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A87095 The first general epistle of St. John the Apostle, unfolded & applied. The second part, in thirty and seven lectures on the second chapter, from the third to the last verse. Delivered in St. Dionys. Back-Church, by Nath: Hardy minister of the gospel, and preacher to that parish.; First general epistle of St. John the Apostle. Part 2. Hardy, Nathaniel, 1618-1670. 1659 (1659) Wing H723; Thomason E981_1; ESTC R207731 535,986 795

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Lord is upon me because the Lord hath annoynted me to wit with his Spirit more plainly the Apostle Peter God annoynted Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and St. Paul sufficiently intimateth it when hee saith concerning Christians God hath annoynted and sealed us and given us the earnest of his Spirit in our hearts the Spirit being as the earnest so the seal and the oyntment and accordingly the generality of Expositors doe here interpret the Spirit of God with his gifts and graces to be this Unction St. Austine among many others is expresse Unctio spiritualis ipse spiritus sanctus the Spirit of God is the spiritual unction And accordingly this is one of the titles which are given to the Holy Ghost in that Divine Hymn The Fountain and the lively Spring of joy celestial The Fire so bright the Love so clear and Unction spiritual That the fragrancy of this Metaphor may the better appear give me leave to break the Box and let you see how fitly it is applicable to the blessed Spirit to this end it will not be amisse to confider the Properties and the Uses of oyl and oyntment 1 There are three eminent properties of oyl which fully agree to the Holy Ghost Purity Permanency and Excellency 1 Oyl is of such a nature as that it will hardly mingle with other Liquors and whatsoever liquor you mixe it with it still is uppermost In this a fit embleme of the Spirit especially in respect of its sanctifying grace which will not mixe it self with any sin and where-ever it is keepeth corruption under Indeed wine and water will easily incorporate but oyl will not natural and acquired habits may consist with the predominancy of some lust and therefore it is that acutenesse of wit strength of memory depth of judgement readinesse of elocution skill in Arts and Sciences and such like excellencies are to be found in wicked men but those Spiritual infused habits of grace will not admit the dominion of any sin so that though sin still remain yet it doth not cannot rule in the regenerate 2 Oyl is of a lasting durance it is not as the water evaporated by the scorching heat or congealed by the freezing cold whereby is shadowed the perpetuity of the Spirits renewing grace notwithstanding the heat of persecution and the cold of temptation The hypocrites fruit withereth when the Sun scorcheth like the standing Pool he is dry in the heat of Summer his courage faileth grace decayeth whereas the true Christian retaineth his integrity in the worst adversity when the Northern wind of Diabolical temptation bloweth upon an Hypocrite his zeal cooleth his grace freezeth whereas sanctifying grace in the heart of the regenerate keepeth its vertue 3 Oyl is of great worth it is reckoned up as one of those choise blessings which God confer'd upon Israel I gave her Corn and Wine and Oyl and multiplied her silver and gold it was one of the precious things in Hezekiahs Treasury which he shewed to the King of Babylons messenger The Silver the Gold the Spices and the precious Oyntment where it is observable that besides it is numbred among the precious things it hath also the Epithite of precious in particular annexed to it as also by Salomon where he saith A good name is better than precious oyntment But surely as there the Wise man preferres a good name so much more is the Spirit and his grace to be preferred before it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Greek Father In very deed the holy Spirit is a precious thing this Oyl is invaluable this Jewel incomparable and if the Soul which dwelleth in our bodies be more worth than an whole world this Spirit which dwelleth in our souls must needs be of an infinite and transcendent value 2 Besides these properties there is a double use of oyl to wit for eating and annointing and the operation of oyl in both these uses aptly sets forth the Spirits efficacy 1 Oyle being eaten is sweet to the palate and therefore manna for its pleasant taste is compared to it wholesome and nourishing to the body and therefore joyned with fine flour and honey it was by meal and oyle that the widow was preserved alive in famine besides it helpeth digestion of other meats and therefore it is eaten with raw herbs and such like cool things nay more than so though a man have swallowed poyson being taken into the stomack it will expell it and preserve the body from death All which are true of the Spirits graces by which wee are enabled to digest the word of God not only its promises but threatnings the poyson of sin is expelled out of the heart so far as it shall not hurt us our spiritual taste is delighted yea our soul is nourished to eternal life 2 But I must remember the Word in my text is unction and therefore it is most suitable to consider Oyl as it is of use in annointing and thus the Parallel will hold in several respects some whereof are more general and others more special both very significant to our present purpose 1 The more general uses of annointing with Oyle are these six 1 Annointing wounds with Oyle healeth them upon which account the Samaritan poured in as wine for cleansing so Oyle for healing the wounded man nothing more frequently used by Apothecaries and Chirurgions than oyles and oyntments This is the Spirits efficacy who is therefore called the comforter viz. against all those disquietments which unsettle the minde and wound the Conscience The Prophet Isaiah speaking in the person of Christ saith The Spirit of the Lord was upon him to heal the broken-hearted indeed in regard of the wicked hee is a reprover to wound but in regard of the weak hee is a comforter to heal 2 Annointing tumours with Oyle softeneth them to this the Prophet alludeth where speaking of the diseases of Israels Common-wealth hee saith They have not been mollified with oyntment This is the Spirits operation to soften the obdurate and proud sinner and therefore when Almighty God promiseth to take away the stony-heart and give an heart of flesh he presently addeth I will put my Spirit within you 3 Annointing the joynts with oile suppleth them whereby they are nimble and active for which cause it is that Runners and Wrastlers were used to annoint themselves before hand Thus doth the Spirit by his graces strengthen us with all might to run the way of Gods Commandements and to wrastle with our Corruptions It is the prayer of David Establish mee with thy free Spirit whom hee calls by that Epithite no doubt for this reason because it is the Spirits work to set us free from the setters of sin Upon the same account hee is called by the Prophet the Spirit of strength and by the Apostle the Spirit of Life in as much as hee strengthens us in our Christian race and quickens us to spiritual
when that which is affirmed or denyed is evidently contrary to truth and the other when the thing so asserted is injurious and pernicious to them that beleeve it And truely both these may justly bee charged on the Lyars in the Text for they denyed that which was in it self manifest yea which they themselves had been convinced of and that which they denied tended to no lesse than the utter subversion of the Christian faith and the destruction of those who adhered to it and therfore no wonder if St. John by way of question accuse the Hereticks in his time of Lying who is a Lyar c. That which I shall briefly observe from both these titles is the zeal of this holy Apostle in reproving these Hereticks Lyars are execrabile hominum genus a most execrable sort of men hated and abhorred of all nor is a Lyar more odious among all men than an Antichrist is among all Christians so that our Apostle could not well have branded them with names more odious than these The truth is two sorts of sinners are severely to bee rebuked Hypocrites and Hereticks an example of the former wee have from Christ himself who reprehending the Hypocritical Pharisees calls them fools and Vipers and of the latter in St. John who gain-saying the Heretical Teachers of his time calls them Antichrists and Lyars Indeed in one of those Titles is a latent reason of his bitternesse against them namely because they were against Christ Had they been onely his Antagonists no doubt hee would have been milde and gentle but his masters honour was concerned in the quarrel no wonder if hee bee so zealous Moses the meekest man upon earth in his own concernments is so inraged against the Israelites for their Idolatry that hee breaketh the Tables of the Law The Historian observeth of Caesars souldiers that they pursued their Generals Engagements with vigour whilest they were cool and temperate in their own concernments and surely though towards our own Adversaries wee must show meeknesse yet when they are not onely ours but Christs enemies it becomes us to testify our love to Christ by our Indignation against them It was an excellent saying of Guevara in an Epistle to the Emperour Charls the fifth Christianus nullâ re magis dignosci potest quam si De● factas contumelias et blasphemias severissime ulciscatur suas obliviscatur there is no better Character of a right Christian than to forget the injuries done to himself but to be angry at the blasphemies against God and Christ And which serveth so much the more to justify our Apostles severity in reproving those false Teachers is that they were not obliquely but directly opposers of Christ they were such who did not onely indeavour to lop off the branches of Christianity but to pluck it up by the roots to deface the building of Religion but to destroy the foundation as there is a difference in sins so in errours all diseases are not alike malignant nor all errours equally pestiferous every Heterodox opinion is not a sufficient warrant to brand a man with these Appellations of Lyar and Antichrist but when they were so heretical as to deny Jesus to bee the Christ no marvail if this holy Apostle not out of a rash bitternesse but a well-grounded zeal use these harsh invectives It is a frame of spirit which wee finde in other servants of God as well as S. John The Apostle Paul having to do with Elimas spares him not but calls him a Childe of the Devil an enemy of all righteousnesse and writing to the Philippians concerning heretical teachers calleth them the concision and compareth them to dogs no lesse Satyrical was that of Polycarpus to Marcian Agnosco te primogenitum diaboli I know thee to bee the Devils first-born Let the same spirit bee in us in oppugning the Authors and Abetters of damnable heresies The visible descending of the Holy Ghost upon the Apostles was in fiery tongues such tempers had they yea all their successors the Bishops and Pastors of the Church ought to have tongues set on fire from heaven which may flame forth in vehement increpations as of notorious sinners so of venomous hereticks 2 From the Appellations proceed wee to the Accusations I. The first whereof we find to be denying that Jesus is the Christ in which words there is A Truth implicitely asserted by the Apostle Jesus is the Christ An heresy explicitely charged on the false Teachers namely the denial of this truth he that denyeth that Jesus is the Christ. 1 When our Apostle saith who is a Lyar but hee that denyeth what doth hee but tacitely assirm this to bee a truth That Jesus is the Christ and because it is a fundamental truth upon which the whole Fabrick of Christian Religion standeth give mee leave a while to insist upon it not as questioning but for the further streng thening your assent to it so much the rather because of the multitude of Jews which are at this time crept in among us whom though I have little hope to convince yet I would strive to prevent in those secret indeav●rs which probably they use to sedu●e Christians from the faith of Christ That there was such a man as Jesus of Nazareth born and living among the Jews is an history so authentical that there will bee no need of spending time about the proof of it It is acknowledged by the Jews themselves witnesse Josephus in his Jewish Antiquities where he maketh an honourable mention of him in these words At that time was Jesus a wise man if it be lawful to call him man c. It is confessed by Pagans Suetonius in the life of Claudius speaketh of him by the name of Chrestus Tacitus and Pliny the younger acknowledged him by the name Christus and surely that which not onely his followers but his enemies confess may well be taken for granted The only difficulty is to make it appear that this Jesus that then lived is the Christ that is the person whom Moses and the Prophets foretold to bee the Messiah To this end the onely thing to bee done is an inquiry into the Praedictions concerning the Messiah which if they bee found verified in this Jesus and no other person can bee assigned in whom they are verified it will bee clearly manifest that Jesus is the Christ This way of arguing I so much the rather make choice of because it is that to which Christ himself directs us when he bids the Jews to search the Scriptures that is the Old Testament which then was the only written word upon this account for they are they that testify of me therby putting the controversy to this issue that if he were not the person of whom the scripture did testify as the Messiah let him be accounted an Impostor and Deceiver Accordingly it is that his Apostles in their discourses concerning him still have recourse to the Prophetical writings Thus St.
which were for sometime affixed to the gates of the Temple for the people to read and afterward taken down and laid in the treasury and it is expresly asserted concerning God himself that after he had given the Law speaking the ten words with his own lips he wrote them with his own fingers in two tables of stone If you shall inquire a reason why God would have his word not only spoken but written and his Apostles not only Nephtalies to give goodly words but Zebulons to handle the pen and not only Orators but Secretaries I answer upon a threefold ground drawn from themselves their people and the truth they had delivered 1. In regard of themselves Inasmuch as writing was a supply of their absence The Mother cannot be alwaies present with the Babe to suckle it with the dug and therefore she provideth a sucking bottle to refresh it in her absence thus the Apostles because they could not be in many places at once and consequently not alwaies present with their scattered flock vouchsafed to write to them that their wrightings might be instead of vocall instructions 2. In regard of the people Since these writings were an excellent means both of strengthning their memories and confirming their faith 1. The writing did bring to the peoples remembrance what the Apostles had formerly taught them This St Peter asserteth as the end of his writing to stir up the pure minds of the people by way of remembrance it being a great prop to memorie when those truths which have been sounded in the eare are afterwards presented to the eye whilst what was lost to the one is restooed to the o●her and so truth secured to the memory 2. These writeings were no small confirmation of the people in the faith by speaking the Apostles did as it were lay the foundation and by writeing they reared the Fabrick by Preaching they planted and by writeing watered Finally by speaking they converted Heathens to and by writeing they corroborated the Christians in the faith 3. Once more In regard of the truths themselves that they might hereby be perpetuated to posterity To this purpose Rivet asserteth the writings of Gods Word as not only profitable but necessary Labili memoriae posterorum successioni as to help the weakness of memory so to transmit revelations to after ages Aelian reporteth of certain frogs which taking a kind of reed into their mouths save themselves from the water serpents that would devoure them thus the holy Apostles by taking a Pen into their hands have preserved those pretious truths which the Devill indeavoureth to swallow up By which it appears that the sacred writings though they were directed to them who then lived yet they are intended for us St Paul saith of the writings of the Old Testament That the things which were written aforetime were written for our learning the like may we say of the writings both of the New and Old Testament they are for our use and instruction And surely this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cals for a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reading is the end of writing and since the Apostles took the pains to write it is but just we should bestow the time to read It was a sad complaint of God himself against Israel I have written to them the great things of my Law and they have accounted them as a strange thing Oh that the like accusation might not be charged by Christ upon us I have written to them the great things of my Gospell but they have counted them as a strange thing and are strangers to them How sad is it to think that whereas Davids blessed man meditateth on Gods Law day and night with many of us daies and nights nay weeks and moneths pass away without reading and meditating on the sacred writings Oh let us wip● of the dust of contempt from the cover of our Bibles and recall them from the land of forgetfulness whither our neglect hath banished them 2. It would yet further be taken notice of that here is not only a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I write in the thirteenth but an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have written in the fourteenth Verse the sense whereof is fitly rendred by Estius to be Scripsi iterumque scribo I have written and again I write Our Apostle doth not only adde precept to precept but line to line concerning the same precept and though he had written just before yet he writeth again nor are we to imagine it was through want of matter but abundance of zeal that our Apostle striketh a second time upon the same string That workman who would fasten the naile in the wall must drive it home to the head by repeated blows many times as second thoughts are better so s●ond admonitions are stronger and have a more prevailing influence some indeed awake at the first call but the most have need of a second nay a third Calvin too rashly judgeth these repetitions in the fourteenth Verse to be superfluous yet I would to God they were but St John knew it otherwise and we cannot but observe it in our own experience there is a great necessity and therefore just reason that we should write and speak the same lesson once and again and surely if it concerneth us to write it behoveth you to read the same writings again and again the one must not be grievous to us nor the other tedious for you some things need to be read once and again that we may understand them or if reading once we understand let us read again that we may remember and if we understand and remember let us read again that we may finde our affections inlivened 2. Having viewed the Absolute pass we on to the Relative consideration of this Act and that in reference 1. To the Agent That which here this holy Apostle taketh to himself is onely the writing not the enditing he was the Scribe but the Spirit of God dictated or if you will he was the Pen but the Spirit the hand that guided it It is St Peters generall assertion The holy men of God spake as being moved by the holy Ghost And St Paul is no less express when he saith All Scripture is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of divine inspiration the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inspiring is Gods part and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 writing was the Apostles Indeed we finde two expressions which seem directly opposite one to the other whenas in the tenth Verse of the seaventh Chapter of the Epistle to the Corinthians the Apostle saith I command you not I but the Lord and in the twelfth Verse speake I not the Lord. But it will be easily salved if we consider that St Paul refers to the Doctrine which the Lord Christ delivered himself concerning divorces wherein though there is a generall prohibition except in case of fornication yet there is nothing in particular concerning the case of
