O do not slight these invitations A City besieged as we read Deut. 20. 11 12. If it make thee answer of peace and open unto thee thea the people that are found therein shall become tributary unto thee but if it will make no peace with thee then thou shalt besiege it and smlte every male with the edge of the sword Just so now the Lord besiegeth thy heart offers thee peace intreats thee to repent of thy Oathes Sabbath-breakings contempt of the Gospel Drunkenness Uncleanness If thou wilt not receive such a gracious offer of peace to thy peril be it thou art the murtherer of thine own soul 4. I proceed to a fourth Use which is for examination Three Vse 4. For Examination Q. 1 Quaeries by way of tryal I shall propose and answer Q. 1. How may we distinguish of the strivings of Gods spirit from a spirit of error and delusion I answer in this wise 1. Gods Spirit strives by the Ministry of the word and directs A. 1 1. Gods spirit strives by the Ministry of the word us according to that rule Gal. 6. 16. As many as walk according to this rule peace be upon them and mercy and upon the Israel of God But a spirit of delusion deviseth ways of its own and is wise above what is written whereunto a curse appertains Gal. 1. 8. Though we or an Angel from heaven preach a●other Gospel then that which we have preached unto you let him be accursed 2. Gods Spirit leads into all truth It is a s●irit of truth But 2. Gods spirit leads into all truth the spirit of delusion leads us into all errors God will send strong delusions that they shall believe a lie 2 Thess 2. 11. 3. Gods Spirit makes us humble meek gentle A spirit of delusion 3. Gods spirit makes us● humble and meek makes us to swell with pride and pride and passions Gods Spirit meekens our spirit An Antichristian deluded spirit makes us boystero●s ino●dinate in our affections But secondly The Quaery will be How we may distinguish the Q. 2 strivings of Gods Spirit from the strivings of our own spirits or natural conscience I answer thus 1. A natural conscience acts from a principle of A. 1 A natural conscience acts from a principle of fear fear of punishment and upon legal convictions hence come many torturings and strivings in natural mens consciences as in Ahab c. Herod feared John Baptist But Gods Spirit strives and moves the soul to act from a principle of love to Jesus Christ when the love of Christ constrains to duty that is genuine altogether 2. The striving of a m●ns own spirit and a natural
he desires and endeavours after the encrease of every grace more Faith more Love more Humility thus hee cries as the Horsleach's daughter give give 8. There 's a careful strict watch set upon the heart life against Charact. 8. Ther 's a care full watch ov●r the heart and life bosom sins Be they ancient customary constitution complexion sins as dear as a right hand and a right eye they must be cut off pluckt out David profest I kept my self from mine iniquity Psal 18. 23. Be it peccatum in deliciis an Herodias a Delilah away with them be it a Gibeonite a pretending sinne m●ke no league with it be it a Benhadad an Agag give no quarter to them bid adieu to every sin though delightful and pleasing to flesh and blood say to it as to a menstruous cloath get thee hence Let Josephs resolution be as a Monitor and as a Frontlet before thine eyes How can I doe this great wickednesse and sin against God 9. Yet further the desire and endeavour must be universally extensive as to hate and turn from every sinne so to have respect to Charact. 9. The desi●er ●ndeavour must be vniversall every commandement Psal 119. 101. It is an argument of a gracious heart neither to divide in duties nor commands neither to pleade a dispensation in the first nor in the second Table This was Pauls exercise he as it were drove that trade 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And this is consonant to the doctrine of the Gospel Universality is a divisive difference it distinguisheth a Sheep from a ●oat a true from a formal Professour and a constitutive difference to constitute Act. 24. 16. Ti● 2. 11 12 Psal 119. 6. a child of God The universality respects as I now mentioned the object the whole Law all Gods Commandements the subject the whole man at all places and in all companies to walk closely with God all the daies of our lives 10. The Spirit is without guile Here 's an Israelite indeed without Charact. 10. A spirit without guile Psal 32. 2. Joh. 1. 17. guile such was that excellent commendation that Christ gave Nathaniel There are three words whereof a godly man is compounded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 singlenesse of heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 simplicity and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sincerity You have two of them in one verse and thence was matter enough of rejoycing 2 Cor. 1. 12. This we must labour for even singleness simplicity and sincerity and acting upon these principles wee may with comfort look the King of terrours in the face when all carnal Machiavilian policies wil prove Physitians of no value 11. There wil bee the practise of Mortification and Vivisication Charact. 11. The practice of mortification The mortifying of the deeds of the body and the quickning of the graces of the Spirit these are fruits of Regeneration and Repentance Col. 3. 5. Rom. 8. 13. Never dream of a shorter cut to h●aven than the rule of the Word prescribes Mr. Perkins saith He that was never truly humbled never truly believed O set upon the practise of Mortification put to death these br●ts of Babylon crucifie slay mortifie thy corruptions ●et this day be a slaughter day for thy sins spare not an an●ient sinne let not thine eye pity thy most delightful sinne butlet thy ●ow be like the Bow of Jonathan that never returned empty without the blood of the slaine This is a severe way but there 's comfort in it The Apostle useth two words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. the making of the body black and blew and the bringing it into subjection There may be no toleration of any sinne Take heed of easie lazy wayes pleasing to thy corrupt nature they are dangerous wayes Follow the old light of the Word that presseth Repentance Humiliation Mortification that 's Gods Law Take heed of any Antinomian Ignes fatuos which decrie so row for sin if thou followest them thou wilt follow a blinde guide and if the blinde lead the blinde both will fall into the ditch 12. And lastly there wil be a burning in love to Jesus Christ Charact. 12. There wil be a burning in love to Jesus Christ such a love as many waters cannot quench nor stood-gates drown it Cant. 8. 7. The love of Christ wil con●●rain him 2 Cor. 5. 14. He wil doe and suffer out of a principle of love to Jesus Christ This man loves Christs image holynesse Christs Members Joh. 13. 35. Christs ●rdinances they are his delight and counsellors Christs Messengers the appearance of Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 4. 8. Tit. 2. 13. He longs for Christs comming Rev. 22. 20. By all these signes and discriminating characters we may judge of the Tree by the fruit and conclude that heart to be a gracious heart that can produce these evidences and where the heart is upright and holy the conversation cannot but be suitable when the heart is inlarged the feet wil runne the wayes of Gods commandements Put your selves to these Tryals proved to you from the Word of God and your own consciences The fo●rah Vse shall be for Direction how we shall make the best Use 4. For direction use of this day of Judgement In pursuance of this consideration what rules of directions must we observe that from hence we may be engaged to a holy conversation amongst many I shall presse six Rules to be reduced to point of practise 1. Pray for the Spirit of Sanctification It 's Gods will our Sanctification we must pray that his will may be done in us and by Rule 1. Pray for the Spirit of Sanctificatiō us that Christs kingdome may be within us that Christ would love and wash us and make us Kings and Priests unto God This is a new creation and requires an omnipotent hand Psal 51. 10. This is the Apostles prayer for the Thessalonians that the God of peace would sanctifie them This is the prayer suitable to Gods will and if ●e● ask any thing according to Gods will he heareth us We read of a spirit of holynesse Rom. 1. 4. and sanctification of the spirit Pray hard for holynesse wrestle with God be importunate for Grace and when it 's begunne pray for the consummation of it that hee that hath begun a good work will not leave it unfinished till the day of Jesus Christ 2. Be much employed in washing and cleansing thy heart This Rule 2. Be much employed in washing thy heart God calls for Jer. 4. 14. There 's a great deal of filthinesse that lyes lurking in thy heart many foul corners O wash and rinse thy heart there are many vain and wicked thoughts there 's in thy heart a stye a sink of filthinesse a cage of uncleane birds Many nasty rotten thoughts and wicked imaginations doth this womb conceive Try thy heart throughly be better acquainted at home doest thou hope to have benefit by Christ see to thy duty to purifie
evill spinner and a worse weaver This is that estate which the Psalmist mentions Psal 14. 1 2 3. 2ly The state of unregeneracy is emnity against God Naturall 2. A state of Enmity men are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 5. 10. That 's the concrete but we read it in the abstract 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 8. 7. An unregenerate man is Gods enemy and no greater opposition then between God and his enemies Is 1. 25. Luke 19. 27. To have a potent man thy enemy is sad but what is it to have the great God All the attributes of God put forth themselves against his enemies his Justice truth power holyness abused patience His justice in punishing his truth in makeing good all his threats against them his holyness abhorring impurities his power in● mustering up all his forces against them his abused patience that hath so long forborn now breaks forth into extremity of fury 3. The state of unregeneracy is a state of blindness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He neither doth nor can perceive A beast may as soon understand reason 3. A state of blindness as a natural man qua talis the things of God So we read 2 Pet. 1. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nihil pr●●ul cernens as Stephanus Steph. Beza and Beza observed which word according to Stephanus is derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 connivere and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 oculus Dicuntur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qui oculos saepe claudunt quadam debilitate visus quod vitium aliquando naturale est Aretius as Aretius observes Vnconverted persons are in a state of darkness Eph. 5. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 darkness it self in the abstract Act. 26. 28. Eph. 4. 18. They are said to have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 callosam concretionem Gerhard Har. as Gerhard observes in his Harmony it s a kind of hardness that is joyned with this blindness 4. This estate is a state of death An unregenerate man is a dead 4. A state of death man Eph. 2. 1. 1 Tim. 5. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and some will have it from Spa●hale which signifieth ornamenta mul●ebria or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is cibus delicatior She that lives thus luxuriously is a dead woman So Jude describes ungodly unregenrate men by this Character v. 12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This is the second reason A third reason shall be drawn from the free workings of Gods Reason 3. Drawn from the free working of Gods spirit spirit The spirit bloweth where it listeth God is a most free agent and his gifts are various to some he gives humane wisdome to other divine wisdom to some he gives speculative head-knowledg to others practical heart knowledge His gifts are free some had skill given from God to be builders in the Arke notwithstanding they themselves perished in the waters You know Saul had a spirit of Government and Prophesy 〈◊〉 both for a time yet he was a wicked man The Philosophers of Athens were men of great learning but they were ignorant of Jesus Christ and those wise men of Greece accounted the Gospell foolishness Though the world accounted them wise men and cryed them up for men of eminent learning yet they were fooles in matters of Christ and eternall salvation There 's a vast difference between Parts and Graces God gives plentifully many times great parts where he gives not one dramme of saving grace How many know the misteries of nature and yet know not of the new nature Many are acquainted well with moral and intellectual virtues out of Aristotle and yet ignorant altogether of Theologicall graces such as are Faith Repo●tance Love Humility and the like Put then all these Reasons together Is Regeneration such a supernaturall work and is an unregenerate man in a state of Impurity Enmity blindness and deadness Doth Gods spirit work freely dispensing gifts and graces when he pleaseth being a most free agent tyed to none then my Assertion will prove it self That many Learned men are ignorant of the great work of Regeneration This is hidden from the wise and learned of the world Now to conclude all with some usefull Application There are 4 Principal uses which I purpose to make of this Doctrine Use 1. For Exhortation viz. For Exhortation Information Examination Direction 1. Then here is an use of Exhortation And this I shall direct to two sorts of persons and so take in my whole Auditory viz. to Teachers and to Disciples my endeavour shall be with all plainness of speech to press your dutyes home to you and so to divide to every one their portion 1. To Teachers was Nicodemus a Doctor a profound Scholar 1 To Teachers and the cheif Rabbi amongst the Jewes and yet ignorant of Regeneration Then let me press two dutyes upon you that are Teachers of others In the First place let me beseech you all that are Teachers of others 1 Let Teachers goe to school to Christ that you would all goe to Schoole to Jesus Christ to learne this grand fundamentall Doctrine of Regeneration Of all others Ministers should be acquainted with this Doctrine of the new birth The maine end of the Ministry is to beget men a new unto God to convert souls unto Jesus Christ And he is the fittest to comfort others who himself hath been comforted with those things in particular which hee communicates unto the comfort of others Of all others Ministers should be men of knowledge Mal. 2. 