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A54032 Divine essays, or, Considerations about several things in religion of very deep and weighty concernment both in reference to the state of the present times, as also of the truth itself : with a lamenting and pleading postscript / by Isaac Penington (Junior) Esq. Penington, Isaac, 1616-1679. 1654 (1654) Wing P1162; ESTC R40044 96,398 144

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any darkness about it self it is not free If there be any rubs in its way it cannot walk freely therefore God promiseth to this life an high way a plain path in the day of its redemption and freedom as Isai. 35.8 If its light be not very full and cleer and its strength absolutely perfect in reference to its own nature and state it will want of its Liberty it will not be able to come forth or walk in perfect freedom So that that Liberty which is perfect and compleat must be of a perfect seed from a perfect root perfectly grown up and scituated in the life and Spirit of the Lord from which alone it proceedeth and groweth up and in which alone it can live and be enjoyed It hath been and still is a great question how far those that are in Christ are freed from the Law and whether their sins be against the Law or no or only against Christ who is their Life and Law In relation whereunto since it falleth so fairly in my way I shall lay down three Conclusions which may occasion the cleering of it in part and the further better right understanding of this Liberty wherewith I intend to conclude the point only adding somewhat concerning the abuse which it is very liable unto as every other spiritual thing also is in the way that hitherto it hath broke forth and appeared and right use of Liberty from the following words The Conclusions are these 1. He that is in Christ cannot sin against the Law because he is not under it and therefore cannot be bound by it nor be engaged to give any account unto it He is under another husband and therefore free from this as the Apostle reasoneth Rom. 7. But yet mark As Christ himself in his fleshly state was under the Law who was the forerunner and pattern so all his seed in their fleshly state are under the Law likewise They may have sometimes a sight of life and a taste of liberty but until they have followed Christ into his grave and are become dead with him yea and risen with him too they shall not enjoy it While the life lives in the flesh it lives under the Law when the life comes to live in the spirit alone it shall be perfectly freed from the Law This is most certain The life of its own nature is not under the Law nor can its nature to speak properly be subjected to the Law though it may act a part of subjection for a season yet in the acting of that part the sparklings of a diviner life and Law which swallow up this weak life with the whole Law of it cannot but now and then appear as they did in Christ in the time of his subjection and servitude But the man in which the life inhabits and through which the life acts is weak and hath only a promise of strength and of redemption with the life after his death and resurrection with it but hath not any full sense or participation of it but is to remain under bondage and to travail up and down in the wilderness of this worldly state with the life until then And though in the Apostles times the Lord did let out both this life and this liberty into the humane nature in his Saints to give a little glimps what they were yet they were let forth but weakly and they were soon clapped in again and the old husband the Law returns and takes universal possession again though under the name of the life and Liberty of the Gospel This then is the sum To all men whatsoever until they be swallowed up into the spirit of Christ the law is still a Schoolmaster and they may find if they observe themselves the Law of nature or the Law of good and evil which is written in their hearts by nature and further revived by acquired knowledg whether from the light springing up in man and so received thence or from the light held forth in the Scriptures continually instructing and discipling of them As a Schoolmaster it exerciseth them as its Disciples and Schollars Yea in the very times of the Apostles though they had attained a strain of freedom which was not attained before yet they were not altogether free but groaned under bondage and panted after Liberty 2. He that is in Christ cannot do that which the Law judgeth to be sin He cannot act against the righteousness that is in the Law He can no more live to sin then he can live to the Law He hath as little to do with any thing which the Law judgeth evil as with the Law it self He can give no offence to any that have any true light in them for he can do nothing against any true light in any kind This is the nature of truth It longeth for it seeketh after it knoweth it embraceth both its own image and its own substance Truth in the image longeth after the substance Truth in the substance comprehendeth acknowledgeth and embraceth the image The righteousness which is in Christ and his seed in its nature motions and actions comprehendeth the righteousness of the Law Indeed it cannot be comprehended by it but it comprehends it and the righteousness of the Law knoweth it and giveth way to it It hath more in it a far higher kind of righteousness then the Law calleth for but it hath that also Every spiritual motion is beyond the nature and excellency of the Law but yet it hath all that excellency that the Law can possibly expect or exact and therfore cannot offend against the life or truth of the Law The life and righteousness that is in Christ most naturally cherisheth the life and righteousness that is in the Law which they who taste of the truth as it is in Iesus are taught to understand 3. If he could possibly do that which the Law judgeth to be sin yet his sin would not be directly against the Law for the Law cannot judg him as a sinner who is not under it but against his own life which is a greater offence and hath more of the nature of sin in it then if it were against the Law He that is in Christ hath a new life in him which is sown in his spirit and his spirit with that life is transplanted into Christ who is his Lord and Lawgiver And what he now is he is in Christ and what he now does he does unto Christ and is not now any longer under that dispensation of the Law in which he was before his transplantation so that he is not henceforth so much as in a capacity of sinning against it This then is the sum They that are in Christ in his Spirit dead and risen with him who are entred into and swallowed up in the newness Vertue Life and Power of his Death and Resurrection are not subject to the Law of any dispensation though they can also fulfil any yea and are to fulfil the Law of every dispensation but
by which she is exalted and adorned in her greatest seemingly spiritual glory it is the root of the spirit which begets brings forth and feeds Sion even in her lowest ebb and diminution So that mark now you shall finde the same things in both All that you can finde in Sion you may finde in Babylon there is not any knowledg there is not any practise which the spirit of man cannot take up nay and perhaps go through with better then the seed but yet there is a vast difference they are still of a different nature which difference floweth from the difference of the root Therefore if a man will indeed know his estate and condition it is not to be done so much by considering of any thing that is in him or of any thing that floweth from him barely in it self as to search out thereby and therein the root from which it proceedeth Not so much to conclude I am safe because I repent or beleeve but to find out the true root from whence these flow to seek for the true nature in the things themselvs To make this to be more manifest I shall instance in some things of the greatest consequence and shew that the distinction among them doth arise from the nature of their root as particularly in these 1. In Regeneration 2. In Knowledg 3. In Repentance 4. In Faith 5. In Love 6. In Experience 7. In Liberty All which may grow from each from the root of mans nature dressed and purified and so be fleshly or from a new nature from the new creation of God in Christ and so be spiritual 1. For Regeneration You will say for a man to be born again this is the greatest evidence of life that can be yea but Regeneration it self is according to the nature of the root Mans spirit may enter into the womb of flesh and there be born again so saith Christ here speaking of regeneration speaking of the second birth that which is born of the flesh is flesh A man may be new born in Religion by the flesh that is by the use of his own wisdom and reason of serving and considering the things that are discovered by God in his dispensations especially if they be held out very cleerly and miraculously as the case was here Any man who had been ingenious might have acknowledged what Nicodemus did here That Christ was a teacher come from God and so consequently that there was just ground to receive his doctrine and beleeve in him Now that regeneration which ariseth hence which is from flesh which is from the use of any wisdom reason understanding or power in man it is according to this root it is a change of flesh from flesh into flesh it is all along but a fleshly change it is not the change of a mans spirit into a new nature but only a change of the shape and form of it The man indeed seems mightily changed unto himself new-born new-made he is not what he was but a new thing hath new thoughts of God new desires towards God new hopes a new life and conversation and so it is with him in a kind in a sence he is not what he was he is new but all this newness is but the newness of the flesh it is but the putting on a new garment a new dress on the old man on the old wisdom reason understanding ingenuity and integrity which belongs to the nature of Adam and may easily be found in that nature where it is any thing awakened and polished But now that regeneration which is from God that man who is brought forth again in the womb of his spirit that man who hath a new root from the seed of his life this change is truly spiritual this man is truly spirit cast this man into what shape and form you will he is still spirit The other