severals are will best appear in the distinct handling of them The number you see is threefold and before I go further I shall a while d●seant upon them joyntly If you cast your eyes upon the fifteenth Verse of the third Chapter of St James you shall finde a tripartite division of worldly wisdome into earthly sensuall and devillish to which me thinketh very fitly corresponds this division of worldly love the lust of the flesh being sensuall the lust of the eyes earthly and the pride of life devillish We read in the foregoing Verses of three ages of men to whom our Apostle wrote namely Children young Men and Fathers and each of these lusts is especially incident to each of these ages Men in the begining of their daies are most prone to the lust of the flesh in the progress of their age to the pride of life and in their old age to the covetous lust of the eyes In the close of the fourteenth Verse of this Chapter St John speaketh of overcoming the wicked one that is the Devill and if you would know what are the chief temptations with which he doth assault and which if we repell we overcome him they are here presented to us The fruit with which he tempted our first Parents in the Garden was good for food that was a lust of the flesh pleasant to the sight and so came in the lust of the eyes and to be desired to make one wise and that was the pride of life After foure thousand years experience the Devill could not finde out better weapons and therefore with these he sets upon the second Adam in the wilderness tempting him to the lust of the flesh when he would have him turn the stones into bread to satisfie his hunger to the lust of the eyes saith St Austin when he bid him cast himself down out of curiosity say others and more probably with the leave of that reverend Father when he shewed him all the Kingdomes and glory of the world and to the pride of life when he perswaded him to cast himself down which was no doubt for that end to lift him up with arrogant presumption With these temptations it is that he doth still assault the Children of men so that I may not unfitly compare them to Solomons threefold cord by which he draws men to iniquity to the fleshooke with three teeth by which the Priests servant robd the Lords Sacrifice to Hippomenes three golden Apples by which he indeavoured to hinder Attalantas race to Jobs three darts by which he wounded Absalon to the heart to the Caldeans three troops with St Bernard by which they plundered Job of his goods or to St Johns three unclean spirits crawling upon and defiling us It is Christs call to his Spouse Come with me from Lebanon looke from the top of Amana from the top of Shenir and Hermon from the Lions dens from the mountains of the Leopards Ghislerius understandeth by these three mountains these three lusts the pride of life by the mountain of Lebanon which is exceeding high and upon which grow the tall Caedars by the top of Amana from whence they might see a great way the lust of the eyes by the top of Hermon a fruitfull hill the lust of the flesh and these are the mountains on which wicked men range like Leopards and the dens of those Lions the Devils These are those lusts which oppose the three grand designs of our life our own salvation others good and Gods glory Whilest the lust of the flesh warreth against our soul the lust of the eyes maketh us uncharitable to others and the pride of life robs God of his glory Correspondent to these three great sins it seems not improbable that God hath appointed those three sore judgments The Famine as a punishment of the lust of the flesh the Plague which causeth botches and sores of the lust of the eyes and the Sword which bringeth Nations low of the pride of life As Armour against these three darts the Papists superstitiously use a threefold annoynting in Baptism to wit of the loyns the breast and the head but which is far better the grace of God teacheth to live soberly in opposition to the lust of the flesh justly in opposition to the lust of the eyes and godly which is a walking humbly with God in opposition to the pride of life And which is best of all our blessed Saviour prescribes three duties which by the Schools are made the three parts of satisfaction Fasting as a remedy of the lust of the flesh Almes as an eye salve for the lust for the eyes and Prayer as an antidote against the pride of life To draw yet nearer These three are all that is in the world they are the worlds cursed trinity according to that of the Poet Ambitiosus honos opes foeda valuptas Haec tria pro trino numine mundus habet Which wicked men adore and worship as deities in which regard Lapide opposeth them to the three persons in the blessed Trinity The lust of the eyes to the Father who is liberall communicating his essence to the Son and the Spirit the lust of the flesh to the Son whose generation is spirituall and eternall the pride of life to the holy Ghost who is the Spirit of humility That golden Calfe which being made was set up and worshiped by the Israelites in the Wilderness is not unfitly made use of to represent these the Calfe which is a wanton Creature an emblem of the lust of flesh the Gold of the Calf refering to the lust of the eyes and the exalting it to the pride of life Oh how do the most of men fall down before this golden Calf which the world erecteth If you please you may conceive the world as making a Feast to entertaine her Lovers and here are the three courses which she provideth for them the first for food the lust of the flesh the second for sight the lust of the eyes the third for state the pride of life or as entertaining them with a musicall consort which is made up of three parts the Base the lust of the flesh the Tenor the lust of the eyes and the Treble the pride of life Once more you may very well call these three lusts the elements of the sensuall world the lust of the flesh being as the fire in regard of its burning violence the lust of the eyes as the earth because about things which the earth affoards and the pride of life as the ayre or winds which pufs or swels men up Not to inlarge further The world is here represented to us as an Hydea with three heads or like Cerberus that three headed Dog which the Poets faine to be the Porter of Hell Worldly love is here set forth as a tree spreading it self into three main boughs whence sprout forth the bitter fruit of all s●ns or as a Mother bringing forth three
I have nourished and brought up children and they have rebelled against me They that have been baptized in her Font educated by her Pastors and sucked what knowledge and grace they have if yet they may be said to have any from her breasts have now forsaken her yea are risen up against her Viper-like eating out her bowels Oh what sad breaches have been made in the Doctrine and Disciplins of the Church by those wilde beasts Socinians Familists Anabaptists Quakers and such like who being made to goe out of the field have trampled down the hedge endeavouring to lay all waste And now I would to God that all Sectaries would at length sadly consider these two things how causelesse yea how cursed this their departure from the Church of England is 1 How causelesse their going out is were easie to make appear by an induction of the several particulars which are alledged as pretences such as are Infants Baptisme Episcopal Ordination and Jurisdiction Administration of the Lords Supper to all baptized persons of age not convicted of any scandalous offences which they call mixt Communion as also those harmlesse yea useful because significant Ceremonies which our Church retained all which though by them declaimed against as Popish will be found upon due inqniry some of them Apostolical all of them ancient institutions and practices of the Catholick Christian Church though yet should wee grant some of them to bee pollutions and spots in our Church it would only inferre a lawful desire and endeavour of reformation not warrant a Schismatical separation since no corruptions in any Church can give allowance of going out of it unlesle they be such as strike at the very foundation of Christian Doctrine and Worship It may perhaps bee here pleaded that as wee forsook the communion of the Roman Church because we apprehended it guilty of such erroneous Doctrines and practices with which wee could not communicate without sin so doe the Sectaries upon the same apprehension of the like in our Church forsake ours and therefore if their separation from us bee causelesse ours from the Papists may seeme to be as unjust But to this we return that neither have we given them the like cause as the Church of Rome gave us not have they the like rational conviction as wee had Wee impose nothing to be beleeved in Doctrine as necessary to Salvation which wee doe not demonstrate to have been the Doctrine of Christ and his Apostles and the Catholick Church and so ought to bee beleeved wee require nothing to be done in matter of practice which is not of ancient usage in the Christian Church and in its owne nature is at least indifferent and so may bee done without sin and therefore it is not a just conviction but at best a deceiving perswasion at worst a wilfulresolution which causeth their separation and so it is in truth causelesse 2. Adde to this that other consideration namely how cursed it is which is evident in several respects 1 Of Christ and his Spirit who is hereby grieved It is very observable that they who are said in this verse to goe out from the Apostles are called in the verse before Antichrists whilst wee goe from Christs Church wee goe against Christ and by rending from his Body wee grieve his Spirit and therefore St. Ambrose calls Schism a sin against the Holy Ghost 2 Of the Church which is hereby weakned the taking of any stones out of the building lesseneth the strength of the whole fabrick if one Souldier break his rank the whole company is disordered by it thus doe they who goe out of the Church ruire the Church it self interrupting her unity which is at once her strength and beauty upon this account it is well observed that whereas other sins are contra sngulos against particular persons this of Schisme is contra universos against a generality so that as much as community is above a person so much is Schisme above other sins yea as much as a sacred is better than a civil command so much this sin is worse than that of Sedition 3 Of others in as much as by this means 1 Those that are malicious enemies against the Church have their mouthes opened to calumniate her and all that are strangers without the Church are hindred from coming in to her Clemens Alexandrinus repeateth the saying of one to this purpose who cryed out You Christians have so many Sects let my soul bee with the Philosophers 2 Those who are within the Church in as much as some to wit the weak are stagger'd and ready to question which is the true Church nay whether there be any Church at all and others to wit the strong are sadded whilst for these divisions of Ruben are great searchings of heart 4. Lastly of themselves who by their back-sliding separation hasten upon themselves perdition a branch plucked from the root must needs wither a member ●●● off from the body dyes and those that leave the Church perish Nos tentat D●abolus ut lupus ovem a grege saith St. Cyprian As the Wolf tempts the sheep from the Fold so doth the Devil men from the Church and why this but that he may worry and devour them Discedentes ●● Ecclesi● saith Ireneus de fonte Spiritus sancti non p●tant They that leave the garden of the Church cannot drink of the fountain of the Spirit What became of those who were out of the Ark when the ●loud came they must needs perish in the waters no lesse miserable is their condition who goe out of the Church Yea which renders their condition so much the more desperate is that they who once goe out of the Church doe seldome return to it That of the Poet Quis peccandi sibi finem possuit is as true ●rrandi both sin and errours are boundlesse in this respect among others the wandring as of Sinners so Hereticks is like that of a lost sheep which strayeth from pasture to pasture but never of it self goeth back to the fold the path of errour is a going down hill in which men goe nay run from errour to errour till at last they fall into the pit of destruction And now my Brethren think I beseech you that the Church of England bespeaketh you this day in those words of our Saviour upon a like occasion Will you also goe away nor can we return a better answer than that which St. Peter in behalf of himself and the rest gave to Christ Whither shall wee goe thou hast the words of eternal life in this Church is the Orthodox dispensation of the Gospel the faithful administration of the Sacraments and the Primitive Apostolical Discipline established and therefore whither shall we goe Here it is that Christ feedeth his Flock in green pastures by still waters why should we be as they that turn aside Oh let us pitty the seduced multitude who have left Churches for Conventicles judicious preaching for ignorant
performances unctio spiritualis gratiae adjuvat infirmitatem nostram saith the Latine Father the oyntment of the Spirits grace helpeth the weaknesse of our flesh and the Greek Father aptly wee are inabled not onely to do but to suffer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the efficacy of the Holy Ghost 4 Annointing the face with Oyle puts as it were a gloss and beauty on it of this the Psalmist taketh notice where hee saith Oyle to cause the face to shine Naomi bids Ruth before shee went to Boaz to annoint her self and those virgins which were prepared for the Persian King did use Oyle of myrrhe which hath an abstersive vertue getting wrinkles out of the skin and beautifying the face so doth the Spirit by his graces put a beauty upon the soul whereby it becommeth amiable in Gods eies Thou art fair saith Christ of his Spouse which as it is true chiefly in regard of his imputed so secondarily in regard of the Spirits imparted righteousness All the wrinkles of sin spots of the soul are in part and shall bee fully done away by this oyntment which can turn Ethiopians into Nazarites 5 Annointing the body especially the head with Oyle is a great refreshment in as much as it maketh way for the emission of noxious vapours and the free passage of the Spirits There are three qualities of oyle laevor nitor odor a smoothnesse to the touch brightnesse to the sight fragrancy to the smell and so gratifying the senses it must needs cause delight to those who are annointed with it Upon this account do doubt it was used in feasts and banquets so much David intimateth when hee joyneth annointing his head with preparing his table and our Saviour when hee joyneth washing the face and annointing the Head To this Solomon alludeth when perswading to a chearful life hee saith Let thy head want no oyntment and the Prophet Amos when describing the jollity of those Epicures hee saith They annoint themselves with the chief oyntments to which agreeth that of wisdome Come let us fill our selves with wine and oyntment How fitly doth this represent the Spirits unction which alone can rejoyce and exhilarate the soul for this reason it is that the Holy Ghost is called the Oyle of Gladnesse and joy is called the Joy of the Holy Ghost and is reckoned up as one of the fruits of the Spirit that joy which doth not proceed from him is a worldly madnesse not true joy the heart cannot bee really merry till it is annointed with the grace and comfort of the Spirit 6 Lastly and most suitably to the text in hand Annointing the eies cleareth them so much is intimated in the Counsel of Christ to the Laodicean Church annoint thine eies with eie-salve that thou maiest see so doth this spiritual unction inable the minde to discern spiritual objects and whereas other ointments may help the dimme sight this opens the blinde eies this is that which is illustrated by the penetrating vertue of oile when applyed to any part of the body which is by opening the pores what other is the Spirits illumination but a sacred penetration by opening the understanding To this purpose is that allusion concerning Oile that it feedeth the Lamp and so maintaineth the light which otherwise would go out for which reason Oile was prepared for the Light of the Sanctuary Thus doth the blessed Spirit first cause which Oil cannot do and then preserve a Divine light in the Soul to guide its feet into the way of peace Wee finde in the Ancient Hieroglyphicks the Olive to have been an embleme of Wisdome true Wisdome is from above and drops down from that Olive tree the sacred Spirit In one word as the Dove bringing an Olive-branch to Noah assured him that the waters were abated So the Spirit bringing an Olive-branch of peace to the Soul enableth it to know that the waters of Gods wrath are abated than which no knowledge more desirable 2 The more special use of annointing with Oile is for the consecration or setting persons apart for some eminent office more particularly there were three Offices to which men were with Oile annointed to wit that of a King a Priest and a Prophet We read in the Ceremonial Law of an Oile which by Gods direction was first to bee made and then poured on Aaron and his Sons the Priests it was the command of God to Samuel that hee should take an horn of Oile and annoint David King The like Ceremony wee finde used in Solomons inauguration God bid Elijah to annoint Elisha the Son of Shaphat to be Prophet in his room To this practice Calvin conceiveth that the Apostle alludeth in this place Indeed by this unction it is that wee are consecrated Kings to captivate our lusts moderate our Passions and order our conversations Priests to keep our selves unspotted of the World to sacrifize our bestiallusts and to offer up prayers and praises to God finally and most congruously to our Apostles scope Prophets to understand in some measure the spiritual mysteries of salvation What now remaineth for the closing of this particular but that wee look upon this word Unction as a word of Security of Humility of Dignity of Hilarity of Faelicity and of Duty It is a word 1 Of Securitie Indeed that is the design of our Apostle to point out to us what is our best safeguard against the blows refuge from the storm antidote against the poyson especially of Hereticks and heresies so much the adversative particle But intimateth that this Unction is opposed as a preservative against heresie That Promise of God to his People concerning the Assyrian his burden shall bee taken from thy shoulder and his yoak from off thy neck because of the annointing is no less true of this Unction by which our necks are freed from the yoak of destroying errours Warriours of Old that they might make their Armour glister and render themselves formidable to their enemies used to annoint it with Oile to this the Prophet alludeth where hee saith Arise you Princes and annoint the shield Loe here an annointing which is our shield whereby wee become terrible to Satan and his instruments so that in vain do Antichrists set themselves against those who are guarded with this unction 2 Of humility letting us see what wee are in and of ourselves how hard our hearts dead our affections blind our uderstandings how destitute of grace and peace and joy yea all heavenly good else what need were there of this Unction to soften enlighten and inliven us The truthis as the box hath no fragrancy in it self but what it receiveth from the Ointment that is in it no more have wee any excellency but what wee receive from the Spirit Abrahams faith Solomons Wisdome Jobs Patience Davids Zeal Noahs Obedience were all but as so many drops of this Oile and therefore let us learn to bee vile in