7. An ignorant Minister is none of Gods making the lame and the blind may not be offered in Sacrifice Where God gives a calling he gives gifts and therefore a Teacher of others ought to have the tongue of the Learned Gualterus in locum Isa 50. 4. Blind guids are not of Gods approbation For if the blind lead the blind both must fall into the ditch It 's Gualters observation Admonemur non modo vulgus hominum verum etiam ipsos Bullingerus in locum Doctores propter ignorantiam atque inscitiam argui at que corripi debere And Bullinger gives an excellent note upon the place In Ecclesia nihil est melius utilius praestantius Doctoribus sive Pastoribus side●ibus solide doctis Such then as are unskilfull and ignorant of ●● this soul trade are unfit for a Ministeriall imployment and it 's high time to give a vomit to all such who make the sacrifice of God to be abhorr'd No● we are to distinguish of a twofold knowledge of Regeneration Theoreticall and Experimentall A Theoretical knowledge is when a man is convinced by argument study of Scripture that there is a necessity of Regeneration but this Theoreticall knowledge is not like Aarons oyle that descended from the head to other parts it only lodgeth in the brain A naturall m●n its possible may preach for it discourse of it by strength of parts reading and study Nicodemus came not
admits of no revocation Arrow out of a Bow we cannot call back the least minute of time Deeds of Lands are made oftentimes in this world with power of revocation But mans eternal condition admits of no revocation When once death hath dissolved and put a period to our life in this world then we are lanched into the ocean of Eternity and there 's no possibility of returning to the shore of this world no new life to re-act in this world After this life ends we shall be in a never-ending condition The Saints shall no more returne to the world for the world was their prison Death is their Goal-delivery Multitudes of sorrows and sufferings they have met with in the world now in Eternity they are freed from all and shall never returne to re-act all those Tragedies and sufferings which they brake through in this life Neither can the damned 〈◊〉 any relaxation or revocation for they are in a hopelesse and Christlesse condition They sinned against an infinite God and in Justice he proportions infinite punishments for sinning against so infinite a Majesty Thus you have heard what Eternity cannot admit of by way of negation I have shaddowed it forth in those Propositions Now what Eternity is I shall positively thus define unto you Definition of Eternity Eternal life is the perfection of happynesse given by Christ unto the Saints in glory whereby they have an everlasting fruition of God and communion with him To open this Definition 1. I call it the perfection of happynesse It 's the aggregation of 1. Eternity is the perfection of happinesse all good things the comprehension of all blessednesses Many Stars make a Constellation many waters make a sea All good things put together make up this happyness There 's no imperfection no decay no alteration Eternal life takes in perfection of joy perfection of glory perfection of degrees 2. This is given by Christ unto the Saints Joh. 10. 28. I saith 2. Eternity is Christs gift Christ give unto them eternall life God the Father gives eternall life by the Sonne and the Sonne by the Spirit God the Father the fountain and author of all life gives this life God the Sonne laid down his blood a price abundantly sufficient to pay to the uttermost farthing for the purchase And God the holy Ghost seals and gives assurance and applyes the love of God the Father and the love of God the Sonne with all his meritorious sufferings unto the Saints 3. I said by this eternall life the Saints in glory enjoy fruition 3. The Saints enjoy fruition of and communion with God and communion with God Here they enjoy some glimpses and parcels of this communion they have tasted how good God is But in Heaven in Eternity in the fruition of and communion with God there will be these singularities 1. They shall enjoy God immediately They shall enjoy the 1. They enjoy God immediately blessed presence of God communion with the holy Trinity not as here by ordinances and means but immediately 1 Joh. 3. 2. they shall see him as he is If it be so sweet to enjoy a Sabboth and communion with God in Ordinances and communion with his children here on earth Oh! how ravishing must that sweetness be to enjoy God in heaven Si adeo dulcis quaerenti saith Bernard quid erit invenienti If wee meet with sweetness in our way what shall we doe at our jou●●●ys end in our country 2. They shall enjoy God fully In thy presence is fulnesse of joy Ps 2. They enjoy God fully 16. 11. God will never hide his face he will never withdraw his comforts There wil be no low ebbe but it shall be full tide alwaies Every vess●l shall be as full as it can hold even brim full of glory 3. They shall enjoy God everlastingly At thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore Psal 16. 11. Eternity admits no period 3. They shall enjoy God everlastingly of time no conclusion A Ring which is an emblem of Eternity may be broken to pieces and will wear away The Vestall fires are quenched Methuselah that long-liv'd Patriarch dyed But Eternity admits no conclusion As long as God and Christ is so long shall the Saints be happy and that 's to all Eternity Non beatitudo esset si certum Sancti non haberent se ibi semper futuros Aug. de Civit Dei Having now given you some glimpses of Eternity and having though but darkly represented to you that which is indeed inconceivable and inexpressible but by those who are partakers of it I come now in the next place to prove my assertion That this ought to be our inquiry grand business the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the work of works to examine what shal become of our souls bodies to all eternity I shall give attestations to the truth delivered 1. From Scripture Examples 2. From Scripture Precepts 3. From Scripture Reasons 1. From Scripture Examples This was the maine Question of 1. From Scripture examples those that were touched at Peters Sermon Men and Brethren what shall we doe Act. 2. 37. And of the convert Goaler Sirs what shall I doe to be saved Act. 16. 30. Eternity was in the eyes of Enoch Gen. 5. 24. And in the eye of Moses Heb. 11. 26. This was in the meditations of David Ps 17. 15. When I awake I shall be satisfied with thy likenesse This was that Country which those renowned Patriarchs sought after Heb. 11. 16. This was in the heart of Paul Phil. 1. 23. and he speaks in the name of all the Saints Phil. 3. 20. Our conversation is in heaven whence we look for the Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ The worthy Martyrs of whom the world was not worthy laid down willingly this temporal life for an eternal Heb. 11. 35. And what 's the great ground of consolation 1 Cor. 5. 1. but a house eternall in the heavens It were easie to give a Catalogue of many rare precious servants of Jesus Christ who have made this their designe and businesse to enquire concerning their everlasting condition But this that hath been said may suffice 2. For Scripture Precepts To this purpose tends the weighty 2. From Scripture precepts exhortation of Christ to lay up treasure in heaven Mat. 6. 19. 20. to seek first the kingdome of God Mat. 6. 33. Joh. 6. 27. to labour for that which endureth unto eternal life And those of the Apostle Phil. 2. 12. 1 Tim. 6. 12. v. 19. the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is not a bare taking but a laying hold with both hands Wee must make it our businesse to get assurance of our eternal condition 3. I will lay down some Scripture Reasons and they shall bee 3. From Scripture Reasons considered under two heads either privatively what we are freed from by our interest in this eternal life or positively what wee gaine by the
high presumption This is for men to disparage Religion as a cheap commodity This is to undervalue the Medicine of Christs blood by thinking it easie to be had This is to presume of Mercy at last though in the mean time men live as they list But be not deceived God is not mocked The work of salvation is not so easie to work out it will cost sweat and blood watchings fastings humblings repentings and when thou hast done all thou must deny thy self and acknowledge thy self an unprofitable servant Take heed of presuming and blessing thy selfe in carnall security There 's one maine Scripture which should bee as a Looking-glasse set before presumptuous sinners Deut. 29. 19 20. 4. To give God that which is vile and reserve a better to themselves 4. There is sacriledge in this sinne to present God with any thing at a venture when thou hast a better by thee it plainly proves thee guilty of Sacriledge The best thou shouldest consecrate to the Lord the best in thy flock the best of thy services the best of the best of thy heart memory understanding will and affections Now if thou dost keep back the best from God thou art guilty of the highest kind of theft even sacriledge as we may read Mal. 3. 8. upon this Scripture a good old Disciple layeth down this Doctrine That it Mr. Stock on Mal. 3. 8. is a sacrilegious and impious thing for them to with-hold and withdraw the Ministers maintenance Suum merito vocat ac censet quod destinat in cultum su●m saith Calvin And if it be a great sinne as it is questionlesse to defraud Gods Ministers and rob them of their maintenance how much greater is it to rob Christ of his Deity as much as in Blasphemers lyes and to rob God of his Day and Worship The Papists would take away the second Commandement the Anabaptists the fifth the Antisabbatarians the fourth and some Antinomian and Familistical spirits would cut the whole Decalogue off at one blow these are sacrilegious in a high manner Consid 6. Notwithstanding all failings all will be accepted through Jesus Christ who rob God of his Law and Worship ●ut I come to a 6. Consideration When we have done the best offered the Male in the flock though there are many faylings yet all will be accepted through Jesus Christ Two things I must premise 1. That there are faylings in our best services There are iniquities of the holy things Exod. 28. 38. The Prophet confss eth himself a man of unclean lips Is 6. 5. The best of us all had need be humbled to the dust for those very sins that cleave to our duties for our distractions deadness coldness in hearing praying when we have done our duty we had need fall upon our knees to pray for the forgivenes of our faylings in the doing of that duty We had need fast for our fastings be humbled for our humiliations because we have performed spiritual services in a Carnal and Careles manner But 2. If we doe our utmost from a sincere heart and offer all up in the name of Christ through him we shall be accepted of the Father Christ is that high Priest that hath entred into the holy of holies and there he bare the Iniquity of our holy things He takes away our filthy garments and cloaths us with the immaculate robes of his righteousness Our prayers are raw and cold but Christ mends them in the carriage Our services are imperfect Christ presents them perfect to the Father Our duties have many staines and defilements by our formal slight performance of them But the Lord Jesus washeth them and so presents them to the Father So then in all our services we must act in the strength of Christ We must offer all our sacrifices upon this brazen Altar Christ is the onely high Priest that can offer all for us Nothing of our selves as of our selves we can doe in an acceptable manner All we must doe must be in the strength of Christ without him we can doe nothing but we can doe all things through Christ that strengtheneth us 7. And lastly The last Consideration shall be drawne from the Consid 7. From the dreadfull curse in the Text. dreadful curse in the Text The hypocrite the deceiver that offers a corrupt thing unto the Lord is under a dreadful curse It was a heavy j●dgement for Cain and Cham to be under a curse And an Anathema with a Maranatha at the end of it is the highest Gospel Curse How dreadfull must the condition of Hypocrites be who deal deceitfully with God who as it is in the Text make vows and keep mental reservations who vow under pretence of Zeal and yet give God the worst This dissembled Sanctity is double iniquity But what did Cain meet withall but a curse for his sleight sacrifice what did Ananias and Saphira meet withall for their hypocritical juglings and defalcations from the price but death in the place a signal judgement What shall carelesse Ministers meet withall but a dreadfull woe Zech. 11. 17. What shall they all meet withall which doe the work of the Lord deceitfully but a dreadfull curse Jer. 48. 10. Gods curses are terrible and light heavy upon hypocrites Though men oftimes cannot find them out yet God will take them into his own hand and it 's a fearfull thing to fall into the hands of the living God This Deceiver in the Text is an accursed person his sinne will find him out his juglings pretences hypocrisie● are all naked unto God and the vengeance of God will overtake him Having dispatched this Use of Exhortation I come now to a second Use which shall be for Reproof of that grand Hypocrite and Deceiver in the Text who hath in his flock a Male c. Within the verge of this Reprehension come severall sorts of Vse 2. For Reproof persons whom I shall single out and cry aloud against them As for instance 1. The Hypocrite who makes a shew a shaddow a pretence of 1. The Hypocrite Religion without the truth ●eality and substance thereof The Hypocrite is odious to God and man Men hate him because hee seems so good God hates him because he is not what he seems He may goe a great way and deceive men and his own heart for a time yet he cannot escape the knowledge of a holy omniscient Lord God It s the observation of a Reverend Divine that a Hypocrite is usually discovered before he dye But though he escape undiscovered and unpunished by man yet the hand of God will reach him The Psalmist sets him out Psal 36. 2. 3. Psal 55. 21. No man gives smoother words than a Hypocrite no man more full of complements none will pretend more friendship and none will doe lesse Joab came after such a hypocritical manner to Abner and Amasa and made his flattering speeches but a Preface to his Murther Ishmael came weeping as he went