mans Religion consists in his form which the sweetness and ingenuity of his earthly principle feeds it self in and exerciseth it selfe about so that take away his form and you take away his Religion but this mans Religion consists in the nature of his spirit in the nature of that root from which his spirit came and which it is one with 2. As touching Knowledg Knowledg is the next thing to the new birth when a man is new born in any kinde he is still brought forth into a new light in which he is to live according to which he is to move and act and by which he is to be perfected Now the spirit of man may be brought forth in any kind of knowledg light of every sort is surable to his spirit and according to the breaking of it forth still he can take it in Indeed what can more fully distinguish the Children of light then light and yet what light cannot the spirit of man the Child of darkness transform himself into what truth what mystery can be revealed which the spirit of man cannot suck in Though I had the gift of prophecy saith the Apostle and understood all mysteries and all knowledg c. and wanted love implying the possibility of such a thing There is a rationality in all the things of God which the reason of man may reach especially if it be assisted by God and yet that man not have a divine root in himself for want of which his knowledg cannot be call'd truly divine though it be from above The things themselves may be from above the discovery of them to him may be from above yea he may receive divine help in the receiving of them and yet that in him which receiveth them may be but flesh and may receive but the flesh of them Man receiveth but the rationality but the outward nature but the external knowledg of the things of God not the inward substance So that all his knowledg in heavenly things wherwith he abounds is but fleshly it is not true knowledg it is not the knowledg of the truth it is not true light it is not the light of the Lord it is not the light of a spirit lighted from the Spirit of the Lord but a light of man or if you will a fleshly light of God at which man hath lighted his fleshly spirit All the light which mans spirit is capable of in the things of God doth not argue life doth not argue truth to accompany it because it may be borne of the flesh and so be fleshly nay indeed is and cannot but be so All his knowledg of God of Christ of Sin Death Hel of life salvation and happiness and the way to each c. be it never so cleere and never so full in the heart yet it is all but fleshly because it is in a fleshly spirit proceeding from a fleshly root and can give forth it self but according to its own nature and can be received in but according to the capacity of that which receiveth it As man who receiveth these things into himself springs from a root
of flesh and is flesh so that which he receiveth of the things of God is but fleshly He himself under all his spiritual changes as he accounteth them and with all his spiritual notions is but flesh But now he which is spirit all the knowledg which he hath is spiritual the least degree of his light is spiritual He that is born of the spirit is brought forth into the true light into the light of the spirit where he seeth and discerneth the things of God in their own true nature He knoweth the true God and his very Son Iesus Christ He knoweth the true Death the true Life the true Resurrection and Glory of the Son yea he learneth and knoweth in his own order and place all the truths of God not as they are held forth by each man but as they are in Iesus Let knowledg come never so fleshlily clothed to him he thrusts off all that is flesh of it and receives in nothing but spirit whereas the other let knowledg come never so spiritually to him receiveth in and can receive in only the flesh of it 3. For Repentance which is a dying unto sin which is natural unto him that is new-born and brought into the light This the spirit of man can do too and cannot but do Every change in him from every kind and degree of corruption whereof there is dayly occasion ministered unto him causeth repentance Mans natural spirit opened to see it self cannot but repent it cannot but make him loath himself his own nature his own state his own course his own end What man had he the view of himself of his spirit could forbeare abhorring the nature and state of it There is that in the nature of man which cannot but turne from that corruption which he hath contracted with all the concomitants and effects of it so that were but the nature of man awakened though there were neither Heaven to reward nor Hell to punish he could not but loath sin though this is also true that now by the power of his corruption it is become a new nature to him and so he loveth it and would not be rid of it yet there is the relique of somewhat at the bottom of it which is his first and truest nature which hath a contrariety in it hereunto and which upon occasion of being stirred at any time discovereth that contrariety But for all that the spirit of man doth only repent fleshlily I say this Repentance let it arise never so high and be heightened by never so many fresh discoveries of God and spiritual considerations yet still it is but fleshly for that which the light of God discovers and stirs in the nature of man is but of the nature of man But now That Repentance which ariseth from a true root from a renewed spirit from a spirit changed into the nature of the seed which is sown in it this repentance be it never so low let it be never so thickly deeply and darkly covered with a seeming approbation and justification of sin yet the thing it selfe the repentance it self is spiritual It coming from a spiritual root must needs be spiritual notwithstanding its contrary black appearance as the other notwithstanding all its light brightness and glory is but carnal 4. For Faith which is the new life Mans spirit doth naturally beleeve though his Faith is but occasionlly drawn forth Seeing his danger his misery he cannot but lean upon that which is held out to him as his proper rescue releif and support Let God in Christ be discovered to be the only fortress man cannot but run thither And yet his Faith and all his motions in this kind having but flesh having but self having but his own nature viz. the nature of the first Adam for their root what can they be but fleshly but of his own nature but of the nature of the first Adam Nicodemus here could not but run to Christ acknowledg Christ beleeve on Christ but what saith Christ to him Ah poor Nicodemus that which is born of the flesh is flesh To open this a little further because it is the main thing whereupon all dependeth If either the nature or object of faith be mistaken the miscarriage is most certain therefore there is need of great wariness here Now to make this truth asserted here appear the more evident I shall add this consideration following The nature of man came from the nature of God If you should stumble at this expression and say it came from his Will yet sure you will not deny his will to be his nature And as there was at first so there is still a naturalness between God and man though not so open and manifest God doth naturally take care of man and man doth naturally depend upon his God Were the heart of God but opened we should see there that from which the nature of man did flow and his love unto man and care of him even in his broken estate and were the heart of man but opened we should read there dependance and confidence upon his God It is his very nature though at present he be exceedingly turned out of it by an heap of corruption but let the light and discoveries of God break in upon him they stir up this again in him presently only indeed his corruption is so strong that he cannot come off cleverly in any motion of this kind but his heart and nature stands towards it Now is not this evident That whatever is in the nature of man may be drawn forth and that what is thus drawn forth from the Nature of man is but natural or fleshly It is natural to man to look out for help and as natural to him to trust that which is discovered to him as proper and willing to help him And this faith though it be awakened and stirred nay as it were begotten in him by divine means yet that doth not argue it to be divine That which the spirit of the Lord by his warmth and quickening vertue awakeneth in and draweth out of the fleshly root notwithstanding his divine breathings and influences upon it doth not thereupon become Divine though it is easie for weak man who is not acquainted with such kind of things without much questioning to account it so But now That faith which proceeds from a new nature from a new birth from God John 1.12.13 from a spiritual root that must needs be spiritual I shall not need to insist upon the rest I shall therefore only mention them 5. For Love There is a love in the nature of man which doth naturally flow forth towards that which is lovely to the eye of his nature Now God and his Christ having all the excellency in them that is taking to the eye and heart of man and much more upon the discovery of this unto man how can man chuse but love them yet this arising frō the nature of man upon such a discovery as his nature is capable