our own eies taking nothing to our selves but ignorance and f●lly and wickednesse 3 Of dignity Glorious things are spoken of beleevers by the Apostle Peter where he saith They are a chosen Generation a Royal Priesthood an holy Nation a peculiar people and these priviledges they partake of by vertue of this unction Greater honour there cannot bee than those of Royalty and Priesthood Kings are honourable and Priests are venerable Kings are the greatest of men Priests are men of God such honour have all they to whom this sacred Unction is given Wicked men have low thoughts of beleevers it is because they perceive not this Unction but it matters not to bee despicable in the worlds whilest wee are honourable in Gods eies 4 Of Hilarity Indeed this Oile is called by the Psalmist The Oile of gladnesse in as much as it fills the heart with spiritual joy There is as Bellarmine well observeth an Oile of Sadnesse which is used at Funerals and there is an Oile of gladnesse which is used at Festivals and to this is the Spirit compared none are more chearful in all conditions than the annointed ones this oile so mitigateth the asperity of affliction that those who have it are exceeding joyful in all their tribulations in which respect St. Jerom saith excellently Multi vident crucem nostram sed non vident unctionem nostram Many see our affliction but not our unction our troubles but not our comforts our tribulation but not our consolation which far exceeds them 5 Of Felicity Indeed as the annoynting of David by Samuel assured him of the possession of the Crown and Kingdom in due time so doth this Unction ascertain all beleevers of the Kingdom which was prepared for them from the beginning of the world to this purpose it is that the Spirit which here is called the Unction is elsewhere by St. Paul stiled the earnest of our inheritance and as receiving the earnest entituleth to the inheritance so doth the receiving of the Spirit Thus by what we have wee conclude what wee shall have and the participation of the Unction giveth a firme expectance of the Coronation 6 Of Duty which lyeth in two things 1 Making use of this Unction for those choyse and excellent ends to which it is designed It is not the oyntment in the bon but applied to the part which becometh effectual what will the most precious unguent avail him that hath it but doth not use it oh therefore Christians be wise to improve this Unction to the best advantage When then at any time we feel our Consciences wounded our spirits dejected have recourse to this unction for benefit and comfort if as oh how oft thou perceivest in thy self an bardnesse and dulnesse rendring thee unprofitable under the means of grace and unfit for holy services make use of this Unction to soften and quicken thee 2 Walking worthy of and answerably to this Unction It is an undoubted truth where much is received much is expected the greater helps are afforded the greater performances are required God looketh for more from them to whom he hath given his written word than from those who have only the light of Nature and he looketh for yet farre more from them to whom he giveth an internal Vnction than those who have only an external Revelation and therefore as St. Paul exhorts the Thessalonians to walk worthy of their high and heavenly calling so let me exhort Christians to walk worthy of this high and heavenly Unction and so much for the matter of the gift passe we on to 2 The Recipients of this gift in the pronoun You not only we Apostles but you Christians and so this appeareth to be a priviledge belonging to all that are effectually called to Christianity It is St. Pauls universal negative If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his in which is included that universal Affirmative All that are Christs have his spirit To open this briefly you must distinguish 1 Between the miraculous and the gracious Unction some Expositors conceive our Apostle here referres to that Unction of the Apostles in the day of Pentecost with extraordinary gifts whereby the truth of Evangelical Doctrin was confirmed but had this been his meaning hee should rather have said wee have an Unction for though the sent and perfume of that Unction filled the whole Church and so it was for the benefit of all Christians establishing them in the faith yet the oyl it self was poured upon the Apostles and therefore that sense of that phrase seemeth much strained You have an Unction that is we have an unction for your good It is true that in the Primitive times the miraculous Unction was not only conferr'd upon the Apostles but upon many Christians but yet since our Apostle affirmeth it indefinitely of those to whom he wrote I rather conceive that here he intends that Unction of illuminating and sanctifiing grace which every Christian is partaker of and by which he is enabled to know and beleeve to salvation for though every beleever is not annoynted with the Holy Ghost and power yet hee is annoynted with the Holy Ghost and grace 2 Between the possession and the manifestation of this Unction it is one thing to have it and another to know we have it there may be a presence of the Spirit and yet not a sense of that presence a man may have a treasure in his field and not know it all Christians have this Unction from their first conversion though perhaps they are not presently apprehensive of its vertue and operation 3 Between the droppings and the pourings out of this unction it is one thing to have the Spirit and another to be filled with the Spirit This Unction is variously distributed to some in a greater to others in a lesser but to all Christians in some measure it is not for every Christian like St. Stephen to bee filled with the Holy Ghost and yet there is no Christian of whom it can bee said as St. Jude of those false teachers not having the Spirit To wind it up if we pretend to Christianity where is our Vnction where are the vertues and efficacies of our Unction The Holy Ghost who is here called an Unction is elsewhere compared to a seal and as men use to set their seals on their own wares so doth God his Spirit upon them that are his Oh let this bee the chief of our desires and endeavours that God would make us his sealed his annoynted ones and whilst others count it their happinesse when they can say we have Lands and Houses and riches wee have Swords and Scepters and Robes we have Dainties and Musick and all sort of delights let us esteem it our blisse and make it the height of our ambition to say we have an unction and so much for that 3 The last particular remaining to be discussed in this General is the Donor of this
spiritual and saving knowledge It is a known Axiome in Philosophy that there must be a due proportion between the faculty and the object and therefore as sense cannot apprehend the things of reason so neither can reason the things of the Spirit there being no proportion between natural Reason and spirtual verities Indeed Reason in it self is a thing spiritual as spiritual is opposite to material but not as it is opposed to natural and it must bee a spiritual that is a supernatural quality infused by the Spirit which can inable us to apprehend supernatural objects suitable hereunto is that distinction in the Schools of a three-fold light of Nature of Grace of Glory one whereof is far short of the other and as the light of Grace is not proportionable to those beatifical objects of Glory so neither is the light of nature to the spiritual objects of grace and therfore most justly is this affirmative You have an Unction and know all things construed as including the negative if you had not this Unction you could not know any thing To conclude then let the consideration hereof learn us a double lesson to wit of Humility and Prayer 1 Let it abase us in our own estimation notwithstanding our choicest natural or acquired abilities vain man saith Eliphaz would bee wise though hee bee born like a wilde Asses colt men would bee Masters not onely of natural but Divine Knowledge but they become vaine in their Imaginations In reason as corrupted there is a direct enmity against the Gospels simplicity yea the line of reason at the best is too short to fathome the depth of evangelical mysteries and therefore if any one would bee wise let him according to S. Pauls Counsel become a fool that hee may bee wise he only is in a fit capacity for divine knowledge who humbly acknowledgeth his own inability of himself to attain it 2 As wee desire to know all things needful to salvation pray wee for the Spirits Illumination it is strange and yet true to consider how simple Idiots are able more divinely to discourse of Gospel verities than some learned Clerks and whence this but from this special Unction of the renewing Spirit and when wee hear wicked Christians sometimes fluently uttering divine knowledge whence is it but from the common Unction of the illuminating Spirit There is no unfolding Samsons riddle unlesse wee plow with Samsons Heifer no understanding the things of the Spirit but by the grace of the Spirit and therefore I shall end my discourse with the beginning of that excellent Hymn Oh Holy Ghost into our wits send down thy heavenly light Kindle our hearts with servent love to serve God day and night Amen THE FIRST EPISTLE OF St. JOHN CHAP. 2. VERS 21. I have not written unto you because yee know not the truth but because yee know it and that no lye is of the truth THis Verse may well bee called a Religious Complement inserted by the Apostle no doubt for this end that hee might the better gain upon those to whom he wrote That piece of Oratory which teacheth captare benevelentiam to seek the good will of Auditors is of good use in Divinity They are too mor●se and rigid who account all Civil Language in a Pulpit da●bing with untempered mortar St. Paul doubtlesse did not court Agrippa with a falshood when hee saith Beleevest thou the Prophets I know thou beleevest them nor did hee gild rotten posts when hee saith to those Hebrews I am perswaded better things of you though I thus speak far bee it from St. John who declaimeth against hars at the same time to bee guilty of flattery which is no better than lying To sooth up our hearers in their wickedness is abominable but to smooth them with oyly Language and silken words that they may bee more pliable to what is good is allowable whilest herein wee trace the footsteps of the penmen of holy writ particularly S. John and that in this verse which is as it were an insinuating parenthesis I have not written unto you because yee know not the truth c. In which words there are three General Observable I A Delineation of the Gospel by a double character 1 Principal and ●rect ●n that it is called the truth 2 Coll●●eral and Co●seque●●ial when it is said no lye is of the Truth II A Commendation of the Christians to whom the Apostle wrote by removing ignorance from them attributing knowledge to them in those words not because you know not the Truth but because ye know it c. III An Anticipation of an objection which might be made against his writing to them who were thus knowing in those words I have not written unto you c. Begin we with the Delineation and therein 1 The Principal Character which though comprized in that one word Truth carrieth in it a great deal of weight Not to trouble you with the Philosophical distinctions of Truth be pleased to know to our present purpose 1 As there is a double word so there is a double truth to wit personal and doctrinal our blessed Saviour saith of himself I am the truth and some Interpreters conceive that by truth here the Apostle meaneth Christ when our Saviour prayeth for his Disciples sanctify them through thy truth hee presently addeth Thy Word is truth and accordingly others expound Truth here to bee the Evangelical Doctrin To this latter interpretation I rather adhere because it is most probable that St. John understands the same by truth in this verse which he intends by all things in the former and those are all things revealed in the Gospel 2 Truth may bee construed in a double opposition either to that which is Typical or that which is false 1 Sometimes the truth is opposed to Types and Ceremonies thus when wee are required to worship the Father in Spirit and in Truth as the former is opposed to hypocritical so the latter most rationally to ceremonial worship and when it is said The Law came by Moses but grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ wee may probably conceive the sense to bee that whereas Moses onely delivered precepts to bee done Christ giveth by his Spirit grace to do them and whereas the Ceremonial Law consisted onely of Types and Shadows the Truth that is the impletion of all those is now performed by Christ Accordingly the Gospel is the truth because it revealeth the body of those shadows the mystery of those figures the substance of those Types and to this Zanchy conceiveth the Apostle Paul might have respect when hee calls it The word of truth 2 Sometimes the truth is opposed to falshood and lies for that is the most genuine signification of the Word and withall the most rational interpretation of it in this place where wee finde a lye expressely set in opposition to it upon this account no doubt it is that the Gospel is so
Catholick Religion but yet even these are falsely pretended by hereticks and by the feigned semblance of these it is that they indeavour and oft times with too much success to seduce their auditors from the faith These Seducers have been more or lesse in all ages but I think I may safely say never more than in this and if you mark it you shall finde the Old cheats still practised The Papists on the one hand pretend to the Church Traditions Miracles and a formal sanctity The Socinians boast much of Reason The Antinomians of Liberty The Anabaptists Quakers and such like of Enthusiasms a light within breathings impulses and discoveries of the Spirit All Sects have some mixtures of truth and would father their Errours upon the Scriptures And now being encompassed as it were with such subtle Sophisters crafty Seducers what need is there of a prudent vigilancy lest wee bee insnared by them according to that excellent advice of St. Peter Beware lest ye also being led away with the errour of the wicked fall from your own stedfastnesse Behold saith our blessed Saviour to his Disciples I send you forth as sheep among wolves bee yee wise as Serpents and innocent as Doves wise as Serpents to defend themselves innocent as Doves in not offending others or as Prosper to our present purpose innocent as Doves in not circumventing any and wise as Serpents in not suffering themselves to bee circumvented and surely this Serpentine wisdome is that which concerneth all Christians in some measure to attain so much the rather because these wolves as our Saviour elsewhere speaketh come in sheeps cloathing for this reason saith Optatus Ut prius ovis mordentem lupum sentiat quam praesentiat venientem that they may seize upon the sheep before it can perceive them comming Hee that walketh among snares had need bee cautelous and no less reason have we to bee circumspect who are in the same danger which those Christians were in of them that would seduce then and so much shall suffice to have been spoken of the first General namely the mischievous design of the false Teachers I go on to a more brief dispatch of the other which is The Pious care of true Apostles These things have I written to you concerning them For the full discussion whereof I shall look upon the writing here mentioned in a double reference namely as it was a result of the Spirits dictate and as it was an argument of St. Johns care 1 As a result of the Spirits dictates for St. John and the other holy men of God spake and wrote as moved by the Holy Ghost and so wee are here to take notice that the Divinely inspired writings are of excellent use against Seducers Indeed as a straight line discovers what is crooked and the clear light dispells darknesse so the word of God serveth to discover who are Seducers and to dissipate their clondy errours you erre saith our blessed Saviour to the Sadduces not knowing the Scriptures tacitly teaching us that the Scriptures well known and rightly understood are a guard against errour The whole Scripture saith St. Paul is of divine inspiration and is profitable as for reproof of sin so for the correction of errour Let it therefore bee our business especially in such erroneous times as these to study the Scriptures and not onely to bee well versed in the letter but acquainted with the meaning of them that as our Saviour refelled the tempter so wee may bee able to refute seducers with a scriptum est No darts pierce so deep as those which are taken out of the Lords armory no arrows hit the mark like those which are drawn out of Gods quiver nor is any sword so sharp as that of the Spirit and therfore as David hid Gods word in his heart that hee might not fall into sin so let us that we may not run into errour 2 But that which would bee chiefly taken notice of is that his writing these things concerning Seducers was an argument of his care that the people might not bee deceived by them It is that which wee finde to have been not only the care of this but the other holy Apostles the greatest part of St. Judes Epistle and of St. Peters second Epistle is concerning these Seducers frequent caveats wee meet with in St. Pauls Epistles to the same purpose witnesse his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Col●ssians Beware lest any man spoil you nay his threefold 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Philippians beware of Dogs beware of evil workers beware of the concision and to name no more his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Romans beseeching that they would mark and avoid such It were easy to let you see how the Fathers of the Church have in this particular traced the footst eps of the Apostles Ignatius bespeaketh the Christians of Antioch in words much like those of St. Paul to the Philippians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Beware of Dogs Serpents Dragons Aspes Bazilisks Scorpions St. Cyprian in his Epistle to all the people is very urgent with his ●r● vos fratres and again with his admone● pariter et consulo advising admonishing intreating that they would not beleeve the smooth words of false Teachers lest they did mistake darknesse for light night for day and poyson for a remedy Irenaeus in his Preface to his first book against Heresys saith this was the reason of his writing those books that the wolves might not devour the sheep of Christ through his default for the same cause were those things written by Epiphanius Athanasius St. Augustin and many others which are extant concerning heresies Nor was it without a great deal of Reason that those holy men were and in particular here St. John was so careful to write concerning Seducers and that both respectu populi in regard of the people for the preservation of their safety and respectu sui in regard of himself for the discharging of his own duty 1 In respect of the people St. John well knew 1 That all men are naturally prone to errour their understanding as well as will being corrupted yea that the best being but men may through want of judgement and partiality of affection bee led aside The bad through wickedness and the good through weaknesse sometimes like sheep have gone astray 2 That the errours to which these Antichrists did indeavour to seduce them were in things fundamental for so it appeareth by the charge hee laiet● against them which is that they denyed the Father and the Son that they denyed Jesus to bee the Christ a doctrine upon which the whole Christian Religion is founded St. Hierom upon that o● our Saviour Bee wise as Serpents observeth Serpentis astutia ponitur in exemplum quia toto corpore occul●at capu● ut illud in quo vita est protegat the Serpent is therefore mentioned as an Example of Wisdome
mentioned but inlarged upon in these words But the annointing c. The right understanding of this whole verse depends upon the genuine notion of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the annointing once and again here spoken of In order to which it will bee needful to inquire to what this annointing alludeth what it doth import and wherein the Analogy holdeth The Jesuits in their Comments would have us beleeve that St. John alludeth to the Annointing which is used in their Church at the Sacrament of Baptism before in the breast and between the shoulders and after on the top of the head But though I cannot deny that the use of Annointing in Baptism is very ancient as finding it mentioned not onely by St. Augustine but St. Cyprian and Tertullian yet sure I am it is no where spoken of in the New Testament as either instituted by Christ or Preached by the Apostles in which respect it cannot rationally bee conceived that St. John alludeth to it Indeed wee finde in St. James an annointing of the sick with Oil to bee then practiced though by the way that of a far different nature from the Popish extream Unction for wheareas the Papists annoint the sick in order to their better passage out the annointing then used was in order to their recovery and longer continuance in this World But as there is no reason to imagine that St. John had any eye to St. James his Unction so much lesse can hee bee supposed to allude to an Vnction which was not at all used in his time If therefore you would know from what this phrase is borrowed the Answer is that very probably the Apostle had an eye to that unction which was in use under the Law the ingredients and composition whereof you have set down at large by Moses and so much the rather because as that is called the Holy Oil so this annointing is said before to be from the Holy One. 2 The Socinians inquiring into the meaning of this Metaphor understand by it the Evangelical Doctrin construing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the annointing in this by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hat which you have heard at the four and twentieth verse and conceiving it to bee called the Unction because that by that wonderful effusion of the Holy Ghost the Apostles were inabled to publish it for which reason they suppose it is elsewhere called the Spirit and the ministration of the Spirit with this interpretation some of our late Orthodox writers accord though upon a far different reason For whereas the Socinians falsely denying any need of the Spirits illumination to bee conferred upon every Christian but onely of that Revelation which was at first vouchsafed to the Apostles and by them to the World endeavour to evade the argument which is brought against them from this Scripture by this Exposition The Orthodox justly denying any new Revelation or extraordinary inspiration now to bee expected answer the argument which Euthusiasts bring from this Scripture by this interpretation For my own part I am very unwilling without great cause to recede from the Generally received exposition of any scripture And as to this particular text 1 I finde the annointing by the far greatest part both of Ancient and Modern Protestant and Popish Commentators to be expounded the Holy Spirit suitable to which it is that the latter annoynting is read Spirit in the Aethiopick version his Spirit teacheth you of all things 2 There are several considerations which render the common exposition most rational in as much as 1 Usually where the Scripture speaketh of annoynting it is meant of the Spirit as appeareth in the former discourse upon the twentieth verse 2 It is not here said the annoynting which wee to wit Apostles have received of him for then it might most probably have referred to the visible descension of the Holy Ghost upon them nor yet is it said the annoynting which you have received of us for then it might justly have been construed as the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which you have heard this Evangelical Doctrine which was delivered by the inspired Apostles but in as much as it is the annoynting which you have received of him it is most rationally construed of that Spiritual illumination which every Christian receiveth in some measure from Christ. 3 Adde to this that our Apostle in this verse manifestly intends to mind the Christians what a singular help Christ had provided for them against seducers whereby they might be enabled to continue in that which they had heard and therefore it cannot rationally be looked upon as one and the same with that which they had heard but rather the enlightning grace of his Spirit is to bee understood than which there cannot be a stronger antidote against errour Finally as by this exposition this Scripture becometh a sharp sword against the Socinians so as shall appear in the handling it will not hereby become a buckler for the Anabaptists and therefore I shall acquiesce and adhere to it as most genuine 3 As to the last enquiry how fitly the Spirit of God is compared to and resembled by oyl and annoynting the answer hath been already returned in the discourse upon the former clause of the twentieth verse whither I referre the Reader nor shall I adde any thing further but only that as the holy Oyntment was made of several Spices mixed with the oyl whatsoever things or persons were annoynted therewith were legally sanctified by it so we are here to understand by this annoynting not the illumination of the Spirit which is oft-times found alone and is vouchsafed to the unregenerate but that which is as it were made up of the several graces of the Spirit whereby not only the minde is enlightned but the whole man is sanctified Having given you this account of the annoynting which is as it were the hinge upon which the whole verse turneth it now remaineth that I goe on to consider what is here affirmed concerning this Unction and because I have already traced the metaphor of oyl and our Apostle is pleased to insist upon another similitude of teaching I shall follow that and accordingly you may conceive the Spirit of God who is the annoynting to bee likewise here represented as a School-master whose excellency is set forth by four Characters namely his Residency Sufficiency Fidelity and Efficiency His 1 Residency permanent in those words The annoynting which you have received of him abideth in you 2 Sufficiency abundant in those words And you need not that any man teach you but as the same annoynting teacheth you of all things 3 Fidelity eminent in those words and is truth and is no lye 4 Efficiency evident in those words and as it hath taught you you shall abide in him Begin we with the Residency of this School-master as it is set forth in the beginning of the verse The annoynting which you have received of him abideth in you and