is any 2. Prayer must be in Faith whit available in the sight of God It s the prayer of a righteous man which availeth much And only beleevers are accounted righteous in the sight of God 3. Prayer must bee fervent James 5. 16. Qui timide rogat docet negare 4. All Prayer must be put up in the name of Christ Joh. 15. 6. 3. Prayer must be fervent 4. All Prayer must be put up in the nāe of Christ 5. Prayer must be with perseverance 6. Prayer must proceed from the spirit of Adoption No petition can be excepted unlesse it be prefer'd in the name of Jesus Christ 5. This Prayer must be with perseverance 1 Thess 5. 17. Will the Hypocrite saith Job pray alwayes will he alwayes call upon God 6. Prayer must proceed from the Spirit of adoption Gal. 4. 6. Many have a gift and are strangers to the grace of prayer Many use a form and yet are unacquainted with the Spirit of prayer Many use prayer as a duty few as a meanes Wherefore we must shaddow forth the spirit of prayer by these propertyes 1. There 's a warming of the heart the heart powreth out its selfe before the Lord Hence comes grones sighes supplications The heart is seriously affected Prayer is rather heart labour then lip labour and the heart breakes and pants after God in prayer So was Hannah affected in powring out her heart before the Lord. 2. There is a Child-like language There is Abba Father 2. Gal. 4. 6. There is much difference betweene the language of Children and Slaves Gods children learn his language and they come as children unto a Father 3. Their aime ends and designes are Gods honour and glory 3. Self-ends and interests doe not set men on work to pray the spring that moves is love to God his honour and glory and the end and aime they drive at is the glory of God In the next place its inquired How may we give God the Q. 2. How we may give God the Male in receiving of the Sacrament Male in receiving of the Sacrament For Answere hereunto we are to note that if we rightly examine our selves we may participate of the Sacrament To which purpose I will set down Self-examining-objects Self-examining-propertyes and Self-examining-graces 1. For self-examining-objects and they are either thoughts Words and Deeds as 1 For our Thoughts we must examine whether they are sanctifyed 1. Self-examining-objects 2. Self-examining-Propertyes 3. Self-examining-graces Jer. 4. 14. 2. As for Words they must be such as minister grace to the hearers Col. 4. 29. and 3 As for our Actions they must be such as become the Gospell Phil 1 27. 2. For self-examining-propertyes they must be 1. Thorough and Impartiall we must take notice both of lesse and greater sinnes No sinne must escape us without due and serious examination 2. Regular The rule of the word must be that whereby we must try and examine our whole life we must bring all to the Law and Testimonye Then 3. For Graces we are to examine in these especially 1. Knowledge is required whether we discern the Lords body An Ignorant blind devotion is abominable and rejected by God we must know the nature of a Sacrament the Institutor the end of it we must know our happynesse by creation our misery by sinne in Adams fall our restored condition by Christs Redemption the benefits of Christs purchases viz. Justification Sanctification and Glorification 2. Faith is required and this must not be Temporary Historicall Dogmaticall but a Justifying faith such a one as purifieth the heart Act. 15. 9. as is unfained and worketh by lowe 3. Repentance this must be Evangelical This Repentance must have these fruites 2 Cor. 7. 10 11. 4. Love both love to God and love to the Brethren Joh. 13. 47. Love is the badge of a Disciple 5. New obedience newnesse of life is required Isa 55. 7. And thus we must give God the Male in the celebration of his Ordinance But the next Question hath some affinity unto this Q. 2. Whether we give God the best in our graces Q. 2. Whether we give God the best in our Graces Not to instance in what I instanced before I le propound other instances viz. In Humility Meeknesse Temperance Wisdom 1. Doe we give God the Male in the exercise of the grace of Humility There may be a voluntary Humility and a naturall humble carriage but the question is whether we have that Humility which is of the same stamp with spiritual Poverty whether self be emptied Christ advanced 2. For Meeknesse there 's in some a more natural inclination to Meeknesse But when we are provoked to wrath do we then shew meek spirits to bear and forbear with others to overcome evil with good to heap coales of fire upon enemies heads 3. For Temperance where is our sober temperate carriage in Abstinence and Moderation Phil. 4. 5. 4. For Wisdome doe wee labour for Wisdome Divine Wisdome and honour God with it lay forth our parts interests and all to honour God withall Q. 3. Whether we give God the Male in our whole life conversation Q. 3. Then the last Question is whether we give God the Male in our whole Conversations To which purpose by way of character we must decypher out such a Conversation 1. It must be holy 1 Pet. 1. 15. 1. Holy 2. Sincere 3. Universall 4. Wise 2. It must be sincere 2 Cor. 1. 12. 3. It must be universall Ps 119. 6 101. 4. It must be wise and ordered with discretion the wisdome of the Serpent is required as well as the innocencie of the Dove 5. Fruitfull 5. It must be fruitfull in the exercise of good works A Christian Conversation is not barren it must bear twins 6. Regular 6. It must bee regulated according to the Gospel Phil. 1. 27. Vse 4. For Direction The fourth Use in order is for Direction For the better setting home this Use as may be most profitable for you I shall endeavour to answer two Queries The first whereof is what impediments and obstacles we should remove that hinder us from giving God the best Then secondly What special duties are required to shew the Q. 1. What Impediments are to bee removed Imped 1. Ignorance sincerity of our hearts that we offer God the Male even the best of all our services For answer unto the first Question the Impediments are these especially 1. An ignorant blind mind when people understand not the excellency of Jesus Christ they will brayd of the Gaderenish humour they preferre their swine before him There 's ignorance sufficient when they askt what is thy Beloved more than another beloved Cant. 5. 9 10. But the Spouse gives an experimental answer v. 10. My Beloved is white and ruddy the chiefest of ten thousand 2. A frothy and vaine spirit How many entertain a low and Imped 2. A frothy vain spirit cheap
silence and give him not rest till he establish and till he make Jerusalem a prayse in the earth The Text divided and expounded p. 69 70 71. Doct. That its the obliged duty of all the Children of God to be earnest and assiduous suitors at the Throne of Grace in the behalfe of the Church of God p. 72. Method of handling the Doctrine 1. By propounding parallell Examples p. 72 73 74. 2. By Scripture Precepts p. 74. 3. By 3 Reasons R. 1. In respect of God p. 75. R. 2. In respect of prayer p. 76 77 78 79. R. 3. In respect of the Church p. 79 80. Vse for Reprehension p. 80. 81. Vse 2. for Exhortation p. 83. 4. Things especially to be prayed for p. 83 84 85. 2. Motives p. 86 87. Vse 3. for Direction 1. We must pray in faith p. 87. 2. With fervency ib. 3. With perseverance p. 88. Vse 4. for Consolation ib. SERM. V. GAl. 5. 24. And they that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts p. 89. Doct. 1. That there are a peculiar people that are Christs and have speciall Interest in him p. 89. Doctrine prooved from Scripture Testimony p. 90. What it is to have Interest in Christ ib. 4. Reasons drawne 1. From the Promises 2. From the Fathers Donation 3. Christs Redemption And 4. From the sanctification of the spirit p. 91. What are the Benefits of those that are in Christ Ans In five particulars p. 91 92. Vse 1. for Consolation p. 92. Vse 2. for Exhortation ib. Vse 3. of Examination five Notes of Triall ib. Doct. 2. Those that have Interest in Christ have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts p. 93. Method propounded 1. What 's meant by flesh p. 93. 2. What 's meant by affections and lusts ib. 3. What 's meant by crucifying the flesh p. 94. 4. The Doctrine prooved by three Reasons p. 95. Vse 1. for Information p. 96. Vse 2. for Reproofe of three sorts p. 96 97. Vse 3. for Exhortation pressed by three Motives p. 97. Vse 4. for Examination foure Properties of a Crucified person p. 98 99. Vse 5. for Direction 1. What we are to Crucify p. 99. 2. What duties are to be put in practise Ans in 7 Duties p. 100 101. Vse 6. for Consolation An Objection ● answered in six particulars p. 101 102. SERM. VI. ROm. 5. 8. But God commendeth his love towards us in that whil'st we were yet sinners Christ died for us p. 103. The Context opened p. 103 104. Doct. That the death o● Christ for s●nners is an Evident Demonstration of the Love of God the Father and of the Lord Jesus Chri●t p. 104. Method propounded 1. By ●xplication Q. 1. Wherein consists the love of God the Father Ans p. 105. Q. 2. Wherein consists this love of Chri●t ib. and p. 116. Q. 3. Did not Heathens dye where lyeth the difference Ans p. 109. six Prop●sitions p. 109 110 111 112 113. Three Objections answered p. 113 114 115. Vse 1. for Information in five Particulars p. 115 116. Vse 2. for Examination six fignes given o● those that have Interest in this distinguishing love 116 117 118. Vse 3. for Exhortation branched into six particular Duties p. 118 119. Vse 4. for Comfort foure Benefits of this speciall l●ve p. 119 120. SERM. VII 2 TIm 2. 19. And let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from Iniquity p. 120. The Context opened p. 121 122. The Text divided and expounded p. 123 124. Doct. That wheresoever there is the Profession of Christianity there ought to be a Godly life and Conversation every way sutable and correspondent therewith p. 124. The Doctrine handled 1. By Scripture Testimony p. 125. 2. Confirmed by foure Reasons 125 126. 3. Applied in foure Vses 1. for Information p. 127 128. Vse 2. for Examination foure Characters p. 129 130 131. Vse 3. for Exhortation in three Motives p. 131 132. Vse 4. for Direction 1. How we must depart from Iniquity Ans foure waies p. 132. 2. What meanes must be used Ans 6 Meanes directed p. 133. 134. SERM. VIII JOh. 8. 24. For if yee believe not that I am he yee shall dye in your sinnes p. 135. Context opened p. 135 136. Doct. That of all sinnes Insidelity especially is a grand-damning sinne again●t the Gospell Method propounded 1. What Infidelity is Ans in five particulars p. 137 138 139 140 2. The Aggravations of unbeleefe in 6 particulars p. 141 142. 3. By 5. Arguments the Doctrine is confirmed p. 142 143. 4. The Doctrine is applied in 6 Vses 1. For Reproofe p. 145. 2. For Caution in 4 particulars p. 146 147. 3. For Exhortation in 2 Motives 1. Drawne from the Benefit of faith p. 147. 2. From the mischiefe of unbeleefe p. 147 148. 4. For Examination 5 signes of faith p. 148 149. Three signes of unbeleefe p. 149. 5. For Direction 4 directions p. 150. 6. For Consolation in 5 particulars p. 150. Objections of unbelievers answered p. 151 152 153. Objections of Misbelievers answered p. 153 154. Objections of Weak-believers answered p. 154 155 156. SERM. IX HAb 3. 18. Yet I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation The Context opened p. 157 158. The Text divided p. 160. Doct. Amidst all sorrowes lossesse and crossesse joyes supplies and comforts are to be found in the Lord our God p. 161. 4. Arguments in the Text explained p. 163 164 165. 5. Demonstrations added for Confirmation p. 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175. Three Vses 1. For Consolation p. 176 177. 2. For Exhortation 1. To make God our joy p. 178. 2. To make God our Treasure p. 179. 3. To make God our Refuge p. 179 180. Vse 3. For Direction 4. Impediments to be remooved p. 181 182. 3. Duties to be practiced p. 182 183. SERM. X. ROm. 12. 2. But be yee transformed by the renewing of the mind Doct. Every Person who is really Converted is transformed and changed in the renovation of his mind p. 184 Method propounded 1. What 's understood by transformation Ans p. 185 186. 2. What 's meant by the renewing of the mind p. 187. 3. The Doctrine by Scripture prooved p. 188 189. 3. Cautions premised p. 189 190. 4. The Doctrine applied in 4 Vses 1. For Information p. 190. 2. For Examination wherein are 6 False glasses discovered p. 191 192 193 194 195. Three signes of Reall Conversion viz. Vniversality Sincerity and Perpetuity p. 196 197. Vse 3. For Exhortation 3 Motives pressed p. 197. Vse 4. For Consolation 3 Priviledges of such as are really converted p. 198. ERRATA Pag. 4. Marg. r Calvin In the same margent r delect i. p. 124. Marg. r. nominet credens verum discedat p. 125. l. 14. r. implied p. 127. l. 20. r. Angell p. 185. l. 7. r. then p. 186. l. 10. r. soever p. 186. l. 16. r. which is Other Errataes the Reader is entreated to amend DECAD III. OF