1. This is very unworthy If thou wilt overthrow the Testimony of Christ do it fairly do it by that which is equal to it by a light of as deep a nature as his If thou canst not speak upon as good grounds as he do not undertake to contradict him 2. It is very unsafe Suppose before the Lord Christs should prove a truth and thine a conceit what will become of thee It is not the strength of thy apprehension which will then bear thee out The market is yet open for thee wherein thou maist buy wine and milk without mony and without price but by this means thou makest thy self uncapable of making use of thy present opportunity Use 2. Ye who find a need of eternal Life and a desire after it Consider the ground of this truth and so far as it will carry weight receive it Receive it into your natural man and look up to God to sow a new nature in you that so it may give new life to your spirits Nay by receiving it it may become a seed The light we let into our understandings if it be of a spiritual nature is of power to change our understnadings into spirituality We little think what life is wrapped up in the outward seed of the word as it seems to us when God engrafts it into the spirit Receive with meekness the engrafted word which is able to save your Souls A principle of spiritual darkness let in by the ear into the heart what strange changes doth it make there and why may not a principle of light be let in the same way and do as much Christ came to save the world verse 47. He spake these words to save he gave out this testimony to save and for this end might he also leave it in writing And who knoweth but in the hearing of this sound Christ may work that faith in him who heareth which may save him It is not worth the being busied about this world though a man were sure to obtain it but it were worth the being busied here though a man were sure to lose his labor for it is noble and excellent to pursue that which is excellent though one should miss of it X. Of the Liberty of the Kingdom which was outward and shadowy in that dispensation of the Gospel by Christ and his Apostles but inward and substantial in the true seed both before then and after that dispensation yea and for ever which Liberty although it be very large yet is limited by the Law of its own Life and Nature GAL. 5.13 For brethren ye have been called unto Liberty only use not Liberty for an occasion to the Flesh but by love serve one another LIberty is the right temper and posture of the new life whereby it both is and enjoys it self It is the breaking all bonds asunder and setting of the heir free It is the investing him with his inheritance and the leaving of him to the direction and dispose of his own understanding and will which he being grown up in the Lord are of sufficient light wisdom and strength to guide him in the Lord. There is in it or by it the removal of all Tutors of all Governors of all Laws of all kind of discipline in every kind which was proper for his nurture and education when his life ran low but is now no way convenient when he is come to his full age and growth Now it is necessary for his life to be free in its nature circuits and motions He being grown up his life being come to it self it is requisite it should have the honor of disposing of it self of becoming a rule and guide to it self nay if it be truly strong and compleat in its nature it can need no rule no bonds no bounds but it self but it s own nature So that this is Liberty when the nature of a thing is not circumscribed by any Laws or limits whatsoever but it hath its full scope to the utmost for the exercise of its nature This I say is Liberty full Liberty compleat Liberty perfect Liberty There is no such Liberty in this Life or flowing from this Life as the corrupt nature of man seeks namely a Liberty to satisfie the corruption of his nature and that this should not be sin nor subject to the lash or censure of any Law nor able to bring any death or danger upon him But this Liberty is pure and holy like the nature and life from which it flows and hath in it that which answers every Law of righteousness in every kind There is no Liberty here not to love God or to neglect any Duty of Love Holiness and Obedience which his nature and will calls for no Liberty to be unrighteous or unmerciful either to man or to the meanest creature but the Liberty of this life is perfectly holy sweet and just It is a Liberty from all manner of corruption and unrighteousness and a Liberty unto all purity and righteousness It is a Liberty like that which is in the Nature of God who can do nothing that is evil nor neglect the doing of any thing that is good Gods Liberty lieth in two things First He is free only to his own nature nothing can incline him any way but his own nature but his own understanding and will which is from and according to his nature or which is his nature Secondly In his own nature is comprehended the accurateness and perfection of all that righteousness holiness and sweetness which any dispenced Law darkly shadows out So that by the presence by the purity of the substance he is freed from the shadow Now the Liberty of the Seed is a true copy of this As their nature is a true extract from the Nature of God so is their Liberty from his Liberty Their nature being thus in with and from God holiness and righteousness being their very nature it must needs be the Liberty of their nature thus to be and thus to act For Liberty of the nature is sutable to the nature not contrary to it All the Liberty which crosseth the nature and truth of Life is but a false appearance how specious soever but is not true Liberty If a man had his reason at perfect Liberty he could do nothing that were irrational nor neglect the doing of any thing that were rational So is it in this Life its Liberty lies in being free in its own state nature and course Not in being free to but in being free from all impurity of flesh and spirit It is the Liberty of the Lord to be free from sin weakness and folly Not in that he can do the same things which sinners do and not sin but his Nature Life and Spirit will not permit any such motions to have any place in him He is free from the root which bears such fruit And when his seed are redeemed they shall perfectly know and enjoy this Liberty with him for neither their spirit nor
life perisheth and man returneth to his Earth to his very corruption again yea and taketh unto himself seven Devils worse then the former For the higher that man is raised by this breath from the Lord the lower he falls when this breath is withdrawn It is the spirit of corrupt man getting or advanced by the Lord into the purest ways and forms of Religion which bringeth forth the filthiest abominations 4. In the result of this corruption and evil will befall you in the latter days Sin most naturally brings forth death Corruption or putrefaction is a degree of and a direct passage unto death And it will break forth and appear in the latter days Man must have a time to corrupt in which he is to be let alone but in the latter days when his end draws nigh death hastens apace his corruption then begins to open it self and to discover the death which lay hid in it Then that evil which man hoped all this while to secure himself from will begin to manifest it self to be in the nature of his own spirit or in the nature of that sin and corruption which he hid within the nature of his spirit He hath hid his destruction in his own bowels he hath hugged it in his bosom in the midst of all his designs to escape it and in the latter days when it is grown ripe and strong thence it will start seize upon him and devour him When the Lord hath throughly tryed the spirit of man and when man hath throughly corrupted himself then will he lay the ax to the root of this tree and cut it down that it may cumber the ground no longer He hath cut down the Iews already Their latter days wherein evil did befall them have overtaken them and he will also cut down the Gentiles The Iews were not the seed for after the death of Moses they did corrupt themselves and discover that they like the rest of the world were but flesh Neither are the Gentiles the seed for they also after the death of that life which did flow from the Spirit into Christ and his Apostles did also corrupt themselves The uncircumcised and unclean spirit of man did enter into this Temple and Worship as well as into the former Therefore the Lord will both cut down the spirit of man and will also down with all that into which the spirit of man can enter and then will he bring forth his own Truth his true Temple his true Worship his true Worshippers 5. In the ground of this death and destruction to man because ye will do evil in the sight of the Lord to provoke him to anger through the works of your hands All the motions of man anger God All the works of his hands are filthy and corrupt in themselves and provocative to the eye of his nature and spirit All mans knowledg all his life all his ways of Worship Faith and Obedience in every kind every thing that suits the eye and judgment of his spirit and wherewith he thinks to please God is lothsom to God This lothsomness stirreth up in God his indignation which causeth him in the proper season thereof to bring death upon man and to bring him to Judgment after which cometh the second death Then it shall be known who have been led by the Lord and who have truly followed him though the spirit of man now laughs at all who walk not with him in his way of understanding Then shall all see and know who are righteous and be forced to confess from their very hearts saying Verily there is a reward for the righteous a competent reward a full reward unto them for all the sufferings and misery which have attended them in their way and passage hither Blessed is he whom the Lord leadeth by the proper cross attending every dispensation through trouble and death into life But excessively miserable is that man whose fleshly spirit remaineth in any dispensation or who passeth from dispensation to dispensation with his life unslain therewith feeding upon the Ordinances duties enjoyments or any other holy or spiritual things of God and thereby fattening and fitting himself for death and destruction against the great and terrible day of the Lord God Almighty according as the spirit of Christ in David speaketh Psal. 94.12 13. with a gloss whereupon I shall draw towards a conclusion Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest him out of thy Law That thou mayst give him rest from the days of adversity until the pit be digged for the wicked There is a pit digging for the wicked into which when it is finished when it is every way made large and deep and piercing enough the whole wicked spirit of man shall either fall or be cast or partly fall and partly be cast into it Till this pit be digged it is a troublesome time to the seed but a quiet time with man The spirit of man is now at ease He can serve he can please he can enjoy himself in his whole course both of nature and religion yea and he can also secure himself from future danger from danger at the last He hath made a covenant with death and with Hell is he at agreement When the overflowing scourge passeth it shall not come near him It is for unbeleevers for sinners for persons who know not God or obey not the Gospel of our Lord Iesus Christ to fear death and Hell or eternal destruction But when this pit is digged the Spirit of the Lord with his light will search out the spirit of man under all his disguises and what ever hath not the true breath of life in it shall be cast into and dye in this pit There are persons also to whom God will give rest from the days of adversity Those who have all along been persecuted by all sorts of enemies and afflicted with all sorts of miseries that spirit which hath been hunted wounded grieved distressed all the day long by the cruel spirit of man and Satan shall be rescued from the jaws of each and be refreshed Those who are leavened with the life of Gods most holy Spirit who are so new-changed by it that they have none of that life none of that spirit left remaining in them which the Lord cometh to destroy the Lord will give them rest When the Lord cometh forth to hunt take and devour the spirit of man those in whom that spirit is already dissolved shall not be in fear or danger of his severity but shall find the abundance of love sweetness peace and rest administred to them by the same hand which will then so eagerly and fiercely prosecute the spirit of man Then they who have hitherto been at ease shall be troubled and they who have hitherto been troubled shall have ease And to you who are troubled rest with us When the Lord Iesus shall be revealed c. 2 Thes. 1. The ways whereby God leadeth his to this rest are