so much the force of the Greek carrieth in it hee onely sojourned for a time with his Disciples but his Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abides with his Church from one Generation to another 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so Theophilact glosseth for his presence is not as Christs was onely for a season True it is Christ is said to be in the midst of the Golden Candlesticks but that is by his Spirit In respect of his corporal presence hee saith in one place The Poor you have alwaies with you but mee you have not alwaies in regard of his Spiritual presence it is that hee saith in another place Loe I am with you alwaies even to the end of the world 2 As this Annointing which wee receive from Christ abideth in the Church so doth it in all the chosen and faithful members of the Church It is said of the Apostles that when this unction visibly and gloriously descended on them there appeared cloven tongues as it were on fire and sate upon each of them Sitting is a fixed posture and noteth permanency it doth so in some though not the same measure and manner upon every true Beleever At the eighth verse of the next chapter where I shall God willing inlarge upon this subject it is resembled to seed and that such as is not onely cast into but remaineth in the ground by our blessed Saviour it is compared to water and that river water which is continually running and therefore said to bee living and again it is said to bee a well of water springing up in the heart of a beleever to everlasting life Finally by John the Baptist it is likened to fire and such a fire it is which like that under the Altar never goeth out The consideration hereof may serve 1 To rectifye our judgements in the true estimate of and accordingly to quicken our indeavours in the ardent pursuite after this unction Ah Lord how eager are men in scraping the things of this World which when with difficulty obtained by us are easily snatched from us how much rather should wee seek after this annointing which being received abideth in us Labour not saith our blessed Saviour for the meat that perisheth but labour for the meat that indureth to everlasting life thereby plainly intimating that perpetuity is that which much advanceth excellency every thing being so much the more amiable by how much it is the more durable no wise man but would prefer lasting brass before fading gold a constant table though of a few dishes before the largest feast which should only last for a few daies and surely then when wee consider how much this and all other spiritual blessings transcend corporal both in their nature and durance we cannot but judge them worthy our highest esteem and choicest indeavour A good name saith the wise man is better than pretious ointment but this pretious ointment is better than a good name and much more than wealth and pleasure or whatever it is that this world can afford This is one of those gifts to which St. James giveth those Epithites of good and perfect Every gift is good though but temporall but spiritual gifts being of a never ●ading durance are both good and perfect great reason have wee to beg these above all others Oh let us not cease in asking seeking knocking for this unction which being given to us like Maries good part shall never be taken from us 2 To comfort those who have received this unction when they consider its perpetual duration Habet Oleum Deus habet et Mundus saith Hugo God hath his Oil and the World too Oleum mundi in vasis deficit Oleo dei vasa deficiunt The Worlds Oil faileth in the vessels but the vessels fail for Gods Oil the one nunquam sufficit will never satisfy the other nunquam deficit will never waste whatever worldly comforts wee receive our fear of losing allaieth the sweetnesse of enjoying but it is not so with the grace of the Spirit which being received abideth with us Though withall a Caution must bee annexed that wee use our indeavour to preserve and maintain this Oil in the lamp of our souls This Schoolmaster is willing to reside with us but then wee must remember St. Pauls caveat Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God whereby you are sealed to the day of redemption for if we grieve him he will at least for a time withdraw himself from us This fire is of a lasting nature being once throughly kindled but then wee must observe that other injunction of the Apostle Quench not the Spirit for though it bee not wholly put out it may bee much quenched by our Negligence This Annointing is abiding but then wee must take notice of our Saviours assertion To him that hath shall bee given but from him that hath not shall bee taken away that which hee hath Wee must make use of and improve this holy Oil concerning which that riddle is a truth the more wee spend the more it increaseth the Oil in the widows vessel ceased not so long as shee poured it out this holy Oil is best preserved by using it to the Glory of God our own and others advantage and thus much shall suffice for the first character of the residency of this Schoolmaster proceed wee to the next which is 2 The sufficiency of his instruction as it is set forth Affirmatively in those words The same annointing teacheth you of all things Negatively in those And you need not that any man teach you 1 Begin wee with the assirmative part and therein consider The latitude of the Object all things and The Quality of the Act Teacheth 1 The Object is expressed in the same latitude at the twentieth verse where hath been largely discussed how and with what restrictions it is to bee interpreted It was the promise of our Saviour to his Disciples that his Spirit should guide them into all truth nor was this confined to them but is here assured to all Christians that the annointing should teach them all things all things that is all truth truth being the proper object of the understanding which is that faculty whereby wee are capable of teaching nor yet must this bee extended as far as the Spirit is able to teach and lead but onely as far as was requisite for them and is for us to know and understand thus the Spirit led them into all truth whereby they were able to propagate Christian Religion in the World and hee teacheth every Christian all truth which is needful in order to the prevention of fundamental errours and the salvation of his precious soul It would not bee passed by that our Apostles phrase is at once both extensive and restrictive it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hee teacheth all things but of or concerning all things that is something of all things These all
things are not taught simultaneously but successively fully but gradually the Disciples themselves were taught by degrees and did not know all things at first nay indeed not exactly at the last it is but a partial knowledge the best have of these all things but yet all those things which conduce to the strengthening us against error and the guiding us in the way of truth are in some though not the same measure taught by this Unction 2 The chief thing here to be discussed is the quality of the act what kind of teaching it is that is here attributed to the Spirit whereof all Christians participate For the better understanding hereof take notice of a double distinction 1 The teaching of this unction is either extraordinary or ordinary that peculiar to some this common to all Christians in reference to the extraordinary teaching it is that St. Gregory saith excellently Ungit Spiritus iste sanctus Citharaedum Psalmistam facit ungit pastorem Prophetam facit ungit Piscatorem praedicatorem facit ungit persecutorem doctorem gentium facit ungit publicanum facit Evangelistam the annoynting of this holy Spirit maketh an Harper so was David a Psalmist a Shepherd so was Amos a Prophet a Fisher-man so was St. Peter a Fisher of men by preaching a Publican so was St. Matthew an Evangelist finally a Persecutor so was St. Paul a Teacher of the Gentiles But it is the ordinary not that peculiar and extraordinary way of teaching which is here intended 2 The ordinary teaching of the Spirit is either external or internal and both these are no doubt included 1 The outward teaching of the Spirit is by the Ministry of the Word and preaching of the Gospel which is contained in the holy Scriptures look as the holy Writings were at first inspired by the Holy Ghost so by them he still teacheth his Church Accordingly it is that all saving truths were dictated by the Spirit to the Pen-men and are fully faithfully delineated in sacred Writ It is a form of sound words every way compleat explicating as Gregory the great saith all the Divine mysteries of Religion and delivering all precepts for Moral practice Quibus quidem duabus partibus omnis nostrae salutis faelicitatis ratio continetur in which two consists the whole doctrine of attaining true happinesse and therefore in this respect this of the Apostle is verified The annoynting teacheth us of all things to wit in the external ministration of the Word 2 Besides this outward there is an inward teaching which the Spirit vouchsafeth to the Church and every true member of it and is here principally aymed at This is that teaching which being the secret work of Gods Spirit is not so visibly discernable the more things are abstracted from sense the more mysterious they are no wonder if it be difficult to apprehend what this teaching is which according to St. Gregory is Allocutio intimae inspirationis an inward inspiration or Spiritual allocution It is a Question much controverted in the Schools how the Angels being Spiritual substances impart their conceptions to one another and surely it is much more hard to know how the Spirit imparts his Divine learning to the soul even they who are thus taught are sure of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that so it is but are not able to unfold the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 how it is so And yet that wee may in some measure apprehend what we cannot fully conceive I shall in a few words acquaint you with that notion of this teaching which the Scripture is pleased to give us and accordingly if you ask what this inward teaching is whereof the Apostle speaketh I shall return the answer in the words of the Prophet Jeremy or rather God by the Prophet It is the putting his Law in our inward parts and writing it in our hearts Indeed as we say in general the Scripture is the best interpreter of it self so in this particular the Prophet is the best Commentator on the Apostle and therefore that wee may more clearly understand the one it will bee needful more particularly to comment on the other and let you see what this putting this Law in our inward parts and writing it in our hearts meaneth by which wee shall the better perceive what this teaching is in reference to which I shall lay down a double conclusion 1 That which the Spirit teacheth inwardly is the same with that hee teacheth outwardly and therefore that which he is said to write in the heart of man is no other than that Law which is written in the Book of God As the minde of the Spirit in one parcel agreeth with the minde of the Spirit in another parcel of Holy Writ so the impressions of the Spirit on the soul answer to the dictates of the Spirit in the Scriptures It is very observable that Christ tells his Disciples the Spirit should bring all things to their remembrance as if the chief end of the miraculous descension of the Holy Ghost upon them were not to teach them any new doctrine but to bring to remembrance what Christ had before taught them surely then the inward teaching of this Vnction whereof all Christians participate doth not reveal any new mysteries which are not already delivered in the Word Among other resemblances the Spirits working upon the Soul is said to be a sealing and among other reasons for this because as the seal maketh no stamp upon the wax but what is answerable to that which is upon the seal so whatsoever the Spirit teacheth the heart is answerable to what it teacheth in the Word 2 The inward teaching or writing of the Spirit is the imprinting of Scripture-truths upon the soul Conceive then the soul as the paper the truths revealed in Gods Word as the Letters the Spirit of God as the Scribe and the ayl of his grace as the Inke by which there is an impression made of the letters upon the paper truths upon the soul For the more particular opening hereof know 1 That this teaching is not a naked motion but a real impression not a superficial wetting but a deep soaking Many there are to whom the Spirit vouchsafeth some taste yet never drink a full draught who have some gliding aspects but no direct beams of the Sun of righteousnesse shining on them it is one thing to hear the voyce of the Spirit speaking another to find the Pen of the Spirit writing that teaching which is here meant is such as confirmeth against error and therefore doth not glide off like water but abide like oyl slightly move but strongly work upon the soul 2 That this impression of the Spirits teaching is upon the whole soul more especially the two chief faculties of the soul the Understanding and the Will so much seemeth to be intimated by that double character of the subject the inward parts and the heart which wee finde in the Prophet as of
doth not tend to and end in Obedience And so much for the Antithesis by which the Thesis is illustrated Proceed we to the Last particular in this first proposition Namely The Argument by which it is proved laid down in these words Who so keepeth his word in him verily is the love of God perfected Calvin indeed conceiveth these words to be annexed as a description of Obedience so that if we would know what it is to keep the Commandments the answer is It is to have the Love of God perfected in us to this purpose is it that Moses saith What doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to love him And Christ summeth up all the Commandements in those two precepts of love towards God and our Neighbour yea St Paul saith expresly That love is the fulfilling of the Law not only effectivè because it inableth us to keep it but reductivè because the whole Law is reducible to that of love But though this Construction be true yet I conceive it is not so genuine and congruous to the Apostles scope And therefore I rather look upon these words as a confirmation of the preceding clause he that knoweth God will keep his Commandments because he that knoweth him loveth him and he that loveth him cannot but keep his Commandements The strength of this Argument will the better appear if we put it into a Syllogism which we may take briefly thus The Love of God is perfected in all and only those who keep his Word In whomsoever there is a right knowledg of God the Love of God is perfected Therefore Whosoever knoweth God aright will keep his Word And now acording to this Interpretation here are two positions to be insisted on The one whereof is the Minor the other the Major in the Syllogism the one tacitely intimated and the other positively expressed 1. That which is here implyed is that where there is a Knowledg there is also the Love of God and Christ The Love of God may admit of a double reference either Charitas quâ amat or quâ amatur actively the love whereby God doth love or passively the love whereby he is beloved Illyricus understandeth the former and no doubt it is a truth that Gods love is fixed on him who keepeth his Word He that hath my Commandments and keepeth them saith Christ my Father will love him Yea whereas God vouchsafeth a generall love to all men he hath a more speciall favour to obedient persons but if we thus understand the Love of God in this place the phrase of perfected will sound very harsh since there is nothing in God but it is absolutely and infinitely perfect and therefore I reject it More generally and probably Expositors here understand that love which we have to God and so it is an undoubted truth they who know him cannot but love him The truth is therefore is divine knowledg effective because it is affective it commands our actions because it commands our affections and if we know him we keep his Commandements because if we know him we love him It is a rule among the Hebrews that verba notitiae connotant affectus the phrase of knowing noteth such an act of the understanding as carrieth the affections along with it And indeed it is impossible but the affections should be carried on toward the Object when it is rightly known It is a saying of St Austin Qui vult habere notitiam De● amet he that will know God must love him since love causeth acquaintance and it is as true Qui vult habere amorem Dei noscat he that will love God let him know him The necessary connexion between these two appeareth upon a double ground 1. The one in respect of Gods Nature which is good and goodness it self The proper Object of love is good and it is impossible Vt quis bonum cognitum non amaret that good known should not be beloved Be a thing never so good if the goodness of it be not known to us it cannot be loved by us and if our understandings are fully and clearly convinced of its goodness it cannot but draw our love towards it now God is good the chief good a full Universall Originall good There is no goodness in any Creature which is not from him and after a more eminent way in him and therefore he that knoweth him apprehending him infinitely good cannot but be enamored with him Indeed he that rightly knoweth God knoweth him to be justice it self and therefore cannot but fear him Truth it self and therefore cannot but trust him Goodness it self and therefore cannot but love him 2. The other in respect of the Spirits efficacy and operation Idem spiritus qui illuminat inspirat conformem affectum the same spirit is both a spirit of Knowledg and Love Like the fire which giveth both light and heat and wheresoever the spirit worketh savingly there is not only an illumination of the minde but a sanctification throughout whereby the will is inclined to the love as well as the judgment enlightned with the knowledg of God Content not thy self then with a sapless heartless Knowledg Though Christ as God knoweth all persons and things yet he knoweth not them whom he loveth not and therefore he saith himself to the workers of iniquity I know you not and though a man as St Paul specifieth in his own person have all knowledg yet if he have not Charity it is nothing to wit in Gods account and though it may be profitable to others yet it can neither be acceptable to God nor beneficiall to himself 2. But further that which is here expressed and therefore chiefly to be insisted on is that whoso keepeth his Word in him ver●ly is the love of God perfected The Subject of this clause whoso keepeth his Word is the same for substance with that in the third verse If we keep his Commandements and therefore need not be again handled only the different term of Word would not be passed by The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath especially a double signification both of which may be here made use of to wit ratio and sermo reason and speech According to the former acception Christs Commandements are so called because in them is set before us ratio vivendi the way to order our Conversation aright And there is nothing in them but what is rectae rationi consonum most agreeable to right reason According to this Notion it is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in St Peter is rendred by the Vulgar Latin Lac rationale and that for this reason quia rationem tradit credendi rectè vivendi because the word set down a just rule but of a right belief and a good life and this by the way may be a strong Obligation to the keeping of what Christ requireth because he requireth nothing but what is just and reasonable According to the latter construction Christs