reconciliation to beseech people to be reconciled unto God And having endeavour'd this great work principally in the next place I conjure you and earnestly entreat you as you are Ministers of the Gospell of peace that you would conferre your best endeavours to cement sod●r and unite diss●nting Brethren that they may what in you lies be prevail'd withall to agree together in Unity on Earth who shall agree in Unity in the highest Heavens I plead not in the least for any persons how much soever admired by some who are either unsound in the saith or unholy in life No reconciliation can be expected nor ought to be attempted with * Gal. 5. 20. 21. Idolatries Drunkenesse Heresies and other such like deeds of the flesh I plead only for such as truly fear God who are not only nominall but reall saints Here lyeth the labour and here the work to be reconcilers amongst them and such peace-makers are blessed That I may speak my mind freely for I love plain dealing as for such Reconcilers as Cassander of old and Sancta Clara of late who would joyn together the Ark and Dagon the Ephod and Teraphim I mean Protestantisme and Popery these are to be detested and sent back again to Rome from whence they came † V. Bishop Hall's Treatise No peace with Rome No peace with Rome no quarter ought to be given to Benhadad I may say of them as Jehu said to Ahaziah * 2 King 9. 22. what peace so long as the whoredomes of thy Mother Jezabel and her witchcrafts are so many daies without number As for Ignatius Loyola Father of the Jesuites John of Leyden Ring-leader of the Anabaptists and the rest of their Complices of whose franctick practices we have ample Relations in Print † V. Sleyd Comment Baylyes disswasive they are so farre from any reall endeavours after reconciliation with us as rather like Samsons Foxes they run abroad with firebrands in their tails and so set all the standing corn a fire These are the grand Incendiaries flabella seditionum From Jesuitisme and Anabaptisme all heresies and damnable errors receive their originall At Rome and Munster this counterfeit coine receives it's stamp and impression Hence as out of a Trojan Horse is let out an Ambuscado to destroy the Protestant Religion Therefore ther 's no ground of hopefull successe if we should attempt any reconciliation with them Let them come to us and make serious Confessions and retractations but let not us go to them Let them first abjure their principles and practises though I know not why we should trust a Papist upon his oath till then there can be no possibility of embraceing peace with such who either are of Babylon or for Babylon But what is chiefly in mine eye and aime amounts to this brief issue to perswade all those to unite amongst themselves who are sound in the faith and holy in life Amongst them there are some who come so farre up to us and we hope they may yet come farther if selfe interests make no obstructions as to acknowledge us true Ministers the Church of England a true Church Much is granted to this effect by some * V. Apolog. of the five dissenting Brethren Reverend dissenting Brethren in Print When carnall Interests secular policies and mentall reservations are laid aside and men declare plainly what they would have and when we know once where to finde them and where they will fix then Attempts of Accommodation may attain a happy and comfortable successe That which much concerns us all is to lay to heart and be deeply affected with the divisions of Reuben and to use our utmost endeavour to comprimise differences and make up breaches and animosities lest otherwise we gratify the Jesuit who is the common Enemy who loves to fish in troubled waters or is like an Adder which seeks for shelter in broken walls Let 's leave off contention prius quam sese immisceat so Junius renders the words of Solomon † Prov. 17. 14. Prov. 17. 14. i. e. Let not contention mixe with our affairs For once it being mixed and joyned it 's not easy to unmixe and separate afterwards Wherefore let it be our care and wisdome not to give advantage by our domestick breaches to the wild Boar of Babylon or the subtle Foxes of Munster and Racovia who when they see us a quarrelling one with another they make a prey of us both I well remember about this time 24. yeares ago in the Vespers of our publicke Act there was a Question discuss'd which the * Dr. Wingham of St Johns Respondent held Affirmative An Calviniani quos vocant Lutherani possint in unam Ecclesiam coalescere And in the like solemne Convention another Question 7. yeares ago was affirmed homogeneous to the former by a † Dr. Wilkinson of Christ-Church learned Professor of our University An intersit pacis salutis Ecclesiae vere Evangelicos pium colere syncretismum But especially let 's have recourse unto Scripture What saith the Psalmist * Psal 133. 1. Psal 133. 1. Behold how good and how pleasant it is for Brethren to dwell together in unity I have often fetch 't a ground of hope against many fears from 2. Prophesies The one is † Zeph. 3. 9. Zeph. 3. 9. For then will I turn to the people a pure Language that they may all call upon the name of the Lord to serve him with one consent The other is * Zach. 14. 9. Zach. 14. 9. And the Lord shall be King over all the Earth in that day shall there be one Lord and his name be one † Non satis est si homines agnoscerent unum Deum nisi consentiu●t in re●ta simplici aliqu● fide ita ut celebretur in terrâ nomen unius Dei Calv. in Zeph. 3. 9. Though there be but one Lord yet his name is called on diversly but here is Prophesied an unity of worshipping God And as for unity amongst Brethren this is accounted a fruit of our effectuall calling * Eph. 4. 3. Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace And for the better setting home of this exhortation the Apostle mentions 7. Ones in the following verses viz. One body one Spirit one hope of our calling one Lord one faith one Baptisme one God and Father of all How pathetically doth the Apostle presse unanimity † Phil. 2. 1 2. If saith he there be therefore any Consolation in Christ if any comfort of love if any fellowship of the Spirit if any bowells of mercies fulfill ye my joy that ye be like minded having the fame love being of one accord and one mind * Numerus binarius eo magis infamis quia primus ausus est discedere ab unitate Pythag Pythagoras used to put a brand of infamy upon the number of two because it first departed from unity But the Apostle propounds the Question
† Gal. 4. 18. zealously affected in a good matter * Praedicare verbum Dei nihil aliud est quam derivare in se furorem totius inferni satanae Luth loc com † In aliis mansuetus ero in blasphemiis in Christum non ita Zuing in Epist ad Servet Luther used to say That to preach the Word of God zealously was a ready way to bring the rage of all the Devills in Hell about our ears But in Gods cause let 's go on couragiously and though we may be vilified by the vilest of men yet let 's resolve with David to be more vile A good God a good cause and a good conscience will carry us through the greatest dangers and difficulties And let us still remember to shew most meeknesse in our own cause and most zeal in the cause of God So * Zuinglius answered Servetus in other things I will be mild but not in blasphemies against God Now I have not yet done with the pressing of this Doctrin● of union amongst Brethren I shall yet prosecute it farther heartily desiring that my words may leave deep impressions upon your Spirits and obtain some comfortable successe The breaches amongst the Ministers were as an Arrow stuck in the sides of that good man Philip Melancthon Whereupon on his death bed V. Vitam Phil. Melancth per Melct Adamum editam he profest I am very glad I am to leave this World because I shall be with Christ and then shall be freed from the contentions of some Divines which were very great at that time There 's a sad story of two eminent Martyrs for the truth viz. * Epiphan Haeres 68. Meletius and Peter Bishops of Alexandria who when they were put into Prison fell at variance amongst themselves about a petty difference whether the Lapsi were to be received into communion The Schisme was very great insomuch as they drew a partition between each other in Prison and would not hold communion with each other and yet afterward they joyntly suffered Martyrdome And it 's not easily to be imagined what a great Rent their dissention made in the Church of God and gave advantage to the common Enemy And what a dust was raised between two choyce and constant Martyrs Ridley and Hooper one prest conformity too strictly upon his Brother and contended with too much eagernesse for such kind of vaine uselesse Ceremonies which Calvin calls tolerabiles ineptias Yet notwithstanding these two Godly Bishops could not agree in Blacks and Whites they could both agree in Red for they resisted even unto bloud and sealed the truth of their Religion with the effusion of their bloud And now to speak my judgment more plainly as in the presence of God without partiality having no mans person in admiration for advantage I conceive it a word spoken in due season and that there is necessity of speaking of it even to exhort Ministers to study the things that make for peace and especially to agree in a sweet Harmony one with another And I am fully satisfied in my judgment that to effect this much desired union a speciall expedient will be in severall Counties as † London Lancashire Essex Warwick Worcester Norfolke c. some herein have given a good President already to associate into Presbyteries and exercise that Government which by experience is known to be Flagellum Haeresium and ordaine Ministers and to put Church censures into execution When Ministers meet together and sosolemnly seek God by prayer and fasting they strengthen one anothers hands and unite each others hearts The keeping up of Discipline is a speciall means to preserve union amongst Brethren to extirpate Heresies and sweep them away as dung and promote the power of Godlinesse It hath often lain sad upon my Spirit to consider the mischiefe that hath ensued upon want of execution of Church Discipline Hinc illae lachrymae Hence for want hereof a sluce hath been opened to let in an inundation of heresies and blasphemies But it 's much to be hoped that the execution of Discipline will shut up the sluce and stop the inundation Faxit Deus Now having spoken thus farre to Ministers the other part of 2. Part of this use to people my use I will direct to people And the substance of my exhortation is to perswade them with all alacrity of Spirit to embrace the Doctrine of Reconciliation tendred to them It 's the great Doctrine of concernement in an especiall manner to be Preacht and practised The Ambassadours of peace publish these good tidings They come in the name of Jesus Christ offering termes of Reconciliation With what joy with what ardency of love should you embrace such gracious offers O how sweet is the voyce of Christ unto his Church His lips drop as an honey combe If thou be the Spouse of Christ thou wilt delight to heare the voyce of the Bridegroom So the Evangelist tel's us * Joh. 3. 29. Discimus etiam hic quod etsi amicus sponsi i. e. Minister Evangelii non gaudeat gaudium sponsi neque fructum eum percipiat ex Ecclesia qui sponsi proprius est non tamen caret gaudio quodam suo vel ex eo quod stet audiat vocem illam sponsi longe suavissimam quam rursus bona fide tanquam internuncius referet sponsae Rollocus in locum That the Friend of the Bridegroome which stands and hears the Bridegrooms voyce rejoyceth greatly Now consider Christ's messengers are his voyce unto people They come on his errand and deliver what he puts into their mouth O how sweet then will Christs words be to a gracious heart And this is that sweet welcome word which Ministers deliver to pray men to be reconciled and make their peace with God My brethren I beseech you in the bowells of Jesus Christ to set the highest estimate upon this Doctrine of Reconciliation preferre it before your appointed food before thousands of Gold and Silver And have them in honour and account their feet beautifull who do the office of Evangelists and are dispensers of these truths and Trumpetters of Gospell peace Though they be men of like passions yet they are Persons of honour Commission officers authorized by Jesus Christ to Preach the Gospell Private Christians may discourse of these things Charitative but let them keep within the compasse of their own calling and exhort one another to embrace this Doctrine but Ministers exhort Authoritative as Ambassadors and commissioners of Jesus Christ Wherefore Brethren let me be your remembrancer of the great duty incumbent on you all to love and reverence the Persons of your Ministers and have them in honour for their works sake especially I shall put you in mind of a Scripture or two that so my exhortation may leave deeper impression upon your hearts one is * 1 Cor. 4. 1. 1 Cor. 4. 1. Let a man so account of us as Ministers of Christ and Stewards of the