partly Instructions and partly Corrections He breatheth his Spirit into them and by the power and vertue of his rod beareth down and subjecteth their spirits He burneth up their dross aforehand that he may make them fit to be saved and that it may be righteous for him to save them in the day of the worlds destruction He striketh them down he layeth load upon them he humbleth them exceedingly until he hath fitly tempe●ed them to hear and then he teacheth them the Law of his Life And thus he reneweth both his knocks and his beams of light as their condition need and capacity requireth O happy happy thrice happy are they whom God leadeth though through a wilderness and the dismal exercises thereof into his land of rest All that severity of Discipline under which they are now nurtured and trained up is nothing to that misery which they shall then escape or to that life and blessedness which they are hereby prepared for I shall close thus They that trust in lying vanities vanity shall be their recompence Yea they that trust or hope in God or in Christ or in God through Christ after the strength of their own apprehensions fastened upon or gathered from the Scriptures and not according to the knowledg and power of the truth as it is in Iesus shall find even these objects vanity to them their faith and expectation upon them vanity also and their end misery when they sink into death and destruction with the world yea and that somewhat deeper then the world But they who in truth are taught and led by the truth to wait and hope under their bondage and misery for the truth how extravagant or rediculous soever they may appear to all the various eyes of the several sorts of Religious persons from the strange exercises of God upon them shall be owned by the truth The root nature yea and all the motions of the spirit of the creature even in all the dispensations of God is rejected for in the true state and nature of things it is not that which the Lord can accept It is dark in all its light dead in all its life a captive and a slave in all its liberty an hater and a rebel in the midst of all its love and obedience and therefore how can the Lord who searching the spirit cleerly knoweth and discerneth this in the spirit but throw it aside notwithstanding its glittering appearances of light and life from him of precious faith and hope in him and of sweet love and obedience towards him But the root nature and motions of the seed under all its disguises in the midst of all its darkness death bonds captivity and estrangedness from God is his delight is his heir it is the heir of his nature and spirit and therefore shall undoubtedly inherit the truth and glory of life in him He that hath ears to hear let him hear the spirit which testifieth the same thing now as it hath done all along the Scriptures O let him who desireth the truth of salvation harken to the voice of the spirit of God in the Scriptures and not give ear to such fictions as his own spirit doth most naturally form out of them XIV The happy End of the holy Nature and Course of the Seed of Life which the Spirit of Life through all the various dark paths of sin death and misery most faithfully guideth it unto or The sweet and happy End of the Righteous PSAL. 37. vers 37. Mark the perfect man and behold the upright for the end of that man is peace THe perfect or upright man is he who is of an entire stamp or nature and who walketh entirely with God in every dispensation from the Law of this nature The very nature of man is imperfect He is a transgressor from the womb Let him never so honestly and ingenuously dedicate himself to God and to righteousness yet he cannot for his heart walk with him or live righteously But the other cannot but do so And however he may slip from the weakness of his present estate yet his nature still sets him right again Now there is no man more miserable in his present condition then this man The unrighteous the unholy spirit of man can thrive in the world or flourish in any form of Religion but this man not having the spirit of this world cannot seek or enjoy it nor deliver himself from the oppressions and sufferings which are multiplied upon him by it Nay he is persecuted also and grievously afflicted by the powers of darkness which will not spare him in this their hour Yea his God estrangeth and hideth himself from him he hideth his face from the house of Iacob chastisiing him sorely continually Because of that corruption which cleaveth unto him and which his feet are still gathering the holy God which loveth truth and purity is ever and anon casting him into the fire The Lord by his Spirit of Judgment and Burning doth most naturally search try and judg the spirits of his people until he hath purified and perfected them Alas how sad therefore must it needs be with them in the midst of all these The world may live and flourish but they are still withering and dying The world may enjoy the freedom of its natural spirit after a sort but theirs is in bonds The world may laugh and rejoyce because of the contents they find and can reap and enjoy in the things of the world and in their several forms and exercises of Religion but these cannot but weep and lament that they are left desolate and have no Comforter These are the sick ones these are the blind ones these are the lame ones these are the poor ones these are the naked ones these are the pe●secuted ones these are the oppressed ones whose misery no eye can see no heart conceive no tongue express Any misery that man meeteth with the spirit of man may pity him in but this is a kind of misery which the spirit of man knoweth not and these are the persons whom he judgeth and whom his heart is hardened against But mark the end of this man Look upon all this distress all this misery all this lamentably hard travel in its end For the end of that man is peace There is no knowing of any thing as it now appears under its vail in this dark shadowy world but if you would understand any thing aright keep your eye fixed upon it and observe it to the end In the end flesh when it is stripped of all its seeming glory will appear what it is and in the end spirit when it is unclothed of all its deformed rags will appear what it is If you consider the perfect man without the discerning of his end he will appear the poorest most miserable most contemptible thing that can be but if your eye can truly follow him unto his end you will have another ghess sight of him there for the end of that man
chiefly dispenced under the one and the spirit under the other The letter was appointed for the litteral people and the spirit for the spiritual and so they are managed The litteral people receive their impression from the letter of the Word are brought forth by the letter and fed and maintained by the letter and the spiritual people receive their impression from the spirit of the Word are brought forth by the spirit and fed and maintained by the spirit So long as the letter of the Word lived in the fleshly people the fleshly people lived so long as the spirit of the Word liveth in the spiritual people the spiritual people live for these can live no more then the former any longer then they are fed from the root This dispensation and people may dye as well as the other Hence that ministration is called the ministration of the letter this of the spirit So that mark now There is letter and spirit life and death justification and condemnation in the Word both in the Copy and in the Original in Christ which is the Word of God and in the Scriptures which are the words of Christ in the heart of Christ which is Gods Book where he hath writ his Word and in the heart of man which is Christs Book where he hath writ his Word And both these dispensations are equally from God and from Christ from first to last both in their causes and in their effects 2. Of the Spirit The Spirit is that Substance which comprehends the Word and is comprehended in the Word It is the Lord and Servant of Christ who is the Word of God It is that which lives dwells and reigns both in the flesh and spirit of Christ and in which they likewise reign It is the liquor in Christ which Christ as a Vessel containeth and also the Vessel which containeth Christ. It is both the root and the fruit The root from whence Christ groweth and the fruit which Christ beareth both in his life and death from whence they both sprang and wherein they both meet The ministration of this is not yet made manifest It was only pointed at in the ministration of the Gospel which did shadow out it as the Law did shadow out that ministration or if you will both the Law and the Gospel did shadow this out in different respects and degrees the one more grosly the other more refinedly the one more darkly and remotely the other more nearly and clearly The Law stood aloof at a great distance from it yet spake of it and referred unto it the Gospel did as it were touch it speaking the very name and manifesting the very nature of it Yet the very ministration of the Spirit in that dispensation of the Gospel if it be