the last Chapter of this Epistle plainly ascribeth this Office of bearing witness to the Spirit and yet it is no less true that these graces and qualifications do beare the same witness these two witnesses being the one subservient to the other whilst the spirit is the principall and these qualifications are the Spirits instrument in this work Whether there be an immediate Testimony given by the spirit to the Soul of a Believer assuring him o● his interest in Christ I will not now dispute That the spirit can thus testifie is not to be questioned and that at some times to some eminent Saints he hath been and may still be pleased to vouchsafe it will not be denied but doubtless the usuall way of the Spirits witnessing is by the grace of Sanctification imprinted on the heart and expressed in the life To this Testimony the Spirit concurreth especially two waies partly by implanting his graces in us in which respect they are called the fruits of the Spirit and partly by discovering them to us in which regard St Paul saith We have received the Spirit which is of God that we might know the things which are freely given us of God The truth is as we cannot have grace without the Spirits operation so neither can we discern it but by the Spirits irradiation and as the beauty of all colours is manifested by the light of the Sun so is the truth of all graces in the heart by the Spirits light By all which it appeareth that the Spirit is the chief in this work so that as if you ask how we know that we know Christ and are in him the answer is by keeping the Commandments and walking as Christ walked so if you ask how we are inabled to keep the Commandments and walk as Christ walked and how we are to know that we do thus walk and keep the Commandments the answer is by the Spirit To close up this with a double consectary 1. That assurance of an interest in Christ which many pretend to who walk contrary to him and his Precepts in their lives is not a Christian Knowledg but a vain confidence a carnall security a lying delusion and a damned presumption To all such therefore who hug sin in their Bosomes and yet suppose they are folded in Christs arms who sail with full speed to Hell and yet think to cast Anchor at Heaven Gates who live in Rebellion against and yet promise to themselves Salvation by Christ we say not rejoyce with trembling but tremble without rejoycing not work out your Salvation with fear but fear without any hope of Salvation in this condition And whereas such persons may perhaps plead an immediate Testimony of Gods spirit assuring them that they are in Christ we are bold to tell them it is an hissing of the old Serpent not a whispering of the good Spirit it is the voice of the Devill not of God Ah my Brethren we sometimes pity mad Persons whom we seelying in the straw clad in rags and yet heare them boasting themselves to be Kings and Queens Have we not as great nay far more reason to pitty our own madness in fancying to our selves we are in Christ washed by his Blood and made Kings and Priests to God when as we transgress his Laws and cast both his Precepts and Pattern behind our back Me thinketh when men who live in Adultery Fornication Covetousness Envy Rebellion or any work of the Flesh promise to themselves an interest in Christ their sins should presently look them in the face and tell them that they are none of Christs 2. It neerly concerneth us all to search our hearts and try our waies to enquire into the Obedience and Conformity of our Conversations that hereby we may know we are in Christ It is an excellent saying of St Bernard Quantum creseis in gratiam tantum dilataris in fiduciam according to the measure of our Obedience so is the measure of our Confidence if therefore we would strengthen the latter we must by due inquiry assure our selves of the former Ah my Brethren it is an easie matter for a man to say I know I am in Christ but it is no easie matter to say Hereby I know I am in him what is it for a man to brag that such and such Lands and Lordships are his unless he can shew his evidences These qualifications are the evidences of our title to Christ and what will it avail to lay a claime to Christ if we have not these to shew Oh then what need is there of a diligent search that we may find these qualifications in us and because in nihilo facilius periculosius erratur there is nothing wherein we may more easily and yet more dangerously be mistaken then in this enquiry Oh what need is there of a due care that there be no flaw in our evidence that our qualification be of a right stampe To this end Study carefully the directions of the word Pray fervently for the illumination of the Spirit consult not with flesh and blood hearken not to the suggestions of Satan but deal impartially with thy own Soul as knowing of how great concernment the right managing of this work is And now upon serious and deliberate search 1. On the one hand Canst thou not find these qualifications in thee Be not too hasty in passing a determinate sentence against thy self since though these graces be necessary effects yet they are no● necessary signs of Faith and therefore they may be in us and so we truly in Christ and yet not appear so as we to know either that they are in us or we in Christ Perhaps thou art at that time clouded with some violent passion assaulted with some virulent temptation under spirituall desertion and no wonder if in such a case thou be not able to see those graces which yet thou hast since though there be fire yet so long as it is hid in the Embers it cannot flame forth nor doth it appear to be there Besides the operating there must be as you have heard a discovering work of the spirit By the former Faith bringeth these graces forth as effects by the latter a Believer maketh use of them as signs and these two do not alwaies go together Indeed if thou manifestly find the contrary vices reigning in thee thou maist and oughtest to conclude thy self as yet to be without Christ but though thou canst not clearly apprehend the inbeing of these graces thou must not peremptorily conclude against thy being in Christ but rather hanging as it were between hope and fear wait and pray and search for further discovery 2. On the other hand dost thou find the truth of these qualifications in thee Bless thy God know thy bliss own thy priviledg and labour after greater measures of this apprehension since as he that only hopes he keepeth the Commandments can only hope that he knoweth Christ so he that knoweth and is
of God only but also our own souls because ye were dear unto us Thus did St Ambrose love his charge when he declareth how much he was troubled at his absence from them though upon just occasion It were easie to multiply instances of this nature Oh let all Pastors take fire at these flames and learn by these examples indeed there is no relation in which Ministers stand to their people but it cals for this duty if they look on them as their Sheep their Schollars their Children their Brethren all ingage them to Love And surely Magnes amoris amor Love is the Loadstone of Love if we love you you must love us as Brethren so did those converts who bespake the Apostles with this very title Men and Brethren Tell me I beseech you why should we be accounted as your enemies who watch for your souls If you think scorne to honour us as Fathers yet however own us as Brethren In a word Since we are Brethren let us sweetly live and love as Brethren Oh how pleasant a thing it is for Ministers and People like Brethren to dwell together in Vnity Oh that both Priest and People when any contentions arise between them or when their love to each other begins to faile in them would remember this relation so should the meditation hereof be both as water and fire as water to coole the heat of contention as fire to kindle and cherish the heat of affection 4. It is a word of dignity That he who was in the highest office belonging to the Christian Church should call the despised Christians to whom he wrote his Brethren as it is a dignation in him so it must needs be an exaltation to them The greater the Persons to whom we are related and the nearer the relation is the greater is the honour To be a Servant a Kinsman but much more to be a Brother of a Lord or Earl but much more of a King is a very great Dignity such honour have Christians they may claim Brotherhood to the goodly fellowship of the Prophets the Noble army of Martyrs the sacred Hierarchy of the Apostles yea the head of the Church Christ himself for so saith the Author to the Hebrews concerning him He is not ashamed to call us Brethren Oh let us walk worthy of these high relations which Christianity confereth upon us and so much the rather because by our unanswerable behaviour to these relations we shall not only dishonour our selves but them to whom we are related If one that is Brother to a King should make himself a companion of Thieves doth it not redown to the dishonour of the King to whom he is so nearly allyed And if we who by our Christian profession pretend at least alliance to the Apostles yea Christ himself shall live no better nay worse then Turks Pagans Infidels how must they suffer to whom we pretend so near a relation And therefore to imitate the Apostles exhortation Let our Conversation be such as becometh the Brethren of those holy Apostles who were the first Publishers of the Gospell of Christ And so much be spoken of the Compellation given to the Persons Pass we on to the commendation which our Apostle here giveth the matter whereabout he was now to write which is drawn from three heads The Authority of it as being a Precept both old and new in those words I write no new but an old Commandment c. and Again a new Commandment I write to you The Conformity of it to the Pattern which Christ hath set in those words A thing which is true in him The Congruity of it to the state of the Gospell the truth of Christianity in those words And in you because the darkness is past and the true light now shineth The Authority of that which our Apostle here commendeth is that which we are to begin with And that inasmuch as it is 1. An old Commandment This is that which is both propounded and proved the former in those words I write not a new but an old Commandment to you the latter in those Which you heard from the beginning the old Commandment is the word which you heard from the beginning 1. The proposition is set down with a great deale of Emphasis not only Positively but Oppositively Affirmatively but Negatively The Apostle doth not content himself to say I write to you an old Commandment but knowing as Calvin well noteth how suspected novelty is and deservedly hatefull and because as Didymus observeth the brand of novelty both by Jews and Pagans was cast on Christianity and withall because many things are old which yet in truth are but old Innovations as I shall hereafter discover he doth expresly vindicate his Doctrine from any such aspersion by this addition not a new but an old Commandment It is somewhat debated by Interpreters what our Apostle intends by this old Commandment whilst Some understand it generally of the whole Evangelicall Doctrine Others referre it to the preceding Verse where is a speciall command of walking as Christ walked Others to that particular command of Love which immediately followeth This last I incline to and so much the rather because I find St John himself so expounding it in the Eleventh Verse of the next Chapter wherein he cals loving one another the message from the beginning and at the Fifth Verse of the next Epistle where he saith Not as though I wrote a new Commandment and this concerning the precept of loving one another That I may the better dispatch this clause be pleased to proceed with me by these steps ● The Doctrine which our Apostle was now about to propose is called a Commandment whence observe 1. Generally That as the Law had Gospell so the Gospell hath Law in it and as it publisheth promises so it obligeth by Precepts It is the difference between promises and commands that the one importeth some good to be done for us and the other some good to be done by us the one informeth us what God will do and the other what we should do Now though the principall end of the Gospell be to declare the one yet so as that it teacheth the other For this reason it is no doubt that the Gospell is sometimes called by the name of Law as where we read of the Law of Faith and the Law of Christ and the Law of Liberty and the Law of the Spirit of Life and upon the same account the Apostle Paul cals it a Canon or a rule to which our lives must be conformed and by which our waies are to be directed and St Peter stileth it the holy Commandment from which Apostates turn and the grace of God which many interpret by a Metonymy of the Object to be the Gospell is said to teach being as well a Schoolmaster as a Comforter Finally In this respect it is that we read not only of believing the Gospell which layeth hold
commendation of these Children that they know the Father To winde up this 1. It is that which should be in the first place an item to Parents that they be carefull to traine up their Children in the knowledge of the Father Oh Parents you are industrious to provide wealth and riches for your Children but why are you not more solicitous to obtain grace and knowledge for them You take a great deale of care to enrich their bodies but why so little for the adorning of their souls what is this but to use Plutarchs comparison as if one should be very curious about the shooe and neglect the foote or exact id triming the glove whilst the hand is foule perhaps you endeavour that your Children may attaine some kinde of knowledge to wit in the tongues or arts and sciences in a trade and calling and herein you do well learning being a far better portion then riches without which the wealthiest heire is but an Ass laden with gold but oh Parents why stay you here there is one thing more needfull then either of the other and that is the knowledge of the Father what difference is there between a Pagan and a Christian Parent if your only care be to acquaint Children with secular affairs or educate them in Philosophicall studies oh let it not suffice that your Children are instructed in humane whilst they are ignorant of divine learning Tell me I beseech you is it not a sad thing and yet I would to God it were not too common that little Children through your negligent education should swear so soon as they ean speak and learn to blaspheme that God whom yet they have not been taught to know such Parents saith S● Chrysostome are worse then Homicides nay then Parricides for these take away only the bodily life of their Parents but those do what in them lyeth to cast the souls and bodies of their Children into Hell and whilst by generation they were the instruments of their temporall life through neglect of good education they become at least the occasion of their eternall death It is a dolefull story which is reported by Gregory the great to this purpose of a Childe of five years old which being carelesly or rather wickedly brought up was given to blaspheming Gods holy name and being a little after smitten with death the poore Childe cryeth to the Father Help help the Moors are come to take me away and so blaspheming God it died no doubt to the horrour and perplexity of the wicked Father It is a sad thing when Children in their old age shall have cause to complaine that their Parents had no care to bring them up in learning but is it not far more sad that Children in Hell shall cry out against their Parents because they had no regard to instruct them in the knowledg of God Let then all Parents be admonished of this necessary duty which they owe to their Children Children are sometimes called pignora pledges so they are of Gods love to us in bestowing them on us so they ought to be of our love to God in consecrating them to him They are compared to Arrows as they are at first directed so afterwards they fly● Oh let it be your endeavour that they may be directed upwards towards Heaven by divine knowledg It much conduced to Alexanders prowess and victory in his wars that his Father Philip caused him to be brought up as it is were from his radle in Military discipline Oh let it be the prudent piety of all Parents to teach their Children betimes the knowledge of the Christian warfare and to that end to begin with the knowledg of the Father 2. But secondly Let me turn my counsell from the Parents to the Children whom I cannot better bespeake then in Davids words Come ye Children hearken unto me and I will teach you the knowledg and fear of the Lord. You know your earthly Parents I but labour to know your Heavenly you know the Fathers of your Flesh ey but strive to know the Father of your Spirits you are expert it may be in Homers Odes Virgils Ecl●gs Cicero's Orations oh but strive to get understanding in Davids Psalms Solomons Proverbs and the other plaine Books of holy writ Manna was to be gathered in the morning the Orient pearl is generated of the morning dew Aurora musis amica the morning is a friend to the muses Oh remember thy Creator know him in the morning of thy Childehood When God had created the Heavens and the Earth the first thing he did was to adorne the world with light and seperate it from the darkness happy is that Childe on whom the light of saving knowledg begins to dawn early God in the Law required the first born and the first fruits so he doth still our first daies to be offered up to him They are Wisdomes own words They that seek me early shall finde me Where a Rabbin observeth a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is added to the Verb more then usuall which in numbring goeth for fifty with this note that early seeking hath not only twenty or thirty but fifty nay indeed an hundred sold recompence attending on it He that is long before he seeketh God I will not say he shall not at all but it may be long ere he finde him oh begin early whilst yet you are Children to seek the knowledge of God The better to endu●e you hereunto consider my good Children 1. You were in your very Infancy almost as soon as born dedicated to the Father being baptized in the name of the blessed Trinity Father Son and holy Ghost and will you not now that you begin to have the use of your understanding endeavour to know the Father you are already his sworne servants and souldiers will you be ignorant of him to whom you are sworne 2. If you do not now begin to know the Father you will be less docible hereafter alas how hard is it to instill knowledg into old years Can it be imagined that that tree which doth not bud nor blossome in the spring should bring forth fruit in Autumn or should flourish in Winter Now in your Childhood your wits are fresh your apprehension quick oh imploy them in studying and gaining the divine knowledg so much the rather because hereby you shall put to shame those ignorant old ones who have lived long and yet with the Ninivites know not the right hand from the left 3. Your Parents may prove unnaturall and forsake you however they are mortall and when death comes must leave you but your Father in Heaven liveth for ever and if you know and serve him he will love you and take care for you he will never leave you nor forsake you The Hen is not more tender of her Chickens nor the Sheapheard of his Lambes then this universall Father as Clemens Alexandrinus cals him is of his little ones towardly and hopefull Children You may