* Eph. 5. 9. Eph. 5. 9. Viz. Goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth and he mentions another much larger † Gal. 5. 22 23. Gal. 5. 22 23. Viz. Love joy peace longsuffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith meeknesse temperance Here then is the great triall whether the life and conversation be ordered aright Whether the conversation be in † all holy conversation and Godlinesse Whether the new Creature exert it selfe through a mans whole life Whether a holy profession be adorned by a holy conversation Now if in truth and sincerity affirmative answers can be given to these Questions then without doubt such Persons have Interest in this Reconciliation by Jesus Christ But I shall adde no more to these Characters I conceive that whosoever can produce these tokens hath a sure and undoubted title What yet remains is as I promised you to excite you all by some moving considerations to make it your grand work and businesse to get assurance of your reconciled estate which is the businesse of the greatest concernment Motive 1. Consider the riches of mercy and bowells opened towards fallen man and denyed to the fallen Angels As for Motives 1. Let us consider of the riches of mercy and bowells opened towards fallen man which were utterly denyed towards fallen Angells And this consideration heightneth the great contrivance of this Reconciliation in that it was from all eternity Adde hereunto that God himselfe was first in the tender and contrivance of this great work Man neither could nor would make up so great a breach It transcended the Sphere of his capacity Had Adam and all his posterity joyned all their heads together they could not understand what way and means to undertake to make up so great a breach But God the Father out of the riches of his mercy found out a way even a new and living way by Jesus Christ The Angels were past by they fell once and that irrecoverably without any hope of reinvesting themselves in their first estate For Christ shed not one drop of bloud for them He * Heb. 2. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat arripere apprehendere manum injicere B. Andrews Cura sollicitudo labor festinatio pro salute generis humani ea una voce significatur Hyperius in loc took not upon him saith the Apostle the nature of Angels but the seed of Abraham Yet notwithstanding the riches of Gods mercy are inhanced toward fallen man because the promised seed even that † Gen. 3. 15. the seed of the woman should break the Serpents head was proclaim'd in Paradise and appropriated unto mankind Secondly consider the great and inestimable price paid to purchase Mot. 2. Consider the great price paid to purchase peace and reconciliation peace and Reconciliation And what was that price but the price of bloud And this is called in Scripture * Act. 20. 28. the Bloud of God Yet in such expressions we are to understand a communication of Idioms This bloud was the bloud of sprinkling which † Heb. 12. 24. Speaketh better things then the bloud of Abel This was the bloud of the immaculate Lamb slaine from the Foundation of the World Because * Rev. 13. 8. without shedding of bloud there was no remission Christ therefore took upon him humane nature There are two great significant words which evidently declare his humane nature one word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 † Joh. 1. 14. Joh. 1. 14. He pitcht his Tent or Tabernacle amongst us The other word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Phil. 2. 7. Vers 8. Phil. 2. 7. He emptyed himselfe or made himselfe of no reputation And Vers 8. we read of the highest degree of Christs humiliation in that he became obedient unto death even the death of the Crosse Thus Christ hath made a compleat satisfaction by doing and suffering all that the Father required And now Christ † Rom. 8. 34. sitteth at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us And we have a ground of strong consolation further laid down * Heb. 7. 25. Heb. 7. 25. Wherefore he is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them There 's a word of great importance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which as a † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 omnimodam significat perfectionem Camero in Myroth learned Authour observes signifieth all manner of perfection This sheweth such an absolute perfection that nothing else can be desir'd nothing can be added And wherein doth this all-sufficient Saviour shew himselfe to be so We have an answer and strong proofe drawne from Christs intercession in the following words where it is said That he ever liveth to make * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non dicit ut offerat hoc enim semel fecit sed superest altera sacerdotii pars nempe Interpellatio Beza Intercession for them This Scripture is a fort Royall and impregnable notwithstanding all the batteries that Socinian Hereticks make against it But I proceed to a third motive drawn from the willingnesse Motive 3. Drawn from the willingness of God to be recon●iled of God to be reconciled Wherefore he sends his messengers upon this errand to perswade people to embrace Articles of peace The Lord entrusts his Ministers with the word of reconciliation which is the Doctrine of the everlasting Gospell And they spend their Spirits and lay forth their strength to the uttermost woing intreating exhorting people to submit unto Christs Scepter and through him to make their peace with God the Father Now the Spirit of God strives in the Ministery of the word It 's a most terrible judgment when Gods Spirit refuseth to strive any longer with a people And this is threatned * Gen. 6. 3. Gen. 6. 3. And the Lord said my Spirit shall not alwaies strive with man i. e. The Lord will not alwaies dispute chide and argue the case with a people the Lord will not alwaies strive by the Ministery of his servants such as were Enoch Noah Methusalah who lived the longest and died but the year before the flood God will not alwaies suffer his Spirit to be grieved the motions thereof slighted Neither will God alwaies suffer the faithfull labours of his Ministers to be neglected * Some † Pagninus Grotius render the word Lo-jiddon non vaginabit He will not alwaies put his sword into the scabberd but he will draw it out and fight against his Enemies And oh that you would all consider in your most serious composed thoughts that now you hear as it were a voice behind you saying This is the way walk in it This voyce is the Spirit speaking in the written word for the Spirit speaks according to the word Now by all the woings and whispers of the Spirit and by the unwearied labours of the faithfull Ambassadours of the Gospell you are entreated to
the dore of the Sanctuary is yet opened and a * Ezra 9. 8. nail is yet left in the holy place you have bread in the morning and in the evening and more plenty of spirituall food on the Sabbath day and week daies then heretofore Much is given unto you and much required from you Where God hath sown so liberally he expects as plentifull an harvest Now you hear the joyfull sound even the word of reconciliation and substance of our Embassie is to intreat you to consider the value and dignity of your Heavenly born being soules and to seek after reconciliation otherwise you are undone to all eternity Now Christ holds out a white flag for a parley of peace now the King of Heaven holds out the golden Scepter O come and touch the top thereof and live The Port-cullis is not yet let down The Judge hath not yet vailed his face The dore of hope is not yet shut up the holy Ghost calls † Isa 55. 6. Seek the Lord whilest he may be found call upon him whilest he is neer ‖ 2 Cor. 6 2. Nemo tam divos habuit faventes crastinum ut possit sibi polliceri Senec. Now is the day of salvation None of us can promise to our selves a morrow no not the least moment of time and if we neglect this golden opportunity and season of grace offered we may never live to have another tendred unto us All the World cannot call back the least minute of time when once it is past it 's like a swift stream or an arrow out of a b●w not to be recalled Wherefore as you consult the eternal good of your immortal souls be intreated to improve all the prizes and Talents that God puts into your hands to get Wisdome withall When the Lord bids you seek his face O that your hearts with all readinesse might return this answer * Psal 27. 8. Thy face Lord will I seek God hath put this word into my mouth and here fixt my thoughts after I had severall other subjects in my eye and hath sent me on this very errand to treat on this great Theame of reconciliation unto God And now what message shall I return unto him that hath sent me What account shall I give at the last day of the entertainment of this word What shall I say more You have life and death set before you this day viz. The happinesse of a reconciled estate and the misery of an unreconciled estate O that the Lord would engage you all to make the better choyce by heark●ing unto this word of reconciliation and unfainedly embracing the same and so your souls shall live † 2. Tim. 2. 7. Consider what I have said and the Lord give you understanding in all things THE MINISTERY OF ANGELLS Heb. 1. 14. Are they not all Ministring spirits sent forth to Minister for them who shall be heires of salvation TO draw down the context to the text we are to Sermon 2. Preached at S. Marye's Oxon. Oct. 3. 1658. Vers 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Solis radii sunt ejusdem naturae cum sole ab eodem propagatione distinguuntur avelluntur nunquam hac Metaphorâ divinam filii naturam convenientissime expressit Apostolus Et character ●icitur expressa imago Archetypi Pareus in loc take speciall notice of the Excellency and dignity of Christ represented unto us in this chapter especially Vers 3. Who being the brightness of his glory and the express image of his person and upholding all things by the Word of his Power when he had by himselfe purged our sinnes sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on High And by way of Comparison the Apostle further inhanceth the honour and preheminence of Christ For after he had compared Christ with the Angells he sets the Crown on Christs head his name is more excellent than theirs Vers 4. 5. Being made so much better then the Angells as he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name then they For unto which of the Angells said he at any time Thou art my son this day have I begotten thee And againe I Will be to him a Father and he shall be to me a Son Christ is a Son the Angells his servants they may not be worshipped themselves but they must worship Christ Vers 6. 7. Let all the Angells of God worship him Of his Angells he saith who maketh his Angells spirits and his Ministers a flame of fire And further honour is ascribed to the Son which is not to Angells Vers 8. 9. Vnto the Son he saith Thy throne O God is for ever and ever a scepter of righteousnesse is the scepter of thy Kingdome Thou hast loved righteousnesse and hated iniquity therefore God even thy God hath anointed thee with the oyle of gladnesse above thy fellowes And further Christ is a Lord and Creatour the Angells servants and creatures Christ is advanced to the Throne He is the Soveraign Lord of all Vers 13. The Angells ministering spirits subservient to Christ and at his command and when commissionated by him helpfull and serviceable unto all the children of God It is demanded by way of interrogation in the Text Are they not all Ministring spirits c. Which scripture sets forth clearly the Protection of Angells their Ministery and serviceablenesse unto the children of God A point seldome taught yet very usefull comfortable and of singular concernment unto all the children of God! And being that its the duty of the Minister to declare unto people the whole councell of God that which hath oft been in my intention I shall now endeavour to handle with all the perspicuity that I can The words contain a question Are they not all Ministring spirits Divis which being resolved the answer is obvious that the Angells are all Ministring spirits More particularly we are to observe a Description of Angells 1. From their nature Spirits 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implied 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exprest 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. From their office Ministring 3. Their commission Sent. 4. Whose Ministers they are 1. Primarily Christs And secondarily Christs children 5. The universality All All the Angells Here 's the universality of the object and it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and universality of the subject all the Angells All that are heires none left out none exempted from the benefit of the service of all the Angells of God All that are heires of Salvation all Christs children have interest in their protection Many scruples may be made and many things require explication what requires opening shall be endeavoured in the enlargement of one intire doctrine whereon I purpose to fix Thus I propound it to you That it pleaseth God to make use of the Ministery of Angells for Doct. the good of his Children This is the point I aime at from this