well looked into will appear rather a shadow then the thing it self and every way more like a shadow then like the thing it self Now who knoweth whether those things which have been so contrary in all dispensations hitherto shall not here meet Life and Death Heaven and Hell which every where else are at such a distance may here touch one another and agree very sweetly together even so fully that both those names and natures whereby they did appear and were so various in all dispensations may here be drowned and vanish Yet it is not by eithers real loss of any thing whereby and wherein they differed that they become thus harmoniously united but by both their entering into a more perfect fulness And he to whom this seemeth so strange and who is so much offended at it let him fairly answer me this following question Were not Hell and Heaven at union in their root before they were brought forth Were they not at rest and peace in the Power and Nature of God from whence they were produced Without controversie what ever lay there lay in rest and whatsoever is brought back thither returneth to rest Now did the Lord bring forth any thing which he cannot bring back again and who can say he will not Surely every thing most naturally breatheth after that condition of rest and fulness which it can alone enjoy in his bosom Most certain it is that the vast Spirit of the Lord taketh in all things howsoever it dispose of them Thence they came thither they return there they are and doubtless there they may be found in union and agreement by him whose Spirit is quick and piercing enough Happy is he who can read this truth in the Spirit of the Lord but wretchedly miserable is he who frameth false imaginations in his own mind by the vanity of his own reason concerning it 3. Of Faith Faith is a shadowy or substantial life flowing from the Spirit through the Word into the seed seeking after fastening upon and resting in the Spirit This is Faith First I say it is Life It is a touch of life it is a spring of life it is the choyce of life which God bringeth forth in his own in his own seasons We may mistake in ascribing names to other things whose nature and principle we know not but this we are taught by God who knoweth things very well to name Faith The life of the Law was obedience a spirit of obedience by this a man was enabled to live in and according to the Law but this life is faith a spirit of faith He who beleeveth is only able to enter into this life and to walk in it I call it shadowy or substantial because it is either as it is looked upon Look upon it backward and it is substantial Look upon it forward and it is but shadowy As the ministration of the Gospel was a ministration of the spirit of that which was in the Law so the life ministred under the Gospel is a substantial life in compare with that But look forward into the substance of that which is yet behind and here faith it self is but a shadow This life also is but a shadow Alas the life of Faith must vanish Notwithstanding all its glory it must dye and lie in its grave like the Law Flowing from the Spirit through the Word into the seed The seed is the vessel the only vessel which containeth this life It is not man that this life is sown in but the seed and the seed is sown in man Immortal life eternal life is wrapped up in immortal seed in eternal seed that is the immediate vessel and this is sown in the mortal spirit of man which by putting on mortality there it changeth into its own nature Hence they in whom the seed is sown and who are changed by it are called by that name they are called the seed This life floweth from the Spirit into this seed The Spirit which formeth this seed breatheth into it this breath of life This seed is the spirits own vessel and this life is his own liquor wherewith he filleth it The Spirit lyeth in the vessel and is continually breathing in it and that
my self and pant after deliverance from such a kind of being There are two things excellent in the nature of man in this his present state The one is to know that which is above him To acknowledg his Lord and fear him The other is to walk righteously lovingly and sweetly towards his fellow creatures This was writ in the heart of man naturally It was writ over again in that dispensation to the Iews and yet again by Christ. We feel we are men and not God flesh and not Spirit and we are to reverence that which is above us that which we our selves are not but live from and yet further want the supply of yea although we lose the sense of this yet that doth not take away that obligation which ariseth not from our sense but from our nature and state We also know that we should deal justly mercifully sweetly and tenderly with our fellow creatures Let us say and think what we please yet we would be dealt so with our selves and do not esteem the contrary equal with it Alas how do we delude our selves by cherishing principles in our minds which the very secrets of our hearts judgments and consciences cannot but disown And are they so lovely as they are accounted Can those principles be very good which shut up or banish not only a new but the old common excellency of Nature and open and let loose all the filth and abomination of it Surely man is forward enough of himself to evil and unrighteousness as also backward enough to that which is good and just he need not thus egg himself on to the one and exclude himself from the other by poysoning his judgment already too much corrupt with such corrupting principles 3. Their destructiveness to the present state of mankind They overthrow the foundation of all sweetness security or comfortable converse This necessarily ariseth from the former for in that they strip a man of all those seeds of ingenuity and civil honesty which are yet left remaining in his nature or any way repaired by outward art or any inclination to or power of religion and introduce in their stead seeds of all manner of corruption they make him fit only for perversness and mischeif incurable and unavoydable As for instance He whose very principles allow him to and justifie him in lying as well as speaking truth defrauding as well as dealing uprightly He that can without any scruple rob me of my name estate wife c. beleeving in his very soul and conscience that he doth therein as well as if he did the contrary or did forbear so to do which way can I converse with him or secure my self from him This world is bad enough as it is but certainly did but these principles overspread it it would be far worse It would be a very Hell in respect of what it now is It would be such a seat of confusion oppression and misery as would make them themselves from whom these principles sprang and in whom they do most fully raign perfectly weary of it For such miserable principles are they that they can only harm them in whom they take place and others through them but can in no wise secure no not so much as them themselves who prostitute all their honour and excellency to entertain them This is most certain There is no truth nor righteousness upon the face of this Earth Man is so selfish blind and corrupt in his very root which all the art of common Nature or Religion can neither rectifie nor sway down that he cannot be true or just either to his neighbor or himself But though there is no truth of righteousness yet there is a shadow of righteousness whereby the present state of things subsists from whence that peace sweetness safety and enjoyment which man hath floweth Now to break down this shadow by the substance of that truth which man wants would be excellent service but to beat it down by a lye by confusion by darkness to thrust out this seeming righteousness by real filthiness and abomination this would both bring desolation upon the present seeming happiness of man and plunge him into a far deeper misery then that wherein he yet is He that will ascend let him first descend He that will through down righteousness let him first pursue attain and bring righteousness He that hath and can at pleasure fulfil the Law may challenge some liberty in undervaluing it but it very ill beseemeth him to make light of it who is yet in the strength and power of his nature and condition far beneath it 4. Their dangerousness in case of mistake Man is in a weak state cometh forth with a weak eye and hath but a weak sight and judgment of things How many sorts of men do some or other of them every day discover themselves deceived in their apprehensions deceived in their principles deceived in their practises Thou who art of this judgment how many dost thou apprehend deceived how often hast thou thy self been deceived before thou arivedst here Now suppose thou also shouldst be deceived as well as others and here again as well as formerly in other things and that there should at last prove both good and evil Light and Darkness Hell and Heaven the children of Light and the children of Darkness c. what a condition wert thou in Thou mayst say rashly Thou must take it as it falls but are thou sure that understandingly thou canst be content to do so Alas the Lord with his engines of misery will be too hard for thee Thou also wilt be made with all sinners to repent the stopping thy ears at the voyce of Wisdom and harkening to the enchantments of thine own seducing spirit which hath led thee like a fool to the correction of the stocks for alas thou knewest not that it was for thy life The testimonies which Christ gave concerning these things were not light nor upon light terms He dealt fairly and ●lainly speaking what he knew whose knowledg was n●ither small nor uncertain and wilt thou undertake upon a strong apprehension of reason to overthrow that divine light which shone in him The danger of these persons must needs be great for they do not only practise all manner of things which God Christ and Nature condemneth but they do it as good and they teach others to do so They call and that with a loud voice in the sight of the Sun evil good and good evil darkness light and light darkness confounding them together and equalizing them both laughing out of countenance all the wisdom of God in all his dispensations who hath professedly put a difference between them Now if these men be in the right they will have no great advantage for others will be as safe as they but doubtless if they be in the wrong their danger cannot but be exceeding great God hath baffled the reason of man in all its undertakings yea and he delights to make the