them is not to be one among them men seldome imagine till they finde it by woefull experience what an infectious breath there is in evill society to corrupt their mindes and manners 3. Poure out water even the water of the penitent tears for thy former impurities The heads of Dragons are broken in the waters Draconum capita vitia capitalia the heads of Dragons are capitall sins among which incontinency and intemperance are the chief and look as the greater the flam● the more water must be poured on it is not drops but buckets nay flouds of water must quench the raging fornace So according to the greatness of thy sins proportion the multitude of thy tears and if thou hast been a notorious offender in this kinde thou must be a dolorous mourner 4. Lastly Strive to blow out this fire of lust by the breath of thy Prayers solicit the throne of grace for chastity sobriety vigilancy temperance those virtues which are directly opposite to this lust yea beseech the Spirit of God that he would breath into thy soul and thereby extinguish the flame of thy lust Indeed the breath of the evill spirit maketh this fire the hotter but a blast of the good spirit will put it out at least much slacke it and therefore laying hold on the gracious promise of giving his spirit to them that aske give not over Praying till thou hast obtained the spirit of grace whereby thou maist mortifie this lust of the flesh Amen THE FIRST EPISTLE OF St JOHN CHAP. 2. VERS 15 16. Love not the world neither the things that are in the world if any man love the world the love of the Father is not in him For all that is in the world the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life is not of the Father but is of the world THat God of this world Prince of darkness and arch enemy of mankinde the Devill as he wants not virulency so he is full of subtilty Indeed it is his most usuall practice to take sinners in the snares of temptations nets of circumvention and ambushes of destruction No wonder if St Paul mindes the Corinthians of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as well as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 devices as well as strong holdes Among all his cunning stratagems none more politique and prevalent then those by which he taketh advantage from our selves against our selves To this purpose it is that he observeth the age of our lives quality of our outward condition the complexion and constitution of our bodies the abilities and endowments of our mindes dispositions and inclinations of our hearts and accordingly fits his temptations whereby too often he overcometh us The last of these and not the least St Basill taketh notice of where he saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he useth our own lusts and desires as weapons to fight against us And no wonder if the winde of his temptations blow us on amain when it joyneth with the tide of our own desires Good reason had St John having encouraged young men and in them all Christians to battle with and a victory over the wicked one to warne them of those lusts which if not mortified would be prejudiciall unto them and serviceable unto him The lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life We are now in order to proceed to a second Daughter of worldly love namely the lust of the eyes but what St John meaneth by this expression admits among Expositors of severall constructions Illyricus conceiveth that our Apostle intendeth Potissimum libidinosos aspectus chiefly lust full lookes uncleane aspects wanton glances This was that with which St Peter charged the false teachers that they had eyes full of adultery and of which our Saviour affirmeth that to looke on a woman so as to lust after her is a committing adultery with her in the heart But since this more properly is referd to the forementioned lust of the flesh and withall is too narrow a restriction of the Apostles meaning I shall pass it by There are two interpretations the one whereof is St Austins and venerable Bedes the other most generally received by ancient and modern Authors both of which being probable I shall reject neither Indeed I think we shall do best with Aquinas to look upon them as two members of one exposition and so if you would know what this lust of the eyes is the Answer is curiositas and cupiditas a desire of knowing and of having curiosity and covetousness the latter of which I shall insist upon because it is that which I incline to as most genuine 1. By this lust of the eyes We may very well understand curiosity or an inordinate desire of knowledge and whereas there is a double knowledg to wit intellectuall and sensitive both which may be inordinately desired this lust of the eyes may very well include both inasmuch as the minde hath its eyes as well as the body and so this lust is both of the mentall eyes after intellectuall and of the corporeall after sensitive knowledg 1. There is a lust of the eyes after intellectuall knowledge not but that knowledg is sutable to and consequently des●rable by the minde of man nor yet is every earnest desire after knowledg to be charged with curiosity Indeed it is such as cannot be had without and therefore must be ●ought for with diligence but if you would know when it is a lust of the eyes I answer the inordination of this desire is discovered severall waies 1. When it is a desire after knowledg for a bad end St Bernard observed in his time and it is still true Sunt qui scire volunt tantum ut sciant Some desire to know that they may know and such a desire is irregular because it maketh knowledg and end whenas it is designed to be a meanes of a furrher and better end Aquinas observeth that there are two accidentall effects of knowledge which are very evill namely to puff us up with pride and make us expert in wicked-ness and when those accidentall effects of knowledg are the intentionall ends of our desire it is a lust of the eyes the truth is knowledge is desirable chiefly in order to practice and that of good and therefore to desire it only as fuell for our self conceit or which is far worse as an help to wicked devices that we may be wise to do evill it is deservedly censured as exorbitant 2. When it is a desire after knowledg by magicall Arts and diabolicall Helps It is far better to be ignorant then to go to Schoole to the Devill That knowledg we gain by him is far fetcht because from Hell and deare bought because with the hazard of our souls 3. When by desires and endeavours after the knowledge of the things that are less needfull we are hindred from the knowledg of what is more needfull thus when men preferre
time of discovering what metal they were made of and then their true-heartednesse to their master had an opportunity to show it self Had it not been for those Heretical and Schismatical Apostates of Old those Ancient Fathers both of the Greek and Latine Church had not been such illustrious stars in the firmament of the Church were it not for those of our latter daies and here among us our Church would not have had so much to glory of her Cranmer Latimer Ridley Jewel Whitaker Whitgift and the rest who were so famous in their Generation for their magnanimity in maintaining the truth against Apostatical opposers 2 The other of the false-hearted who by going out shew themselves in their colours This is that which divine Providence bringeth about for a double end 1 For the shame of themselves ut quod occultaverunt ingenium nudarent so Lorinus that their evil disposition which before lay hid may bee laid open to their disgrace whilest these men are in the Church as gilded postes painted sepulchers whited walls they seem beautiful but when they go out the gilt and paint and white are as it were washed off whereby their shameful rottenness appeareth and according to S. Pauls phrase Their folly is made manifest to all men This is that which must fully bee accomplished at the last day when the separation between the sheep and the goats the Orthodox and the Here tick godly and wicked shall be most perspicuous and shame shall cover the faces of all Apostates but sometimes it is that which divine providence ordereth to fall out in this World and that as for their greater ignominy So 2 For the safety of others ut à fidelibus vitari possint so Estius ne alios corrumpant so Daneus that being discovered they may bee avoided and their infection prevented whilest the wolf is covered with a sheep skin hee is not so easily discerned but when the skin is plucked over his ears the true sheep can far better beware him To winde up this learn wee hence 1 To adore admire and extol the Wisdome Mercy and Justice of our God in discovering Hypocrites by their Apostacy It is that wee have so much the more reason to take notice of because wee see it so much fulfilled in our daies The times wee live in have been times of Tryal God hath as it were by a fan winnowed us whereby the chaffe is discovered as by a winde shaken us so that the rotten boughs and fruit fall off How many who whilest the Church had the reigns of government in her hands embraced her doctrin reverenced her Clergy conformed to her discipline have now made manifest that though among they were not of us their factious schismatical spirits which fear then bridled having now had an opportunity show themselves openly Oh let us blesse that divine providence which hath suffered it thus to be as in justice to them for their detection so in mercy to the Church for her purgation 2 To beware how wee please our selves with hypocritical shows Nemo diu ingenium abscondit wee cannot long conceale our temper though the Ape bee dressed up in a mans habit it will upon any opportunity discover its apish nature cito ad naturam ficta redierunt what is feigned is forced and cannot bee lasting besides it is the just judgement of God on all Hypocrites sooner or later to discover them they may for a time couzen men but God cannot bee deceived whilest yet they remain in the Church they are known to him as Judas was to Christ and though hee wink at them for a time yet in due time hee will pluck off their mask and so order it that they shall be made manifest for so it fell out here with these Antichrists who saith the Apostle went away from us that it might be manifest they were not of us THE FIRST EPISTLE OF St. JOHN CHAP. 2. 20 21. VERS 20 But yee have an unction from the holy One and yee know all things 21 I have not written unto you because yee know not the truth but because ye know it and that no lye is of the truth IT is not unfitly observed that in those colder and frosty Countries of the East there are plenty of Beasts which afford furrs to keep mens bodies warm That in the beginning of the spring when Serpents peep out of their holes the ash puts forth which is a present remedy against their sting and teeth no lesse yea far more considerable is the care of God in reference to his Church who as hee permits Heresies and Schismes to disturb her so hee hath provided helps to perserve her For this end hee hath appointed her his written word as a sure canon a safe guide and an unerring rule for this cause hee hath given some Apostles and some Prophets and some Evangelists and some Pastors and Teachers to build her up in the Orthodox faith Finally to this end above all he hath given her his holy Spirit whose illuminating and sanctifying grace is sufficient for her of which it is our Apostle here mindeth the Christians But you have an unction from the holy One c. In these two verses we have two Generals A Remedy prescribed or rather described against the Antichristian poyson But you have an unction from the holy One and know all things An Apology annexed whereby an objection is prevented which otherwise might have been made I have not written unto you because yee know not the truth but because you know it and that no lye is of the truth Begin wee with the Remedy as it is set down in the twentieth verse concerning which wee may take notice of four particulars The Quality what it is an unction The Community whose it is you have an unction The Originality whence it is from the Holy One. The efficacy what it doth and you know all things If you please to reduce the four to three take notice of The Nature of the Antidote it is an unction The Author of it who is called the Holy One. The worth of it by it wee know all things Once more reduce the three to two and then here is observable Doni collatio A gift conferred You have an unction from the Holy One. Beneficii illatio A benefit inferred and you know all things In the handling of the former of these wee shall consider these three things The matter or thing given an unction The Recipients to whom it is given you have The Donor by whom it is given the Holy One. 1 The thing given as an Antidote or remedy against the poyson of Antichristian Doctrin is an Vnction A Metaphorical and allusive expression Annoynting most properly is with oyl or else with Oyntments in which usually oyl is the chief ingredient but metaphorically annoynting is with the Spirit which is as oyl and oyntment Thus wee finde the Prophet saying concerning himself literally and Christ mystically The Spirit of the
gift namely the holy one By which some understand the third Person in the sacred Trinity to whom this character so fitly agreeth that he is usually set forth by this title the Holy Ghost but the Scripture phrase is not annoynting from but with the Holy Ghost by which is intimated that the Holy Ghost is the unguent itself and therefore it is more rational to understand by the Holy one Christ from whom it is wee have the unction of his Spirit so that in the handling of this part I shall first give you an account how fitly and fully it agreeth to Christ and then reflect upon the unction how justly it is affirmed to be from Christ 1 It would not be passed by that the Apostle mentioning Christ describeth him by holinesse it is the title by which he characterizeth himself in the beginning of his Epistle to the Church of Philadelphia These things saith he that is holy and that he spake no more than truth of himself you may hear the same from the mouth of his and our grand Adversary the Devil I know thee who thot● art the holy one of God Our Apostle here sets it down very emphatically The Holy one that is singularly eminently perfectly holy or in Daniels phrase the holy of holies which our Translators fitly render by the superlative degree the most holy one look as a little before the Devil is called The wicked one because hee is extreamly wicked so Christ is called the Holy one as being transcendently holy It is that which is true of Christ in reference to both his Natures as God and as Man 1 Holinesse is the inseparable property of a Deity it is as it were the excellency and perfection of the God-head and Crown of all the Attributes now Christ is Gods own Son to whom hee communicateth himself and so this holinesse The Angels in Isaiah and the Beasts in the Revelation giving glory to God three times iterate Holy Holy Holy with reference as some conceive to all the three Persons Holy Father Holy Son and Holy Spirit and thus Christ as God is holy in his Nature in his Decrees in his Word and Works and eternally holy in all he is and willeth he saith and doth according to that of the Psalmist He is holy in all his works 2 As man he is the holy one and that both in respect of his conception and conversation 1 His conception was holy because of the Holy Ghost who over-shadowed the Virgin purifying that part of her substance of which Christ was born whereby hee was free from all that corruption which is by Adam propagated to his posterity To this probably referrs that phrase the holy childe Jesus and certainly that of the Angel to the Virgin The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee and the power of the Highest shall over-shadow thee therefore the holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God True it is Christ took upon him the reality of frail flesh but only the likenesse of sinful flesh and though he assumed our natural yet not our vitious defects 2 His conversation was holy Indeed how could any impure stream flow from so pure a spring his nature being holy his life could not be unholy and there being an exact integrity in the one there must needs be a spotless innocency in the other on the one hand he was to bee a pattern of holinesse after whose copy all Christians are to write good reason it should be exact without the least blot on the other hand he was to be a sacrifice for sin which he could not have been if hee had not been without sin and therefore it behoved him to fulfill all righteousnesse by a full conformity to that exact rule of Gods Law Nor is he only Holy but the Holy one in respect of both his Natures 1 In regard of his Divine Nature in as much as he is essentially infinitely originally and immutably Holy essentially because his holiness is not an accident to him but his very essence infinitely because his holiness is not only without imperfection but limitation originally because his holiness is from himself he is the cause of all holinesse in the Creature immutably because it is altogether impossible he should cease to be holy for then he must cease to bee God well might Hannah say None holy as the Lord and indeed this phrase is most properly verified of him in this regard for as Aristotle though he call other things good yet when he speaketh of the chief good he calleth it by way of eminency 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Good so though the Creature may bee said to bee holy yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The holy one most properly belongs to God though yet Secondarily and in a comparative sense not only with all other men but Angels Christ in respect of his Humane nature is the Holy one and that upon a double account The one because the holinesse of his Humane nature farre surpasseth that which is in any other creature and that in as much as it was presently to bee united with the God-head and if some measure of holinesse bee required in all that approach God how unmeasurable and perfect must be that holinesse of Christs Humane nature which is united with God and in whom the fulnesse of the Godhead dwelleth bodily The other because whereas all other Creatures have holinesse only for themselves and cannot convey it to others in which respect St. Austine saith of holy Parents they beget their children Non è principiis novitatis sed è reliquiis vetustatis not from the principles of the new man but the remainders of the old man and so cannot communicate their holinesse to their children Christ is a Son of righteousnesse imparting holinesse to his Church a root of holinesse as the first Adam was of wickednesse giving the sap of grace to all his branches in which regard St. Paul saith expresly he is made to us of God sanctification O then let us learn to magnifie Christ in and for his holinesse That phrase in Moses his Hymn Who is like to thee O Lord glorious in holinesse what doth it intimate but that holinesse calls for glory and praise Worthy then is he who is the holy one to bee honoured and adored by us That expression of the Psalmist Holy and reverent is his name plainly teacheth us that sanctity calls for reverence oh let us reverence the Person and hallow the name of Christ because he is the holy one what the Romanists doe parasitically to the Pope Christs pretended Vicar calling him superlatively Most Holy Father and abstractively his Holinesse that we need not fear to doe Religiously to Christ himself And since we call our selves Christians oh let us account our selves engaged to the study and exercise of holinesse it is St. Peters reasoning since hee which hath called you is holy nor is the
argument lesse valid Hee by whose name you are called is holy be you holy in all manner of conversation because it is written Be you holy for I am holy How unsuitable are unholy members to an holy head and therefore how abominable must prophane Christians be to this Holy Jesus certainly the Holy one is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity to wit without fury in any and much lesse in his own followers and as Moses saith God will bee sanctified in those who draw nigh to him so let me tell you Christ will bee sanctified by those who professe his name and therefore either disclaim Christianity or embrace sanctity that you may be in some measure like him who is here stiled The Holy one 2 Having given you this view of the title by which Christ is called be pleased now to look upon this person so called as he is affirmed to bee the donor of the Vnction for so the text runs You have an unction from the holy one that is from Christ It is that which is true of Christ in a double causality 1 Meritorious in as much as hee was at the cost to purchase this unction and that at no lesse a rate than his own bloud the Apostle Paul speaking of Christ saith not only that in him wee have redemption through his bloud but a little after in whom you were s●aled with that holy Spirit of promise the donation of the Spirit being one of those precious benefits which Christs death hath procured for us 2 Efficient in as much as having on the Crosse purchased this Unction for us he rose from the grave and went up into Heaven for this cause among others that he might actually conferre it on us It is said there was in Rome at the day of Christs birth a Fountain of Oyl which sprang forth sure I am this Unction of the Spirit is given to Christ not only for himself but his Church and as the Oyntment trickled down from Aarons head to the very skirts of his garment so the oyl of the Spirit is diffused from Christ to all his members Those two Olive branches mentioned by the Prophet Zachary are by some expounded of Christ his two Natures and of them it is said they empty the golden oyl out of themselves to note that communicative influence from Christ to the Christian whereby he partaketh of this unction It pleased the Father saith the Apostle that in him should all fulnesse dwell not only plenitudo abundantiae but redundantiae vasis but fontis an abundant fulnesse as in a vessel filled up to the brim but a redundant fulnesse as in a fountain whose streams make glad the City of God Thus as it is said in the Psalms he received gifts so in the Epistle hee gave gifts intimating that he received gifts not only for himself but his Church that as he received from his Father the Spirit without measure so we might receive from him the Spirit by measure no wonder if the Spirit be called in Scripture the Spirit of Christ and the Spirit of Christ Jesus and the Spirit of the Lord. If any shall ask why the Apostle did not say you have an unction from him or from Christ but from the Holy one the answer may probably bee returned that it is to intimate the nature of this unction which is an holy oyntment and for that end it is chiefly given by Christ namely for the renewing and sanctifying of our natures that as the oyntment which God appointed to be made by Moses did sanctifie the things and persons which were annoynted with it so doth this unction confer holiness on those to whom it is given upon which account it is called the Spirit of holinesse and thus it is universally given to all beleevers for the preserving them both from sin and errour To end this point and so this discourse You who are Christians only in name and want this Unction you who are Christians indeed and would have this Unction more abundantly learn whither to repair for it It is our Saviours advice to the Laodicean Church and in her to all Christians I counsel thee to buy of mee this choyse commodity is no where else to be had and though it cost him dear yet he sells it us cheap our buying is only begging our paying praying and therefore acknowledging as all our comfort to be in him so grace to be from him let us continually depend on him earnestly seek to him that as he hath shed his bloud for us so he would shed his Spirit on us Amen THE FIRST EPISTLE OF St. JOHN CHAP. 2. VERS 20. But yee have an unction from the holy One and yee know all things THE Christian Religion as it imposeth difficult precepts so it proposeth pretious pr●mises and though it put the Professors of it upon frequent dangers yet it withall assureth them of glorious priviledges Among those many Promises and Priviledges none of more special concernment than this of the Holy Unction the Spirits Donation by which wee are enabled to all duty and confirmed against all perils There are two things especially by which the Christian Church and her members are endangered namely violent Persecutions and virulent Heresies these corrupt our mindes those perplex our hearts these cheat us of those affright us out of truth but this spiritual Unction is both our consolation and illumination the latter of which it is that our Apostle acquaints us with in the Text But you have c. The second part of this verse is that which I am now to handle namely Beneficii illatio the Benefit conferr'd on all true Christians by vertue of this Unction as it is set down in those words And you know all things For the fuller discussion whereof bee pleased to consider it both absolutely and relatively inclusively and exclusively by the one wee shall see the Nature of the benefit wherein it consists how far it reacheth and by the other its Original whence it floweth and on what it dependeth namely the Holy unction 1 Begin wee with the absolute consideration of the benefit and inquire what is involved in this You know all things There is some little difference in the reading of one word in this clause which would not bee omitted The Syriack reads it as if it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 you know all men and so the benefit here intended is that which is called by S. Paul discerning of spirits 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Theophilact 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to know who is spiritual and who is not who is a Prophet and who is a deceiver nor is this reading here unsuitable because the Apostle just before speaketh of Antichrists between whom and the Orthodox S. John might look upon the Christians to whom hee wrote as able to judge Now this gift in the primitive times was double The one more special onely conferred by the Spirits