shall prevaile 3. A third reason shall be drawn from Jerusalem and that upon R. 3. Drawn from Jerusalem a double ground because Jerusalem needs our prayers and likewise deserves our prayers 1. Jerusalem the type of the Church needs our prayers It is 1. Jerusalem needs our prayers militant on earth It resembleth Noahs Ark on the surface of the waters tost up and down it 's like to that smoaking furnace shewed to Abraham Gen 15. 17. The Church is like the bush that Moses saw burning but not consumed It standeth among the Mirtle Trees in the bottome Zech 1. 11. The Church may take up that selfe same complaint Psal 129. 1 2. Many a time have they afflicted me from my youth may Israel now say many a time have they afflicted me from my youth yet they have not prevailed against me It is necessarily then an incumbent duty upon us all to remember Zion and pray for the prosperity of Jerusalem However Papists lay down Prosperity to be a mark of the true Church yet all the Saints and Martyrs from generation to generation by their sufferings and persecutions have abundantly confuted the groundlesness of their opinion The Church of God meets with various dispensations sutable to that prophecy Zech 6. 6 7. Where were white black grisled and bay horses And for the most part Gods dearest Children drink deepest of the cup of afflictions and have a full cup of the waters of Marah wrung out to them The title of the 22. Psal is Aijeleth Shahar the hind of the morning intimating the continuall hunting and persecuting of the People of God However it shall go well with the righteous it shall go well with them that feare the Lord. God hath founded Zion the gates of Hell shall not prevaile against it Christ is ever present with them and though the Dragon cast out flouds against the woman yet she shall escape And though there are Hornes to push the Church yet God sends Carpenters to cut them off In the mean Zech. 1. 21. time how should we unite and pray for Zion that it may be delivered and established in glory This meanes of prayer God expects God blesseth and maketh successefull Gebal Ammon Amaleck and Philistines all the enemies that Hell can raise are confederate against Jerusalem The seed of the Serpent is at continuall enmity even deadly feud with the seed of the woman We read of their consultation Psal 83. 3 4. They have taken crafty counsell against thy people and consulted against thy hidden ones They have said come let us cut them off from being a Nation that the name of Israel may be no more in remembrance We read of their associations Isaiah 8. 10. Associate your selves O yee people and ye shall be broken in pieces gird your selves and ye shall be broken in pieces Take counsell together and it shall come to naught speak the word and it shall not stand For God is with us Of what necessity then are assiduous prayers and importunate Applications unto God in the behalfe of Zion 2. The Church of God deserves our prayers What high Epi●hites are ascribed unto it It is called the Citie of God Heb. 12. 2. Jerusalem deserves our prayers 22. The house of God 1 Tim. 3. 15. The delight of God Isa 62. 4. The love the dove the spouse the undefiled Cant. 5. 2. A crown of glory and a royall Diadem in the hand of God Isa 62. 3. The body of Christ Eph. 1. 23. And doth it not in all these respects deserve our prayers Should not we honour where God honours I shall adde no more for confirmation I now proceed to Application Vse 1. For Reprehension and shall insist only upon foure uses 1. For Reprehension 2. Exhortation 3. Direction And 4. Consolation 1. For Reproofe This Doctrine in the first place breaths terrour unto all the enemies of the Church of God If God put such an high honour and estimate upon his Church as to ingage his people to pray with all earnestnesse for it what shall we say of such as are so farre from praying for the Church as they oppose it and set themselves in battle aray against it They mourn when it goeth well and rejoyce when it goeth ill with Jerusalem And thus they tread Antipodes to divine Providence Multitudes there are of Samballats and Tobiah's temper who have a spirit of contradiction against the waies of Reformation Many hate the power of Godlinesse and cannot abide circumspect walking but reproach it like the spies that brought an evill report of the promised Land They calumniate revile those who walk most closely with God Now the Churches Enemies will appeare especially in times of Triall when it comes to suffering losses disgrace poverty c. Then all the Enemies to religion will make that wicked choice to chuse sinne rather than affliction as Job speaks Job 36. 21. But a second sort are to be reproved who are negligent careless Indifferents of Gallioes temper they care for none of these things They are secure setled upon their lee's at ease in Zion and are no whit affected with the afflictions of Joseph How many are there that never in good earnest put up a prayer for the Church of God in all their lives They look upon these things as not concerning them They plainly shew themselves to be a body without the spirit to animate it a carcase only painted men not living members of Jesus Christ For in Christs body when one member suffers the other doth Sympathize They are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and conferre subsidiary forces for the mutuall succour of each other but where there is no Sympathy and no fellow-feeling of each others afflicted condition This is a signe that the members of that body are rotten dead like withered branches cut off from the Vine 3. A third sort to be reproved are all such who pray but faintly and slightly and do not put forth their utmost strength for Jerusalem Some pray now and then when the humor takes them but they flagge and hold not out they are not wrastlers with God as Jacob they are not such Remembrancers as will give him no rest that will never leave of praying Now it 's an usuallsaying Q●i●timide rogat docet negare Cold prayer dead prayer and drousy prayer are no better than Gehazi'es touching of the Shunamites child He went on in a carelesse negligent manner and laid his staffe on the Child but it was not awakened whereas when Elisha in good earnest with all his might laid out himselfe and put his mouth vpon the childs mouth and his hands upon the childs hands and his eyes upon the childs eyes then the Child revived so you may read the History 2 King 4. 34. We read 1 Chron. 10. 14. That Saul enquired not of the Lord yet we read 1 Sam. 28. vers 6. That Saul enquired of the Lord. These places may thus be reconciled Though Saul did
spoken 2. Consider those that pray most for Jerusalem shall reape 2. Mot. Those that pray for Jerusalem shall reap the greatest comfort the greatest comfort in Jerusalem's establishment They that have ventured most in the flock shall receive most in the return In Jerusalem's peace we shall have peace Our fraught is imbark● in this ship As we have sowen so shall we reape We have had a wet seed time and have wept and fasted for the Church but we shall have a joyfull harvest Wherefore confirme the weak knees and strengthen the feeble hands But I proceed to a third use for Direction How must we give Vse 3. For Direction God no rest After what manner Must we thus present our supplications to the Throne of grace Amongst many I shall fix only on three properties of such a prayer as consists in giving God no rest according to the Text and they are Faith Fervency and perseverance 1. We must pray in faith The promise is that what we ask believing 1. We must pray in faith we shall receive No prayer unlesse coming from a Principle of faith can obtain acceptance Heb. 11. 6. Without faith it is impossible to please God And whatsoever is not of faith is sinne All prayers must be put up in faith believing in Christ and expecting from him only help and comfort In all our approaches to the Father let us come in the name of Christ believing and relying only on his merits Christ is the Bridegroom and the Church his spouse Christ is the Head the Church his body Faith is an Instrument of Union to unite the members unto the Head 2. We must pray with fervency as Jacob wrastled Hannah 2. We should pray with fervency poured out her Heart We must imitate the Importunate widdow Luk. 18. 1. Christ spake a Parable to this end that men ought alwaies to pray and not to faint The woman of Canaan who would have no nay And so Luk. 11. 8. Though he will not rise and give him because he is his friend yet because of his Importunity he will rise c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We must besiege Heaven and offer an holy Violence to the Throne of grace The violent take it by force and the effectuall fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much James 5. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an inward working or an inwrought prayer Those that were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 did great things 3. We must pray with perseverance We must pray and not faint 3. We must pray with perseverance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luk. 18. 1. The Word as Eustathius observes is derived 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 à cedendo from shrinking back as some cowardly Souldiers do in time of danger Our duty is to pray without ceasing 1 Thes 5. 19. Job makes it the mark of an Hypocrite that he will not pray alwaies he will not alwaies call upon God The fourth and last Use is a word of Consolation to praying Vse 4. For Consolation Christians Such as are much in Prayer who tugg hard at the Throne of grace and in joy frequent Communion with God in this Ordinance They use prayer not only as a duty commanded but as a meanes to obtaine a blessing Their Hearts are heated their affections warmed and prayer is their Priviledge as well as service For they have accesse unto the Throne of grace they cry Abba Father they pray from a spirit of Adoption they come to God as Children to a Father and such have strong hopes to speed The Lords secret is with the Righteous they are his jewells his peculiar treasure Now the Prayers of the righteous availe much for themselves and for the publick wherefore O Christians hold on praying lift up your Hearts with your Hands to God in the Heavens continue to be Jerusalems Advocates and what ever things you see coming as the Answers of Prayers those will be most highly valued Go on then pray for Jerusalem fast and weep for Jerusalem and in Gods good time you shall see Jerusalem a praise in the earth THE CRUCIFIED CHRISTIAN REPRESENTED From Gal 5. vers 24. And they that are Christ's have Crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts UPON a review of the precedent verses you will Sermon 5. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. Feb. 13. 1658. observe a double Catalogue one of the deeds of the flesh vers 19 20 21. Another of the fruits of the spirit vers 22. Concerning these the Apostle determines that against such there is no law i. e. 1. There is no law to Condemne them 2. There is no law to compell them Because they as freely obey God as if there were no law Their freedome obligeth more to obedience not in the least to disobedience Now the scope of my Text is to prove what was immediatly delivered before that there is no law against spirituall men and the Text gives a double reason one is because spirituall men are Christ's therefore there is no law against them the other is because that is crucified in spirituall men which the law condemneth namely the flesh with the affections and lusts therefore there is no law to condemne the spirituall man The words then in their d●ift and Latitude containe a description or a Character of true believers and the scope of the Words lyes obviously before us in these fundamentall Doctrines 1. That there are a peculiar people that are Christ's and have speciall Doct. 1 interest in him 2. All those that are Christ's and have speciall interest in him are Doct. 2 such as have crucified the flesh with it's affections and lusts These two points contain the full scope and substance of the words and what needs explication in the Text shall be given in upon the prosecution of the Doctrines as I go a long I resume the first That there are a p●culiar people c. This I Doct. 1 Method propounded shall endeavour to cleare from severall distinguishing names the nature grounds and benefits of those that are Christs and have interest in him and after this manner I shall handle the Doctrinall part of my Text which done I shall inquire how all this may concerne us as reducible unto point of practise this shall constitute the particular Use and Application of all 1. To prove my Assertion It 's plain if we inquire into Scripture 1. The Doctrine proved Testimony what speciall distinguishing names and Titles are appropriated unto those who are Christs and have speciall interest in him Sometimes Christ calls them his friends Joh. 15. 14 15. Sometimes he calls them disciples Joh. 13. 35. Children Matth. 17. 26. They are a chosen Generation a royall Priesthood a holy Nation a peculiar people 1 Pet. 2. 9. They are Kings and Priests unto God Rev. 1. 6. They are a peculiar treasure unto God Exod. 19. 5. A Crowne of Glory a Royall Diadem in the hand of God Isai 62. 3. The dearly beloved