wisdom of it appear folly All the Imaginations of man hitherto have fallen and can these stand My Soul in the inmost judgment of it upon the deepest observation search trial sense and experience saith they cannot but that there must needs be a future estate of things wherein all shall be set to rights wherein righteousness which hath here been always oppressed shall be rewarded and iniquity which hath as yet flourished shall pine in pain and misery as also That the present life and happyness of man consists in union and communion with light in the several kinds and degrees of it proportionable to his estate and in a separation from darkness in the several kinds and degrees of it My advice therefore to all persons for their own good and safety is not to run away with notions and apprehensions of things but first to measure them And he that is not able to measure them let him not receive them but let a man only receive what he is able to measure What the eye of the senses can truly judg of they may acknowledg and thus may the eye of reason do also and as for the eye of the spirit though it be cleerer and stronger then either of the other yet it is not safe for it to proceed further then so It will be as dangerous for it to receive beyond what it can understandingly judge as it is for the eye either of sense or reason Now tell me He that in sensible things shall conclude all one and not understanding himself shall venture to eat or drink poyson in stead of good and proper nourishment or He that in things of reason shall do the like in their kind what palpable and irrecoverable dangers doth he incur hereby Nor is the hazard or damage less in things of a spiritual nature and concernment Let him therefore that is in this present state of weakness in danger of miscariage in his apprehensions and motions and liable to misery thereby I say in pity love and tenderness to him Let him take heed and not make his eye useless by entertaining such a beam as will exclude or such a mote as will interrupt the truth and cleerness of his sight VI. Of the Various false New-births and the true one which are distinguished by their root and nature IOHN 3.6 That which is born of the flesh is flesh and that which is born of the Spirit is Spirit THere are two ways of distinguishing the things of God The one by the root from which they spring The other is by the nature which they receive into themselves from their root All the Religion of man all the life that man is capable of cometh from a fleshly root and when it is sprung in him it is still but fleshly in it self or in its own nature The truth of God the true nature of God springeth only from the spirit of the Lord and remaineth spirit wheresoever it springs transforming and making that also spiritual which is truly united to it More fully thus There are two seeds which spring up in this world The natural and the spiritual the earthly and the heavenly the seed of this outward world or nature which seed is Adam the seed of another world of a more inward world or nature which seed is Christ. Proportionably there are two Mothers Wombs or Roots in whom these seeds are begotten wherein these seeds are conceived and from which they spring which are Hagar and Sarah the Ierusalem below and the Ierusalem above Nature and Grace or the spirit of this world and the Spirit which is of God In these the seeds are hid and out of these they arise the one from the one the other from the other The fleshly seed comes from the fleshly mother out of the fleshly womb from the root of flesh The spiritual seed cometh from the womb and out of the root of the spirit Nor do they only proceed from the root but they also partake of the nature of the root each do of that root from which they spring so that that which springs from the Earth from the flesh from the root of this common nature is of the Earth is of the flesh is of this common nature and that which springs from the root of the Spirit of God is spirit with that spirit Yet more largely Every thing is and acts according to its root The whole nature course and end of every thing is answerable to the nature of its root According as the root is from which the seed of the tree springs for the tree grows up from a seed and that seed comes from a root such is the nature of the tree such is the estate and condition of the tree such is the fruit of the tree and such will be the end of the tree This is a general truth but particularly in this place applied to Religion All things in Religion are according to the root from which they spring All things in Religion may grow upon any tre● whether natural artificial or spiritual but that which distinguisheth them in their root Now there are two great roots as there are two great conditions two great courses two kinds of fruit and two great ends of things so there are two great Originals of things Nature and Grace Flesh and Spirit God and Man There is the earthly and the heavenly root the sinful and the holy root the humane and the divine root These roots as they are in us have each of them their own rise their own nature their own properties their own fruit their own course their own end The fleshly root in us hath a fleshly rise a fleshly nature fleshly properties is in a fleshly estate and condition runs a fleshly course brings forth fleshly fruit and tends to a fleshly end viz. to corruption The spiritual root in us hath a spiritual rise a spiritual nature spiritual properties is in a spiritual estate and condition brings forth spiritual fruit and tends to a spiritual end He that soweth to the flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption but he that soweth to the spirit shall of the spirit reap life everlasting This is that which putteth the great difference between things making the one happy in their misery and the other miserable in their happiness namely the difference of their roots The high the flourishing estate of some in all manner of knowledg in all manner of enjoyments comes to nothing the low barren desolate estate of others is very precious because of their different roots Babel is unlovely in her greatest lustre and glory even when she is built very high and adorned with the greatest spiritual riches magnificence and beauty but Sion is lovely in her greatest ruines desolations even in her very dust and all upon this ground because of their several natures which they have from and which are fed by their several roots in all their changes It is the root of the flesh from which Babel springs and
of admitting is but according to the root it is but natural it is but fleshly But that love which proceedeth from a new life that love is of a new nature even of the nature of that spirit out of which it shoots 6. For Experience Man may have many experiences in a natural way of religion and devotion or in any dispensation wherein he is placed Experiences of God experiences of his own heart experiences of the nature of things the people of the Jews had many experiences of Gods owning them and care of them c. And yet these also are according to the root Those experiences which the spirit of man the nature of man the understanding of man gathereth and comprehendeth they are but experiences of man they are but experiences in and according to the light and nature of man Those experiences alone which are gathered by the nature and observation of the new life they only testifie the truth of and they alone are usefull to that life 7. And lastly For Liberty True liberty is a very sweet effect of the light of the Gospel The spirit of man in this present state of nature is commonly bound up in darkness every mans darkness is his prison whom light doth set free Now as mans spirit may receive the light of the Gospel after a maner the spirit of man may receive that light which is held forth in the dispensation of the Gospel so mans spirit may come forth into liberty into great liberty he may feel himself free from all his bonds yea this freedom may be so large and clear to him that he may be able to say in his heart all things are lawful for me and yet all this may be but the liberty of mans spirit and another that seems to be in all maner of bonds may have the true freedom for the one is true though but in its birth or seed and the other is not true though in its greatest growth and flourishing The substance of all that truth is in God whereof in man there is but the weak dark shadow He therefore that is begotten by God he that flowes from the generative vertue of his divine nature is begotten in that substance but he which is begoten by man or that which is begotten in man by the purest and exactest strain of the human spirit either his own or any others though with the greatest furtherances and assistances even from above is begotten but in some part or other of the shadow which when the substance appears cannot but vanish pass away and prove a lye so far as it was taken for the truth for the purest extract that can be raised even by God himself out of the spirit of man is not the thing but the shadow of it But now there is the truth in the seed in weakness as well as the truth in growth The greatest perfection of the spirit of man is but a lye so far as it takes upon it to be the truth for it is but a fleshly image of truth it is not truth it self All the Repentance Faith Love c. which the spirit of man can possibly be raised unto by any thing that can work upon his spirit is but a shadow of that Repentance faith love c. which is in the nature of God and floweth from the nature of God for there is in God a turning from that which he calleth to our spirits to turn from which is Repentance and adherence to and confidence in that which he calleth to us to cast our selves upon which is faith but is not the thing it self But now the seed and that which is in it and cometh from it even in its greatest weakness is truth That Repentance that Faith that Love c. that floweth from this nature from this life is of this nature is of this life The meanest the lowest thing that is born of the spirit is spirit even in its lowest state in its lowest kind and degree of motions and the greatest the highest thing that is born of the flesh even in its greatest height in the utmost degree of all its spiritual