here intended and hath already been unfolded Indeed as to corporeal sight there are among others two things especially required to wit an eye within and a Light without and therefore if either adest lumen et desunt oculi light bee present but the visive faculty absent or adsunt oculi et deest lumen the visive faculty be present but the light absent there can bee no sight so is there required to spiritual knowledge an external revelation and an internal illumination the one whereof sets the object before us and the other elevateth the understanding within us and both of those are from this unction 1 By the extraordinary unction of the Holy Ghost the Apostles were inspired to reveal both by their Tongues and pens Evangelical Doctrin and had there not been this Revelation of it wee could never have known it It is not once but often that the Gospel is called a mystery yea saith S. Paul without controversy it is a great mystery Now a mystery as S. Chrysostome well observeth is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 something unutterable admirable and unconceivable so that it could never have been found out by us had it not been made known to us from above As for Humane Natural things Reason is conversant about them and yet ever in these it is many times nonplus'd as being not able to fathome the depth of them but as to Divine things Reason is not onely dimme but blinde Indeed there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some common Principles of Divinity and Morality Religion and Honesty still remaining in our Nature but Evangelical verities are such as Reason could never have prompted to us so that what our Saviour said to Peter concerning the particular Article of his being the Son of the living God flesh and blood hath not revealed it to thee may bee asserted of all the Doctrins of the Gospel they are such as Natural reason could never have revealed to us True it is reason that Candle of the Lord as Solomon calls it affords so much light even to Pagans as will render them inexcusable since their not walking according to Reasons dictates shall be their condemnation but it is Christ The Sun of Righteousnesse as Malachy calls him who giveth us that light by following of which wee may attain salvation for no man knoweth the Father whom to know is eternal life but the Son and him to whom the Son revealeth him But this is that truth which is agreed to on all hands even Pelagians and Socinians acknowledging the necessity of Divine Revelation in order to the acquisition of Happiness Bee pleased therefore to know further that by the ordinary unction of the Spirit which is conferred on every Christian in some degree or other there is a spiritual illumination of the minde whereby Natural Reason is elevated to a right apprehension of Evangelical doctrines and this is no lesse needful than the former to which purpose is that gloss of Calvin upon the Text Non acumine proprii sensus rectè sapiunt homines sed illuminatione Spiritus It is not by the sharpenesse of our own understanding but by the inlightning of the Spirit that wee savour divine things To this Truth S. Paul giveth a most clear and full evidence where hee saith in expresse words But the natural man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can hee know them because they are spiritually discerned where the chief question to bee resolved in order to the genuine Interpretation of the words is who is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Natural man concerning whom this is said that he receiveth not and cannot know the things of the Spirit of God Some affirm the Natural man to bee the weak beleever but how weakly will appear if wee observe the opposition of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is not to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one who is perfect but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every one who is spiritual which though it bee more eminently true of the strong yet it is verified of every true Christian hee is one who hath not received the spirit of the World but the Spirit which is of God and so is among the number of the we mentioned in the twelfth verse of that Chapter And which fully cleareth it that the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here cannot be the weak Christian is that the things of the Spirit are said to bee foolishness to him which cannot bee affirmed of any true Christian though never so weak who hath Learned to adore and admire those divine mysteries which hee cannot apprehend Suitable hereunto it is that the Apostle in the eighteenth verse of the former Chapter saith The Preaching of the Crosse is foolishnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to them that perish whereas the weakest Christian is among the number of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the latter clause of that verse them who are saved to whom therefore it is impossible that the things of the Spirit should bee foolishnesse Others there are who by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 understand the man who is altogether destitute of the helps of ingenuous education and Divine Revelation whereas our Apostle plainly tells us in the former chapter that they were the wise Disputers of the World to whom Evangelical doctrin when revealed did seem no other than folly and therfore when Paul Preached at Athens a place of literature and Knowledge Arts and Sciences the cry of those Sophies is what will this babler say Once again Some there are who interpret this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to bee one who is given to sensual lusts and so hath his Reason clouded by carnal affections but it should then have been 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 between which Suidas and Isidore Peleusiota from whom probably the other borrowed it make this distinction that the Carnal man is one who serveth the flesh and suffereth himself to bee guided by his corrupt affections and the natural or animal man one who builds upon humane Reason thinking by his ra●i●cinations disputations and syllogismes to finde out what is just and profitable not craving or admitting the influence of the Spirit The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then here mentioned is every man who though otherwise well furnished with intellectuals and morals having all those improvements of Reason which all kinde of Philosophy can afford him is yet altogether destitute of the inlightening and renewing grace of the Holy Spirit nor is this my distinction but St. Judes who in the Characters hee giveth of those false Teachers puts these two together 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 explaining the former by the latter and letting us see that all such who have not the Spirit are meer Natural men Of this Natural man St. Paul plainly and positively asserteth hee receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God indeed there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some
things of God which a natural man may know but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the things of the Spirit of God to wit the truths which are purely Evangelical hee receiveth not nor is it said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he doth not finde them out but when they are found out and revealed to him hee doth not receive them nor is it only a reception of them into his will but understanding which is intended for it followeth hee cannot know them nor is it onely said hee doth not but hee cannot it being impossible for him meerly by the help of natural reason to attain the knowledge of them and this because they are spiritually discerned that is the Spirit of God which revealeth them must also inable to discern them Indeed Socinus would explain the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee receiveth not that is hee findeth not out the things of the Spirit of God but this notion of the word findeth no parallel in the New Testament nay is against the nature of the thing for receiving supposeth some thing offered which when it is applied to Doctrins the offering is the revealing them nor is it lesse incongruity to interpret this of St. Paul hee receiveth not that is hee findeth not out than if one should expound that of S. James receive the ingrafted word that is finde it out which will so much the more appear if you observe the reason annexed why the natural man receiveth them not to wit because they are foolishnesse to him and if these things were to bee found out how could the natural man apprehend them to bee foolishnesse I have been so much the longer in the Explication of this Scripture because it is an explication of the Text and the truth in hand For the prevention of those Objections which may bee made against and the further confirmation of this position be pleased to know that 1 The Reasonable Creature is the subject of Evangelical Doctrin this Spirit doth not bestow his Oile upon Trees and Plants Beasts or Birds nor doth hee raise up of stones and blooks children to Abraham all Divine knowledge is grafted upon the stock of Natural Reason 2 By that Native light of reason within us wee may attain the knowledge of many things delivered in the Gospel those I mean which are common to the Holy Scripture with other writings How many things Historical Moral Speculative Practical are there in the sacred books which wee meet with in Heathen Authors Our gracious God would not so over-whelm humane infirmity in the patefaction of Evangelical mysteries that there should bee nothing for reason to fix upon and yet withall hee would not have all things so suitable to reason that there should be no need of faith 3 The litteral sense of the Scripture words may through industry bee attained to by the help of Reason Skill in the Tongues though it was for a time immediately and extraordinary conferred upon illiterate persons by the Holy Ghost yet is such a gift as may bee attained to by common helps and the same industry which renders a man expert in giving the Grammatical sense of other Authors may no doubt inable him to do the like in reading the books of the sacred Pen-men nay more the Spirit of God in Scripture doth not affect that obscurity of Language which some other writers do and so the sense of it may more easily bee gathered 4 The Spirit of God inlightening us to understand those truths which are purely Evangelical maketh use of Reason this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 flower of the soul is not blasted but rather the more opened by the blowing of the blessed Spirit when a man commeth to bee initiated into the School of Christianity hee is not commanded to throw away his Reason onely to subjugate it Indeed every Christian must deny his Reason but that is as hee must deny his affections as it is not the extirpating but the moderating of his affections so it is not the casting away but the captivating of his Reason to the obedience of faith which Christian Religion requireth In one word whilest the Spirits grace is acknowledged to bee principium the principal efficient cause I shall not deny Reason to bee instrumentum an instrumental cause whereby wee come to the knowledge of Divine things 5 And therefore lastly this still remaineth as a sure maxim That Natural Reason by what helps soever improved is altogether insufficient without the Spirits grace to the savoury apprehension of those supernatural and purely Evangelical verities which are revealed in the Holy Scriptures It is not unfitly observed that as nature hath its Secrets and Arts their crafts so all Religions have their mysteries which are not known but to them who are brought up in them It were easy to instance in the Persians Indians Syrians Grecians Egyptians Romans who had their mysterious rites which the Devil taught them and accordingly were taken up in imitation of the true Religion which both in the Jewish and Christian Church never wanted its mysteries such as none can comprehend neither can any apprehend but those who are taught by the blessed Spirit This is expresly asserted by Christ himself when hee saith to his Disciples It is given to you to know the mysterys of the Kingdome vobis datum non vobiscum natum this knowledge is not born with you but given to you if then innate reason were sufficient what need it bee given nor is it onely by outward revelation for so it was to those Scribes and Pharisees the wise and prudent from whom yet those things are said to bee hid to wit because their eies were not spiritually inlightened to discern them if you would know what it is that was given to these Disciples let one of them the beloved Disciple inform you and that in this very Epistle where hee saith The Son of God is come and hath given us an understanding to know him that is true so that not onely the Revelation of that we are to know but the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 understanding it self whereby wee know was given by Christ and this as a peculiar grace conferred on some whilest it s denied to others To this purpose tend those metaphors of opening the eies and opening the heart plainly intimating that in the work of Conversion there is not onely an outward but an inward work nor are Evangelical truths onely revealed by the Word but the rational faculties are rectified by the Spirit what more pregnant instance of this truth than Nicodemus to whom the Evangelical Doctrin of Regeneration was preached by Christ himself and yet by whom it was not understood for want of the Spirits illumination no wonder if Gods Promise to his people runs I will give them an heart to know mee without which though hee had showed his Word and Statutes to them they would still have continued ignorant as to any
Paul saith of himself that hee was separated unto the Gospel of God which he had promised afore by his Prophets in the Holy Scriptures and concerning his Doctrin that hee said no other things than those which the Prophets and Moses did say should come for this Reason it was no doubt that St. Peter wills those to whom hee writeth that they should take heed to the sure word of Prophecy as to a light that shineth in a dark place In this comparing of the Prophecies concerning the Messiah with the History of Jesus I shall not mention all nor yet largely insist on th●se I shall mention so as to vindicate them from all cavils since then this one discourse would swell to a volume and besides it hath been abundantly done by the Learned already onely I shall run over the principal and that in such a way as I hope will strengthen the Christian if not convince the gainsayer The Prophecies of the Messiah which wee meet with in the Old Testament are such as concern his Birth Doctrin Miracles Offices Sufferings and Exaltation all which will upon due search be found true in Jesus 1 Concerning the Messiahs Birth there are four forts of Predictions referring to the time the place the tribe the manner 1 The first prophecy we meet with concerning the time of the Messiahs comming into the world is that of Jacob where he ●aith The Scepter shall not depart from Judah nor a Law-giver from between his feet until Shiloh come and unto him shall the gathering of the people bee That by Shiloh is meant the Messiah may appear in that it is so rendred by the three-fold Targum of O●kelos Jonathan and Hierusalem and withall the periphrasis annexed to him shall bee the gathering of the people can agree to none but him Now that which Jacob asserteth concerning the Messiah is that there should not be a total extirpation of all Civil power in the tribe of Judah before the Messiah came and thence it necessarily followeth that the extirpation of the Civil power is a sure note of the Messiahs being come Another Prophecy concerning the Messiahs advent wee meet with in Daniel and it is uttered by an Angel Seventy weeks are determined upon thy people and upon thy holy City to finish the transgression and to make an end of sins and to make reconciliation for iniquity and to bring in everlasting Righteousnesse and to seal up the ●●sion and Prophecy and to annoint the most holy know therefore and understand that from the going forth of the Commandement to restore and to build Jerusalem unto the Messiah the Prince shall bee seven weeks and threescore and two weeks shall the street bee built again and the wall even in troublesome times and after threescore and two weeks shall Messiah bee cut off but not for himself and the people of the Prince that shall come shall destroy the City and the Sanctuary and the end thereof shall bee with a floud and unto the end of the war desolations are determined where the Angel plainly assirmeth among many other things that the Messiah should come and bee cut off before the destruction of the City and the Sanctuary whence it is naturally inferred that the actual overthrow of the City and Sanctuary is an undoubted sign of the Messiahs being come Parallel to this are those two Prophecies the one in Haggai and the other in Malachy The Prophet Haggai brings in God himself thus saying Yet once it is a little while and I will shake the Heavens and the Earth and the Sea and the dry land and I will shake all Nations and the desire of all Nations shall come and I will fill this house with glory yea the glory of this latter house shall bee greater than of the former saith the Lord of Hoasts That this is a prediction of the Messiah will appear among others by this one irrefragable argument The latter house which is here spoken of was far short of the former and in particular there were five things awanting in it The Urim and Thummim The Ark of the Covenant The Schechinah The fire from Heaven and The spirit of Prophecy Now there cannot any thing bee rationally affirmed as that which notwithstanding those defects should render this latter house more glorious than the former but onely the Messiahs presence Finally the Prophet Malachy in the name of God saith Behold I will send my messenger and hee shall prepare the way before mee and the Lord whom you seek shall suddainly come to his Temple even the messenger of the Covenant whom you delight in behold hee shall come where those words The Lord whom you seek are no other then a periphrasis of the Messiah whom the Jews expected whom this last of the Prophets fore-tells not onely to come but to come suddainly and that with a double behold to intimate both the certainty and propinquity of his comming by both these predictions it is elearly manifest that the Time of the Messiahs comming was to bee whilest this latter Temple was standing and therefore the destruction of the Temple is an undeniable note of the Messiahs being come By what hath been said from these Prophecies one would think the Jew might bee convinced of his folly in still looking for a Messiah when as it is so many hundred years since the Jewish Government together with the City and Temple of Jerusalem was destroyed And that the Jesus whom we professe to be the Christ was born before this utter dissipation is an History so clear that I suppose none will question it Indeed many Learned Christians have taken great pains and to good purpose exactly paralleling the time of the comming of Jesus with the Prophecies of Christ and especially with that which is the most punctual Prophecy to wit Daniels referring the going forth of the Commandement not to that which was given by Cyrus but by Artaxerxes Longimanus in the twentieth year of his reign yea some among the Jews as Rabbi N●hemiah who lived fifty years before Jesus did affirm that the Messiah should come at that time when Jesus was born Nay Porphiry that bitter enemy of Christians saw the History of Jesus so clearly corresponding to the Prophecy in Daniel that his last refuge is to deny those Prophecies to bee Daniels But not troubling my self or you with Chronological computations It is enough for our present purpose if it bee granted which I see not how it can bee denyed that Jesus was born whilest yet the Temple and City of Jerusalem was standing and about the time of the utter departure of the Civil Government from Judah Besides the Sacred History of the Gospel the Testimony of Josephus the Jew and the Letter sent by Pilate a Roman to Tiberius to which both Tertullian and Justin Martyr appeal do sufficiently evince that there was such a person at that time born and living in Judea and at last crucified by the Jews 2