depart from sin thoroughly impartially I have saith David refrained my feet from every evill way Do not chop and change Some exchange their sins having been young Prodigalls they now are become old covetous muck-wormes 4. Depart constantly Do not returne unto thy old courses That 's a doggish and swinish quality The Dog returneth to his own vomit and the Sow that is washed to her wallowing in the mire Then secondly for meanes to be used Q 2. What meanes must be used 1. Pray much that the Lord would subdue thy corruptions Who is a God saith the Prophet like unto thee who pardoneth iniquity and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of thy heritage 1. Pray Mica 7. 18 19. He will turne againe he will have compassion on us he will subdue our iniquities Pray not only for mercy to pardon but for grace to purge and renew thee This is a petition sutable to Gods will to pray for a new heart This God promiseth I will sprinkle cleane Ezek. 36. 25 26. water upon you and yee shall be cleane A new heart also will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you And I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and will give you an heart of flesh Vers 37. But he expects our prayers I will yet for this be enquired of by the house of Israel 2. Keep a strict watch over thine heart Above all keeping we 2. Keep a strict watch over thine heart had need keep our hearts The Devill lyeth in ambush wherefore we ought to be sober and vigilant The flesh inticeth as Deliah did Sampson and afterwards betrayes us to destruction The world is a Patterne of all wickednesse It offers pleasures honours promotion and riches We had need look to our hearts That 's the fort Royall in a Christian If that be conquered all 's lost 3. Resist the first motions and temptations to sinne Be they 3. Resist the first motion to sinne motus primo primi as the School-men speak yet they are polluted and ought to be resisted Take heed of the least sinne A little leake may sinke a ship A little pen-knife may destroy thee A little theife let in at a window may open the dores to a multitude of Robbers I remember what Hanno in Livy said of Hannibal * Parvus hic ignis incendium ingens exuscitat Liv. Dec. 2. Jer. 4. 14. This little sparke may cause a great flame The embers of an evill thought may set the whole man in combustion Wherefore let us look to our thoughts O Jerusalem wash thine heart from wickedn●sse that thou maist be saved how long shall vaine thoughts lodge within thee 4. Frequently and seriously exercise thy selfe in the examination 4. Examine thy heart Jer. 8. 6. of thy heart and life It 's an excellent duty to commune with our own hearts I hearkned and heard saith the Lord but they spake not a right no man repented of his wickednesse saying what have I done Now therefore thus saith the Lord of hoasts consider Hag. 1. 5. 5. Behold thy face in the glass of Gods Law your wayes 5. Behold thy face in the glasse of the Law of God how odious and abominable sinne is in God's accompt and how the law of God denounceth vengeance upon ungodly persons 6. Sixtly and lastly Make it thy businesse to mortify and crucify 6. Mortify thy Corruptions thy corruptions This is the grand employment here on earth to be fighting against sinne resisting to blood And in all we do we must act in the strength of Jesus Christ Help is laid upon him who is mighty He is the Redeemer who turneth away iniquity from Jacob. It 's the voice of Christ that saith Be of Good Comfort thy sinnes are forgiven thee Such a Word if the Lord Christ should speak to any one of us this day it would be the joyfullest word that ever we heard and the happiest day that ever our eyes beheld THE GRAND SIN AND MISCHIEFE OF INFIDELITY SET FORTH FROM Joh 8. vers 24. For if yee believe not that I am he yee shall dye in your sinnes THAT part of this Chapter which relates to my Sermon 8. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. Nov. 27. 1659. Text consists of severall Dialogues betweene Christ and the Jewes And they begin viz and conclude with the Chapter My Text is a good Reply to a bad Answer Christ foretold Vers 21. Whither I go yee cannot come Upon these Words the Pharisees fram'd a most malitious construction and suggested nothing lesse then selfe-murther Vers 22. Then said the Jewes will he kill himselfe because he saith whither I go yee cannot come Christ now rejoynes an Answer wherein he puts them in mind of that vast difference there was between them and him even as great as between earth and heaven Vers 23. And he said unto them yee are from beneath I am from above yee are of this world I am not of this world Christ came from the Father and was to go againe to the Father This grand mystery transcended the capacity of Scribes and Pharisees Their wisdome was earthly and their affections were earthly But this wisdome of the Gospell is heavenly and mysterious This only a spirituall man can understand This wisdome can none learne unlesse such in whom the spirit formeth it as * Nemo idoneus erit Christi Discip●lus nisi quem spiritus formaverit Hinc fit ut tam rarasit in mundo fides Calv. in loc Calvin observes 1 Cor. 2. 14 15. and afterward he draweth an Inference very pertinent Hence saith he it comes to passe that faith is so rare a thing because naturally all man-kind is estranged and averse from Christ They only believe who are effectually wrought upon by the spirit of God No marvaile then that the Pharisees past such a false judgment on Christ considering that they were carnall Christ was spirituall they were from the earth Christ from above Christ was above the world a conqueror of the world they were swallowed up with the love of the world Wherefore my Text ingeminates what was before delivered viz. That they should dye in their sinnes The difference lyes only in this there it is said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Singular number here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Plurall number So then the words containe a Grand sinne and a grand judgment 1. For the sinne It 's said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If yee believe not 1. A grand sinne This great sinne of unbeliefe is the meritorious Cause of the greatest of Judgments As if the Lord Christ should speak to this effect You may lay the blame at your own dores every one may cast the first stone upon himselfe considering that I have been at so great paines with you Although I have been a long time preaching the Deut. 18. 15. Gospell unto you yet you will not believe that I am the
do living without God in the world As one said either this is not Gospell holding up the Bible in his hands or you are not Christians But this is Gospell that if we believe not we shall dye in our sinnes therefore we that live in our unbeliefe are not Christians 4. Infidelity consists in this when we live by sense and not by 4. Infidelity is a living by sense faith we believe no more then what we see if our sense and our reason failes our faith failes as in the case of Thomas Joh. 20. 27. But we ought to live by faith and not by sense Many will believe nothing but what they can give a reason for though the waies of God are most reasonable and religion is a reasonable 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 12. 1. profession and a reasonable service is commanded yet it s above reason and transcendeth the capacity of a naturall man That person must have his senses exercised and a spirituall eye that will discerne the misteries of God see how the Apostle describes faith Heb. 11. 1. To be the substance of things not seen And the Patriarches saw the promises a farre off Heb. 11. 13. What then though sense faile and reason is nonplussed yet the promises of God never faile This sometimes is the fault of Gods own children under desertions who conclude awry and say they have no faith because they want feeling whereas feeling is an after thing Eph. 1. 13. And faith may be in the Root alive though the fruit appeare not presently to the sense There is truth of faith where there may be want of sense and apprehension In so much as faith and doubting may goe togeather as appeares Mark 9. 24. Lord I believe help my unbeliefe This living by sense more then faith is a great peice of Infidelity hence it came to passe that Abraham and Isaac both denied their wifes in them there was sense and fear joyned togeather Sarah laughed at the promise there was sense as appeares by her answer Ge. 18. 12. Sense acted in David and not faith when he said in his heart that he should one day perish by the hand of Saul 1 Sam. 27. 1. Wherefore he betook himselfe immediatly unto the Philistines 1 Sam. 27. 1 2. Here 's the Triall Sense saith no Faith saith yea Sense saith its impossible Faith saith all things are possible to the believer Sense saith its incredible and unreasonable Faith saith I believe though incredible and unreasonable Sense saith and reason pleads we can dispute and argue no longer Faith saith leave of disputing and learne to believe Thus did Abraham and he acted upon a principle of faith Ro. 4. 19 20. 5. Infidelity consists in the Non-application of promises upon 5. Infidelity consi●ts in the Non application of promises Gal. 2. 20. the termes of the Gospell for to belive Christ is a Saviour and not my Saviour what comfort can I take in it To believe Christ dyed for sinners and to exclude my selfe from any benefit by his death this is a dreadfull condition Paul applied Christ to himselfe Gal. 2. 20. Who loved me and gave himselfe for me And so did Thomas my Lord and my God Now heares a great difference between presumptuous sinners and poore weak believers Presumptuous sinners are too hasty to apply too much and poore weak Christians are too backward and apply too little Every presumptuous sinner would be blessed and happy and will say Christ dyed for him but he is a stranger and grossely ignorant who they are to whom appertaines blessednesse It 's appropriated Matth. 5. to the poore in spirit to the pure in heart to those that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse but poore weak believers are afraid to lay hold on promises and question their interest in them Now to speak to weak Christians whose faith is true though but little let them know that their little faith is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like pretious 2 Pet. 1. 1. faith they would faine have more faith they pray for more and they strive for more it 's their griefe and cause of heavinesse that they have no more do you not then whatever you are stand in your own light O therefore tast and see that God is good stay upon his promises and apply your selves unto Christ the poorer you are in your own spirit and the more sensible of your unworthinesse the more fit you are to receive Jesus Christ and if you dare not apply Christs promises unto you be sure that you apply your selves unto Christ and his promises relye stay and leane upon them let them not goe Faith is both a hand and an eye you must lay hold on Christ and look unto him as they did on the brazen Serpent in the wildernesse This faith acts Q. O but I am afraid I tremble I dare not lay hold on Christ I dare not make this application to my selfe Ans To answer hereunto 1. Know a Paralitick trembling hand may receive a pretious pearle 2. Christ invites thirsty hungry poore naked indigent lost creatures such as are undone in themselves to come unto him Art thou sensible of thy poverty nakednesse undone condition thou art invited why then dost thou not make hast unto Jesus Christ 3. Those that come are accepted such I mean who come in faith so Christ declares Joh. 6. 35 37. And the not coming unto Christ damnes multitudes of soules Joh. 5. 40. But I proceed to the second head propounded the proofe of 2. Vnbeliefe hath severall Aggravations the doctrine from Scripture that this sinne of unbeliefe is such a Grand-damning sinne and this will evidently appeare from those severall Aggravations mentioned in the Word of God 1. Unbeliefe maketh the Word of God unprofitable unto us Heb. 4. 2. The word profited not because not mixt with faith We thrive not under Ordinances because of unbeliefe If in our estates we find out that there 's some wastfull licentious course of living that hinders us from thriving and causeth us to grow behinde hand we should carefully avoide that Infidelity hinders our souls from thriving hence comes a leannesse in our soules notwithstanding a fatnesse of Ordinances and great barrennesse and unfruitfulnesse because we believe not the word 2. This sinne causeth Apostacy Heb. 3. 12. Psal 78. 57. 3. It scapes not unpunished in Gods own Children Luk. 1. 20. Zachary was struck with dumbnesse for not believing the Angell 4. Unbelievers are joyned with the most abominable sinners Rev. 21. 8. 5. The Scripture pronounceth damnation to be the portion of unbelievers in the future tense it s said Mark 16. 16. and Joh. 3. 36. He that believeth not shall be damned but in the present tense Joh. 3. 18. They are as sure to be damned as though the were already in hell It 's said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which hath the signification of the present tense as if the unbeliever were actually damned or in a damnable condition 6.