exaltation exercise and motion is but flesh One man may run with much quickness and cleerness through all dispensations and be wonderfully raised and yet remain but flesh before in and after all Another may be in the lowest form of the lowest dispensation and yet be spirit there It is true these things forementioned are all of them effects or at least concomitants of the Gospel Man dark man hears no news of a new birth of the knowledg of God of Repentance Faith c. But yet where the Gospel cometh these things so far as they are in the nature of man are awakened and heightened Partly by Satan thereby to keep out the truth for hereby he cozeneth and deceiveth men making them beleeve they are new men whereas they are new only in respect of what they outwardly were viz. in respect of the form or shape wherein their spirit was but not in respect of their inward nature and partly by God to make a proof or trial of the spirit of man throughout At first God tried him in his whole or sound and now he trieth him in his broken estate in all the several changes he can undergo there Therefore doth the Lord not only draw forth what is in him but also add thereunto by gifts and assistances from above that at length he may give forth a compleat experiment of man what he is or what he can come to And although these experiments be not of use to the nature and eye of the Lord to further his sight or knowledg yet there is a nature and eye to which they are very useful yea necessary to which nature and eye the Lord is engaged by his nature to make them manifest in such a way manner season and proportion as his nature and theirs require For the better illustration yet a little further both of this truth in general and of these particular instances Take notice of this threefold distinction of the spirit of man or carefully observe and distinguish the spirit of man in this threefold estate or condition First in his natural growth Secondly in his Transplantation Thirdly in his spiritual Renovation 1. There is the spirit of man in its natural way of growth The spirit of man naturally inclineth towards excellency There is indeed a bulk of corruption which hangeth about him and turneth him aside but his own spirit disrelisheth it and he wisheth he were freed from it and made to be in himself that which is naturally excellent This is the heart of every man by nature He would serve God he would enjoy God he would be just and righteous to men It is the corruption which hangeth about his nature and is grown so strong and prevalent that it is now become his nature which maketh him otherwise but in his root in his principle he is not so and he
united to the Lord as to become one with him in his own nature not in the life or power of a present dispensation which to day is and to morrow vanisheth but in the true nature of his own spirit and life which abideth for ever Now whatsoever flowes whatsoever grows up from this spirit is truth All the repentance faith love c. which issue hence are true of the true kind having the true stamp and image of Christ upon them Here you may find the true death of Christ and the true life of Christ the true understanding of Christ the true faith of Christ c. whereas that which is so only in a dispensation whether of Law or Gospel though it may be so in its kind and may serve the present turn yet it is not the abiding truth Mans nature mans life mans power even that which Adam had from God and which is the image of God is but fleshly His inclination and natural ability to beleeve to love to obey it is but fleshly The first man is of the earth earthly take him with all his qualifications and endowments That light and knowledg of God which he had with his capacity of receiving in more was but earthly Adam whom God dashed in peeces was but the earthen vessel of the Potter Yea in every dispensation since all that is of man there is flesh All that is stirred up in man is flesh That power of beleeving of loving and obeying which was raked up in the ruines of mans nature being at any time again rouzed refreshed and assisted by any light or power from God in the midst of all its lively motions and operations is still but flesh But yet there is spirit as well as flesh and there is a spirituall birth as well as a fleshly birth and that which is begotten and born of the spirit is spirit as well as that which is born of the flesh is flesh God doth not only try the spirit of man in his several dispensations but he doth also here and there sprinkle the seed of his one spirit He doth beget and bring forth Isaac the seed of promise his own son under the Law under the Gospel as well as Ishmael Now it is the spirit which begets Isaac which soweth the seed of God in the womb of Sarah and that which is begotten and born of the spirit is Isaac ●hat which springs up from his own sowing out of the w●mb of his own spirit is his own seed That which is born of the flesh is flesh and that which is born of the spirit is spirit Therefore Sirs look to your root What I have said unto you hitherto I say unto you still Look to your Foundations If your root be flesh all your glory must down All your spiritual apprehensions and hopes will vanish and leave you in the suds if they be but fleshly in their root If your Foundation be in the sand the higher your building in Religion is the greater will the fall thereof be That which is exalted neerest to Heaven in its present growth and lustre if it prove not right shall be thrown down to Hell with the greatest indignation and sink into the sharpest wrath and misery there The easiest part of Hell is uneasie enough but the darkest chambers of it are reserved for the deepest Hypocrites which they without all controversie are who hold forth the highest resemblance of the life liberty and purity of the Spirit of the Lord and yet have not the true nature of it in them but in whom all this springs from a fleshly Foundation VII Of the true Nature and Vertue of the Kingdom of GOD. 1 COR. 4.20 For the Kingdom of God is not in word but in power THere have always been great disputes about the nature and truth of Religion between the Disciples thereof and the Pretenders to it Every one will have their apprehensions their light their way their practise to be the truth Yea many times that which is indeed truth runs low and that which is but vanity swells and makes a great shew appearing as very high pure and spiritual That which is empty makes a great sound drawing the multitudes after it and that which is substantial is cast aside as being in no wise likely to be that life and substance which all pretend to seek after This Dispute is very hot now upon the face of the Earth What sort of Religious persons do not really beleeve and in some way or other contend that they are in the truth and that the Religion of others so far as it differs from theirs is at least erronious This is no new thing for thus it was at the appearing of Christ in the flesh between the Samaritans and the Iews and also among the several sorts and s●cts of the Jews Yea likewise in the Apostles times There were those that were puffed up who made slight of all that the Apostles taught and would undertake to deliver that which was more substantial more pure more high more spiritual They would teach the truth the substance of that whereof that which the Apostles taught was but a shadow Now the Apostle sheweth the way which he would take to discover the rottenness and deceit of these persons vers 19. He would apply himself to know not their speech but their power He would not regard the beauty and glory of their speech or of the things spoken which is exceedingly taking to a fleshly eye but the vertue the life the spirit of what was spoken He would search into the nature into the root into the vertue into the truth of the thing and so would he prize it in himself and discover it to others as he found it there and not have any esteem of it because of its flourishes or it s seemingly pure and spiritual lustre And he gives the reason of this his intended course or manner of proceeding in these words For the Kingdom of God is not in word but in power The Kingdom of God consists in the one and not in the other All this great appearance of Glory of Spirituality of Life of Liberty c. may be without the Kingdom therefore what should I regard them for to what end should I look after them This is the way to deceive my self with an appearance with a flourish in stead of truth But where ever the true power is to be sure there is the Kingdom Therefore I will lay aside all consideration of the other and mind how much of that is in them Towards opening of the phrases three things would be enquired into namely First What is meant by Kingdom Secondly What by Word Thirdly What by Power 1. What is meant by Kingdom By the Kingdom of God is meant the new nature the new life yea and also that new inheritance unto which this nature and life leads There is a new nature descending from God this new nature leads a new life here in this world and both