Kingdome an eternal glory and everlasting joy an eternal inheritance and everlasting salvation and very frequently eternal and everlasting life nor is it without good reason that this Epithete is made so much use of and that especially on a double account 1 Propter eminentiam to advance the excellency of this Life St. Austin enlarging in the praises of this life heapeth up a multitude of excellencies The Life saith hee which God hath prepared for them that love him is vita vitalis beata secura tranquilla pulchra munda casta sancta a lively happy secure peaceable amiable pure chaste and holy life but stil that which crowneth all is its eternity and therefore the Father goeth on ignaramortis nescia tristitiae it is a joy which cannot be interrupted with any sorrow and a life which is altogether ignorant of death it is sine labe sine dolore sine anxietate sine perturbatione corruptione et mutatione without spot or wrinkle without sorrow or vexation without change or corruption Look as in respect of Divine attributes eternity is that which runs through and puts a lustre upon them all so that it were little to say of God hee is holy wise just good nay that hee is omnipotent omniscient omnipresent unlesse wee could say hee is eternally all these so is it in respect of the excellencies of that other life they could afford little comfort were they not eternal 2 Propter differentiam to difference it from and set it in opposition against this present life This life how sweet soever is but short that life is not onely sweet but lasting yea everlasting This life as to many acts of it is suspended by sleep and at last wholly taken away by death that life knoweth no cessation nor interruption but shall bee one continued act Here Orimur morimur wee no sooner begin to live but wee hasten to death our life is like an hour-glass which is no sooner turned up but it begins to run out or like a Lease which is no sooner taken but it begins to expire the longer our time past hath been on earth that to come is so much the shorter and the more wee grow in Life the nearer wee are to Death But there the Sun riseth and never setteth continually shining in its full spendor that estate is not a Lease for years but an inheritance for ever This Life is a fading flower a flitting shadow a vanishing vapour but that is a flourishing laurel an induring substance a fixed Star Finally This Life is so short that it may bee measured by months by daies by hours but that is so long as it cannot bee measured by Years nor Jubiles nor Ages since when those happy Saints have lived so many millions of ages as there are piles of grasse on the earth drops of water in the Ocean sands upon the Sea-shore or stars in the firmament their life shall bee as new to begin and as long to continue as at the first moment when they entered into the possession of it and thus I have given you an account of the excellency of the benefit pass we on to the Certainty of the Conveyance in those words This is the Promise promised The Explication of this branch will be dispatched in two Queries What this meaneth that eternal life is said to be promised Why it is so emphatically called The Promise 1 Inquire wee a little into the import of this word promised and this will the better appear by considering it in a fourfold opposition to wit twofold in reference to him by whom and twofold in respect of us to whom it is promised 1 In regard of him by whom it is promised wee may very well consider it as opposed to a bare intention and a meer declaration 1 Eternal Life is promised not onely purposed I confesse in one Scripture promised is no more than purposed to wit where St. Paul to Titus saith of eternal Life it was promised before the World began but according to the common notion and usual acception promised is more than purposed A Purpose is onely the thought of the heart a Promise is the fruit of the lips A purpose is secret and hidden a promise is open and manifest Finally A Purpose is onely an intention of the minde but a Promise is the revelation of the intention This Eternal Life was from all eternity purposed and being purposed could not but bee accomplished for the Decrees of God must stand but had it not been promised as well as purposed wee might at last have injoyed it but in the mean time could not have known it it would have been as a treasure hid a fountain sealed a spring shut up Gods purpose then is the emanation and his promise is the signification of his will whereby it becomes manifest unto us Nor yet is this all but 2 Promised is more than declared it is one thing to reveal and another to promise that onely m●keth known but this maketh sure that giveth notice of but this an interest in when therefore eternal Life is said to bee promised it doth not onely mean that it is intended but that it is manifested yea not only that it is manifested but that it is assured God hath not onely set before the Sons of men this eternal life as a thing in it self real and excellent no nor yet onely as that which may possibly yea probably bee attained but hee hath promised that is he hath in his word given an undoubted assurance that hee will bestow it and this is the meaning of hath promised Nor yet is it a simple naked promise but such as is attended with an oath so the Author to the Hebrews expresly God willing more abundantly to show unto us the heirs of Promise the immutability of his counsel confirms it by an Oath that we might have strong consolation who have fled for refuge to the hope set before us which hope is no other than the thing hoped for eternal life yea more than this both the word and oath are upon record in Holy Writ and all this hath a seale annexed to it both the privie seal of the Spirit and the broad seal of the holy Sacraments for our further confirmation If then you will have the import of these words be hath promised in reference to God it is that hee hath not only resolved but spoken it not only spoken of such a life but said hee will give it us yea not only spoken but sworn and this not only with his lips but it is as is were under hand and seal 2 In respect of us to whom it is promised wee may look upon it in a double opposition to actual possession and due desert Eternal life is promised yet not possessed the promise is past it is the preterperfect tense hath the possession to come St. Paul useth the future tense shall give It is not unfitly observed that it is the wisdome of Divine dispensation
here we have something supposed and something proposed that which is supposed is his presence The annoynting which you have received of him that which is proposed is his residence Abideth in you 1 That which is here supposed concerning this unction cometh first to be considered and shall be dispatched in three Propositions 1 That this annoynting is not in us of our selves but received by us from another It is St. Pauls Question and though it be occasioned by a discourse of those extraordinary gifts yet it holds true in reference to all What hast thou that thou hast not received the sins which wee commit are our own but the grace to subdue them is received though wee are sometimes subdue into errour yet wee are apt to fall into them our selves but the unction which armeth us against those errours is received It is a meditation which should keep the best Christians lowly in their own eyes Hast thou this annoynting whilest others want it or hast thou it in a greater measure than others be not proud but humble for though it be in thee subjectively yet it is not from thee effectively and therefore no just cause of Self-exaltation it is St. Pauls inference upon the fore-mentioned question If thou doest receive it why doest thou glory as if thou hadst not received it Where the manner of proposal by way of question intimateth as Musculus well glosseth the impudence of this arrogance Ridiculum planè est de alienis bonis superbire It is a ridiculous thing with Aesops Crow to bee proud of borrowed feathers in one word as to boast our selves of what wee have not is abominable so it it little less odious to boast of what wee have as if it were our own when as it is only received 2 That this annoynting is received of him that is Christ it was at first received by Christ himself to wit as man in his Human nature but he received it not so much for himself as us Voluit accipere ut potuit tribuere he would as Man receive that as Mediator hee might convey it to us Indeed it hath pleased the Father saith St. Paul that in him should all fulnesse dwell to wit as water in the Fountain light in the Sun Wine in the Grape and oyl in the Olive and accordingly saith St. John of his fulnesse wee all receive and that grace for grace What the Head is to the Body that is Christ to the Church and as the members receive sense and motion from the Head so doth the Church this unction from Christ Learn hence 1 How greatly we are beholding to Christ of whom it is that we receive whatsoever measure wee have of this Spiritual unction the truth is whatsoever Spiritual benefit we receive it is only in and through Christ The Remission of sins and Adoption of Sons the Justification of our persons and Sanctification of our natures the Donation of his Spirit and acceptation of our services the Redemption of our bodies and Salvation of our Souls are all received through Christ so justly doth St. Paul say He hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ Jesus 2 What need wee have to bee ingrafted into Christ since as wee can receive nothing but of him so neither can we unlesse we first receive him To as many as received him saith the Evangelist to them he gave power to become the Sons of God and to as many as receive him it is that hee giveth his Spirit no wonder that St. Paul praying for the Ephesians that they might be strengthened with the spirit of Christ prayeth also that he might dwell in their hearts by faith since it is by our faith in Christ that wee receive him and consequently his Spirit which is this annoynting 3 Lastly This receiving of the unction from him is by way of gift Indeed receiving in its largest extent is the correlative both of debitum and donum a debt and a gift what is duly paid and what is freely given both are said to bee received But when it is used in reference to God and Christ it cannot relate but onely to a gift since whatever wee receive of him and much more the annointing of the Spirit is given of his meer mercy Indeed in respect of himself it may bee called a debt hee having pleased by his Promise to make himself a debtor and accordingly it is that the Spirit is called the Spirit of Promise because promised both by the Father and the Son for so wee finde the expressions varyed the Comforter whom my Father will send and I will give you But still in respect of us it is a free gift it was love moved him at first to promise this unction to and since to confer it on us in which respect it is called the gift of the holy Ghost True it is this annointing was received by Christ from his Father as purchased by his pretious blood but it is received by us from Christ as bestowed by his free grace It is a consideration which should so much the more oblige us to thankfulnesse for this unction it being but reason that when wee receive wee should acknowledge the Donor and that what is received freely should bee acknowledged the more gratefully wee have received the Spirit of God saith the Apostle that wee may know the things which are freely given us of God among which the Spirit himself is not the least and who so knoweth them to bee freely given cannot but bee greatly thankful Holy Jesus wee could do nothing that is good nor avoid what is evil did wee not receive this Unction from thee nor do we receive this Unction as a reward of our merit but a fruit of thy bounty Wee are unworthy to receive the annointing from thee but thou art worthy to receive from us glory and honour and praise now and for ever 2 That which is next in order to be discussed and is more directly expressed is the Residency of this Schoolmaster the abiding of this Unctio● Things that are ●●id in Oil are most lasting this sacred annointing is prmanent It is that which is true in respect of the Church in general and each Christian in particular 1 This Annointing abideth in the Church That Holy Spirit who is here set forth under the notion of a Teacher is by our Saviour described as a Comforter concerning whom hee tells his Disciples that hee shall abide with them for ever which Promise was made to them as the then representatives of and so in them to the whole Church accordingly it is that the Spirit hath been resident in all Ages with the Christian Church to teach and comfort and perform all other Offices whereof shee stands in need Christs presence with his Disciples was temporary in which respect St. Johns word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee dwelt among us so our Translation reads it but as in a Tabernacle
of our peace yet wee are very apt to bee with-drawn from them especially by the cunning of Seducers but blessed bee God this Unction abideth with us and enableth us to abide Oh let us herein rejoyce that the wisdome of our Saviour hath so fully provided for our safety and let it bee our daily prayer that this holy Unction would still vouchsafe to remain with us so as wee may bee instructed confirmed and preserved by it to everlasting life Amen THE FIRST EPISTLE OF St. JOHN CHAP. 2. VERS 28. And now little Children abide in him that when he shall appear wee may have confidence and not be ashamed before him at his comming MAny are the Diseases to which the inward as well as the outward man is subject The Feaver of Luxury the Surfet of Gluttony Meagrom of Drunkennesse Lethargy of Sloath and Ague of Idlenesse all which are involved in the Lust of the flesh the Itch of Curiosity and the Dropsy of Covetousnesse which are the lusts of the Eies the Tumor of Arrogancy and the Timpany of Ambition which are the Fride of Life are not more common than dangerous sicknesses no wonder if our Apostle being a spiritual Physician cautioneth us and prescribeth in this Chapter an excellent Antidote against them of not loving the World and the things of the World But besides these the Consumption of Envy the Frenzy of Malice the Giddinesse of Inconstancy and Falling-sicknesse of Apostacy are no lesse deadly and farre more spreading for this cause it is that our Apostle throughout this whole Epistle very much insisteth upon brotherly love the only cure of malice and envie and in the latter part of this Chapter earnestly perswadeth a firm adherence to the Christian Faith the proper remedy of inconstancy and Apostacy the close of which Discourse is in the words of the text And now little children abide in him c. In which verse there are three things offer themselves to our observation ●●e Manner the Matter the Motive The manner ●●●●et The matter ser●us The motive strong The manner Rhetorical The matter Theological The motive Logical The manner vehement The matter important The motive urgent Finally The manner in the Compellation Little Children The matter in the Exhortation And now abide in him The motive in the Incitation That when hee shall appear we may have confidence and not bee ashamed before him at his coming of each of which with brevity and perspicuity 1 Begin we with the Compellation which having had occasion once and again to handle shall bee quickly passed over only I cannot but with Ferus take notice of the excelleat Artifice of our Apostle who calleth them to whom he wrote Little Children Ut oftensione affect us sui fortius moveat thatby discovering the dearness of his love towards them they might bee the more easily perswaded by him St. Paul writing to the Romans concerning false Teachers saith they did deceive the simple by fair and smooth words Surely the Ministers of Christ should be no lesse artificial in perswading than they are in deceiving and to that end use smooth and fair words Me thinketh those words of our Saviour to his Disciples when so many forsook him carry in them a great deal of passion Will you also goe away and no doubt they made a suitable impression on them witnesse Peters answer Lord whither shall wee goe what affectionate straines are those of St. Paul and St. Peter I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God so St. Paul Dearly beloved I beseech you so St. Peter and if wee well weigh it wee shall finde as much nay more in this of St. John And now little children the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which answers to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek is not only an adverb of time but a particle of beseeching and this title Little children seemeth to intimate that our Apostle beseecheth them Per eam Paternam benevolentiam by the love of a Father yea by the bowels of a Mother You that are Parents know with what tender affections you speak to your Children when you disswade them from evil or perswade them to good the same Spirit was in this holy Apostle Mira sollicita de suorum salute cura it was a strange solicitous care and desire which he had of their Salvation which put him upon this earnest way of exhorting them to perseverance Oh that all the Ministers of the Word would learn to fellow this pattern I told you in the last Lecture it is only God that can speak to the heart inwardly and effectually but certainly that Minister shall soonest convey as it were his words into the heart who speaketh with his heart yea rather speaketh his heart whose expressions manifest his affection as to the things concerning which so to the persons to whom he speaketh and this shall suffice for a brief account of the Compellation 2 Proceed we to the Exhortation in those words And now abide in him Before I discusse the nature of the duty it will not be amisse to observe that what is assured in the end of the former verse You shall abide in him is prescribed in the beginning of this abide in him Abiding in Christ is the matter of both a promise and a precept it is that which wee shall finde verified in other duties as well as this I will put my fear in their hearts so runs the Promise Fear the Lord so frequently the Precept A new heart will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you so God promiseth make you a new heart and a new spirit so hee commandeth The Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart to love him is the promise and in the same Chapter I command thee this day to love the Lord thy God Indeed there may seem some kind of incongruity in this at the first view for what need is there of commanding us to doe what God promiseth hee will enable us to doe but in truth there is a sweet harmony between precepts and promises of this nature whilst these serve to strengthen our confidence and those to quicken our diligence when on the one hand we are exhorted to abide in Christ wee may be ready to say but How shall I bee able to perform this duty my enemies are so strong and grace so weak that I fear I shall let goe my hold and as David once said I shall one day fall by the hands of Saul so the weak though willing Christian is apt to say I shall one day fall by the power and policy of the Devil and notwithstanding all my resolutions and endeavours I fear my deceitful heart will bee with-drawn from Christ But loe for our comfort and encouragement here is a promise that by the vertue of this Unction wee shall abide On the other hand when we meet with these and such like promises of perseverance we may be ready to flatter our selves