only yet by a Synecdoche totius comprehends the whole man so that the understanding will affections and heart all must be renewed changed and regenerated The reason which judicious Mr Calvin gives is very apposite Calv. in loc to our purpose Quandoquidem mente corde alieni sumus à Dei Justitiâ Estius gives a good Note Studeto quotidianae renovationis Estius in loc mentis vestrae per mortificationem malorum affectum cupiditatum To him I l'e only adde the exposition of Oecumenius Oecumenius in loc on the place Q●ia homo cum quispiam est non potest non peccare ideo semper renova te ipsum inquit per poenitentiam The result of all is this that in transformation and renovation no new substance is added to the regenerate man but only new spirituall Qualities are infused into him The Faculties of heart and life are all put into a new frame I acquiesce in the Apostles exposition being instar omnium 1 Thes 5. 23. And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly and I pray God your whole spirit and soule and body be preserved blamelesse unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ 3. I proceed in the third place to make good the proofe of the 3. The Doctrine prooved Doctrine That every really converted person is transformed and changed in the renovation of his mind This I shall endeavour to proove by Scripture and Reason 1. For Scripture proofe the Apostles Exhortation is Eph. 4. 23. 1. Prooved by Scripture And be renewed in the spirit of your mind The same Apostle professeth 2 Cor. 4. 16. Though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day This is the Laver of Regeneration mentioned Tit. 2. 5. It is the washing of the Ethiopian and the cleansing of the Leopards spots Of this the Apostle James speaks Jam. 4. 8. Cleanse your hands yee sinners and purify your hearts yee double minded And what their happy change is the Apostle mentions 1 Cor. 6. 11. And such were some of you But yee are washed but yee are sanctified but yee are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the spirit of our God 2. Prooved confirmed by Scripture Reas 1. This change is wrought only by the Power of God 2. For fuller Proofe and Confirmation by Evidence of Reason Amongst others some Reasons may be these Especially 1. Every Converted person is changed and renewed in his mind by vertue of the power and irresistable operation of the spirit of God which bloweth where and when it listeth and when it worketh none can hinder It was Gods spirit that breathed upon those dry bones mentioned by the Prophet Ezekiel chap. 37. That had sinewes flesh and life given them So in our Regeneration it 's Gods spirit that breatheth life into us and quickeneth us Who were dead in trespasses and sinnes So saith the Apostle You hath he quickned who were dead in trespasses and sinnes And Rom. 8. 13. Eph. 1. 2. If yee live after the flesh yee shall dye but if yee through the spirit do mortify the deeds of the body yee shall live This the Apostle further expresseth 1 Cor. 6. 11. And such were some of you but yee are washed but yee are sanctified but yee are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the spirit of our God 2. The Word of God is an Instrumentall meanes to work Reas 2. The Word is an Instrumentall means of Renovation this Change It 's an immortall seed 1 Pet. 1. 18. It 's the arme of the Lord Isai 53. 1. The power of God unto Salvation Rom. 1. 16. 3. Without this Renovation and change there can be no Salvation For whoever hath Interest in Christ is a new Creature 2 Cor. 5. 17. Whoever comes to Heaven must be borne againe R. 3. Without Renovation there can be no Salvation Joh. 3. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. He must be borne from above whoever is saved hath put off the old Adam and put on the new he is cut off the old stock i. e. the old Adam and implanted in the new Adam But before I come to Application I l'e lay down a few Cautions 1. We must know that every by Nature is blind and ignorant Caut. 1. We must know that every man is blind by nature of God Eph. 4. 8. Having the understanding darkened being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them because of the blindnesse of their heart Even the mind the noblest part is depraved with ignorance vanity unbeliefe doubtings and errours 1 Cor. 2. 14. The naturall man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned Col. 1. 21. And you that were sometimes alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked workes yet now hath he reconciled The state of unregeneracy Eph. 5. 8. is a state of darknesse even darknesse in the abstract Cau. 2. This work of Illumination is not attained by mans Industry 2. That this great work of Illumination the opening of the eyes is not attained by the studies and endeavours of mans industry This is the work of the great God to bring a soule from darknesse to light from the power of Satan unto God Phil. 2. 13. For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure Caut. 3. The best of believers are but sanctified and renewed in part 3. The best of Believers are but sanctified and renewed in part still there is some blindnesse some ignorance in the best This imperfection Paul himselfe although the chiefest of the Apostles acknowledgeth Phil. 3. 12. Not as though I had already attained either were already perfect but I follow after if I may apprehend that for which I also am apprehended of Christ Jesus 1 Cor. 13. 9. For we know in part and we prophecy in part These Cautions premised I proceed to particular Application of all For Application I shall fix on foure Uses Applicat 1. For Information 2. For Examination 3. For Exhortation And 4. For Consolation 1. For Information Be informed of the miserable condition Vse 1. For Information of all unconverted Persons and they are such as are not transformed in the Renovation of their mind Some there are that lye in darknesse even are darknesse it selfe as Eph. 5. 8. For yee were sometimes darknesse but now are yee light in the Lord walk as children of light These neither perceive nor receive the things of God 1 Cor. 2. 14. The naturall man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned Now let none think that Ignorance will excuse them The wise man tells us without knowledge the heart is not good Others there are who
Bernards counsell to Eugenius may bee a good motto for the Councellour at Law Frustratorias vexatorias praecide dilationes By unnecessarie delayes and tedious suites many are served by Lawyers as the poore woman mentioned in the Gospel was served by Physitians They left her uncured of her disease and poverty Mark 5. 26. to boote I have read of a Chancellour of England who in a fore-noone dispatch't all the causes brought before him and hee askt whether there were any other causes and they answered no. I wish Law suits especially Chancery suits were ended with more expedition lest by reason of tedious waiting the remedy oft-times proves worse than the disease But secondly Justice must notwithstanding be executed deliberately Rule 2. Justice must be executed deliberately It must not be delayed on the one side nor rashly determined on the other side It must be performed with mature advice and deliberation There 's Pondus Causae Pondus Legis to be taken in to ferious consideration Justitia licet sit coeca exequendo tamen ●culata dijudicando A Judge must not be Vir Ten●dius as Lycophron mentions nor must his instrument of Justice be Tenedia bipennis making as our Proverbe is more haste then good speed Nulla unquam de morte hominis cunctatio longa If there be an Acre of ground an Oxe or an Horse in question Oh! what adoe is there to get an ablesufficient Jury And surely the life of a man is more precious Can Ignoramusses serve for life and death You that are concerned herein seek for sufficient men men of conscience and understanding take not up men that can neither write nor read who must take all upon trust Judgement on life and death is a serious worke and requires prudence and deliberation Joh. 7. 51. Doth our Law judge any man before it heare him and know what he doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 goes before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 your Commission is of Oy●r and Terminer First you are to heare before you determine Job searched out the cause which he knew not Job 26. 19. There must be a serious inquisition after the truth The greatest paines is little enough for the investigation of the truth and the right administration of Justice Justice must be executed impartially Levi must know neither Rule 3. Justice must be executed impartially father nor mother Amicus Plato amicus Socrates sed magis amica Veritas A Judge he mustnot pervert Justice to pleasure my Lord or my Lady mine antient friend and acquaintance Threats flatteries gold or silver may not turne him one jot out of the Bias of Justice It 's said of Fabricius That the Sun might sooner be turned out of it's course then he out of the course of Justice Neither doth a just Judge favour a poore man in an unrighteous cause Exod. 23. 3. Neither shalt thou countenance a poore man in his cause He dares not judge for popular applause to get himselfe a name to be the poore mans Advocate and so swerve from the rules of Justice A just Judge will frequently and seriously catechise his owne conscience and aske this question how shall I answer this great Iudgement before the great Judge of heaven and earth How shall I answer that charge Levit. 19. 15. Yee shall do no unrighteousnesse in judgement thou shalt not respect the person of the poore nor honour the person of the mighty but in righteousnesse shalt thou judge thy neighbour It was a gallant speech of Worthy Mr Pym a renowned and true hearted Patriot of his Countrey See Mr Marshals Sermon at his sunerall Such a one indeed is my good Friend but I will never pay my private d●bts out of the publicke stocke Iustice must be executed according to truth Truth is of such an Rule 4. Justice must be executed according to truth invaluable price as we must buy it at any rate Prov. 22. 23. There 's an heavy charge Is 59. 4. None calleth for justice nor any pleadeth for truth they trust in vanity and speake lies they conceive mischiefe and bring forth Iniquity v. 14. And judgement is turned away backward and justice standeth a farre off for truth is fallen in the street and equity cannot enter You call your Iury good men and true I heartily wish they were all so and the witnesses must be men of truth The ninth Commandement forbids false-witnesse-bearing False witnesse was so abominable among the purblind Heathen that the Law of the 12. Tables ordered That if any bore false witnesse he should See Beards Theater of God's Judgments be tumbled downe the Tarpeian rocke Many fearsull judgements have overtaken perjured persons They are upon record in diverse writers and others are sufficiently knowne by experimentall Knowledge even in our dayes Be sure you that give evidence that you keepe your oath to sweare the truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth Iustice must be executed regularly Neither passion nor prejudice Rule 5. Justice must be executed regularly nor friendship nor gifts may rule nor any unknowne arbitrary Law There 's a Buoy in maritime Lawes to give warning of an Anchour There 's a Pole-starre to direct the Pilot. And the Law of God and of the Land in subordination thereunto must rule The Law of God is the Archetypum All other Lawes are but Transcripts An able Iudge is well-skill'd in the Law of God he hath a copy of it before him So he is charged Josh 1. 7. Onely be thou strong and very couragious that thou mayest observe to doe according to all the Law which Moses my servant commanded thee turne not from it to the right hand or to the left that thou mayest prosper wheresoever thou go●st And he 's well skill'd in the Lawes of the Land he needs not the Tutoring of a Clerke he feares no contradiction of By-standers to say This is against Law We read Esth 1. 15. What shall we doe unto the Queene Vasti according to Law because she hath not performed the commandement of the King Ahasuerus by the Chamberlaines So that hence it is evident that the Law is the rule of Iudicature Both sides are allowed a faire hearing None may be praejudged and condemned without hearing Thus many laid the charge as a terrible Tyranny on Richard the 2d who first hang'd men and afterwards proceeded in a tryall against them Qui statuit aliquid parte inaudita altera aequum licet statuerit haud aequus fierit Iudgment is to bee given secundum allegata probata And this is a regular administration of justice 6ly and lastly Iustice must be executed compassionately Rule 6. Justice must be executed compassionately Iudges were usually Fathers and so more likely to shew compassion A Iudges Motto is Peccata interficio hominem amplector King Edward the sixth wept when hee gave his consent to put Joane Butcher to death though