all agree in their common nature and properties and yet have also a distinct nature and properties of their own sutable to that whereof they are formed and to that peculiar end and operation for which they are formed Use 1. Observe the difference between the Religion of man and of God Man receiveth his vertue his strength in Religion from the outward notion The power which is found in him issueth thence but in the Religion of God the strength ariseth yea and the notion it self too from the seed The seed springing up in them in whom it is sown discovereth its own name teaching them how to call it by manifesting it self in them what it is The new Adam knoweth how to name every new creature at the first sight by his knowledg of its nature 2. See how easie it is for Religion to slip in or out of any thing or person This life this nature this vertue may creep in or out at pleasure The life may fill appear and live in that in us one day which the flesh may fill appear and live in the next The spirit of the Lord may rear up and discover himself in that Temple to day which Antichrist may take possession of to morrow Religion I mean the life of it consists in the breath of God not in any outward form whatsoever but in the breath of God there which when God once withdraweth from any thing there is no longer the true nature of Religion there to be found and ever after it is only fit to be a receptacle for the unclean spirit of man which must have some outward court some appearances of the holy nature and institutions of God to place it selfe in But the true nature and use of the thing is then lost that speech referring to the natural state of the creature is here true also Thou withdrawest thy breath they perish 3. Take notice of the proper way of discerning the truth and growth of Religion It is not by having the outward notion it is not by growing in the outward notion of any thing as of Faith Love Self-denial Resignation to Gods will c. but by the vertue and growth of the nature of the thing it self The Kingdom of God is not in word but in power VIII Of the weakness uncertainty and invalidity of the Flesh in reference to the things of God IOHN 6.63 The Flesh profiteth nothing THe whole Verse runneth thus It is the Spirit that quickeneth the flesh profiteth nothing the words that I speak unto you they are Spirit and they are Life In the ministrations of God in the things held forth by Christ there is Flesh and Spirit Man who himself is but flesh he eyes the flesh thinking to drink in light life and happiness thence but that lies not where man looks for it viz. in the flesh in the outward reason and understanding of the thing but in the spirit of it in the spiritual nature and vertue of it It is the spirit of the truth that quickeneth not the Flesh of it Christs words in his Light in his Spirit are Life and Spirit in the light of man to the ear of man to the understanding of man they are but flesh Flesh is the principle of Nature the Root of the first Adam and the Garment about the second Adam Spirit is the principle of Grace the Root of the second Adam the new principle of life sown in and renewing the old earth of God Flesh denotes weakness outwardness proneness to pollution and corruption Spirit denotes strength inwardness purity That which is born after the flesh dyes even Christ himself so born dyes That which is born after the spirit lives even the weakest creature so born lives The flesh profiteth nothing There is a fleshly principle and there is a fleshly object neither of which are of any advantage of any true profit to the end here spoken The flesh in man is not a profitable principle the Flesh of Christ is not a profitable object The eye of the flesh is not a profitable eye the sight of the flesh is not a profitable sight the things so seen though otherwise never so excellent in their own light in their own nature yet here are of no use no benefit at all The fleshly object cannot feed the spiritual principle nor can the fleshly principle feed on the spiritual object The flesh is the natural understanding of man take it either with all outward helps of art or of more immediate revelations from God both which may very much advance it This is the principle or eye of flesh The object of this eye is all things so far as they are liable to it even the truths of God themselves the outward nature of them the outward reason of them is flesh Flesh is Gods eye an eye of his making and therefore it can be no disparagement to God to have it see the things of God in its own Religion Now this natural understanding this fleshly principle the eye of man is uncapable of receiving any thing that is spiritual from all the outward teachings of God nor can the truths of God the true nature of the things of God enter into man any such way as he looks for them The Kingdom of God commeth not by observation The spirit of the Lord entereth not into a man at the eye of his spirit Man indeed may receive the outwardness of God the outwardness of his Light the outwardness of his Life the outward Gifts of Faith of Love c. Faith of his own element faith sutable to his own nature yet do not boast O man for who hath received any such thing now but he cannot receive the truth he cannot receive the new life the seed of the kingdom is sown and groweth up man knoweth not how Indeed after the Kingdom hath entered into man and overcome him and new-molded him then he also can receive the truth and answer the touches of it though this is not so properly called a motion of his as of the life in him Nevertheless I live yet not I but Christ in me saith the Apostle So that this Scripture teacheth man in all his highest strains Let him climb as high as he can with all the revelations and discoveries of God to him Let him know what he can of Christ receive what he can from Christ act what he can towards Christ All this is to no purpose it is of no use it is of no profit It is true It is of use in its kind It is an excellent kind of operation in this broken state of man and the Lord will make excellent use of it to his end but to the end proposed by God and the end which man aimeth at therein it is of no value It will not reach that eternall life which man aimeth at Observe me equally I say it is profitable in its kind and in its way and shall have its reward but it hath nothing to do with the substance
or with that reward which belongs to the substance both in respect of its nature and of all the motions of it In every dispensation these things are profitable In the dispensation of the Law to the Jews In the dispensation of the Gospel by Christ In any dispensation now in this thick cloudy darkness which man feels not because he wants senses such kind of motions are of use here and shall have their reward hereafter for God will be just to the nature of man giving it what it deserves but it hath nothing to do with that reward which belongeth to the new life and the motions of it Great is the mystery of the nature of man exceedingly hidden from man are the workings of that wisdom and righteousness which is therein in waies of Religion or devotion towards God The great principle of the life of it was sown and broken in Adam yet among these broken reliques there is a continuall motion progress and regress especially where there comes forth any thing with life and power to quicken and stir them up I do not mean life and power in an extraordinary way though that also hath been and may again be but in such a way as is ordinary to and in the common state of man To make this the better evident even to the eye of man which may see the outward part of this as well as of other truths I shall instance in some few very eminent particulars all which he cannot but acknowledg if he know but himself or have but had experience of himself herein But he that is in the dark and knoweth not neither the life of Christ on the one hand nor of his own nature on the other may very easily mistake the one for the other and confidently bolster up himself in vanity 1. There is in man a strong desire after God fain would he know him fain would he enioy him fain would he worship and serve him If he knew which way to please God he would lay out himself to the utmost he would spare no cost Wherewith shall I come before the Lord and bow my self before the high God c. Micah 6.6 Man in his very frame was a vessel fitted for God fitted to be a living house for him and cannot but most naturally long for his proper inhabitant He was made to serve worship and honor God other creatures have neither such a capacity nor such an inclination and he can never be well till he come to the thorow use and exercise of this his nature 2. There is also in him a strong sense of his own weak state He knoweth that he cannot come neer God that he cannot converse with God that he cannot enjoy God in this state and capacity wherein now he is He knoweth that he cannot learn the knowledg of God unless God condescend to teach him in a way sutable to his present estate Man is such an intelligent vessel as that he hath a sense of his own broken condition Man after his many shaterings yet hath so much understanding left him as in part to espy out his own brutishness in the things of God He seeth he feeleth his darkness and that he cannot reach that light wherein his life lieth 3. There is a great breathing in his spirit after the teachings of God fain would he hear the true voice fain would he be led by God into light and into life O how he pants O how he breaths after God after the living God! A formal dead knowledg of God will not serve the living nature of man but as the life sown in him is true life in its kind so it must have true life to feed upon Yet all this kind of life is death the whole strength of the natural life is dead before that which is spiritual Those objects which are living objects those motions which are living motions that principle which is a living principle in the region of man are all dead in the light and Kingdom of God So that man lives and moves truly in his way but not in the truth that which is life that which is truth with him is not so before God nor before that eye which is lighted by God in the truth Man The flesh The wisdom of the creature will enter into any way either of life or death that the Lord shall prescribe he will come within the lists of the Law and all that the Lord commandeth him there will he do He will come within the lists of the Gospel and live upon and obey God through Christ. It is natural to man as to feel the want of Gods teachings and to desire them so to follow them Though this is also true that there is a corrupt principle or corruption hanging about his natural principle which maketh him juggle so that he doth not walk evenly with God in any path Yet this is also as true that there is a natural principle which inclineth him to seek God and to be subject to him in every way he shall please to prescribe though through its own weakness and the corruption that hangeth about it it can rise to no great height It doth rise indeed often very high in mans esteem insomuch as he accounteth his devotion very high pure and spiritual but it is not so in the true Light and judgment of God Yea 5 thly The spirit of man will sow all his life and his death so often as he finds any flaw in it If this or that present strain of Religion appear faulty he will throw it away and if the next prove faulty likewise he will throw away that again The flesh seeking that which is substance cannot but part with that which upon search it finds not to be substance This is little thought of how eagerly the spirit of man will into the fire again and again that he may be purified how industriously he will seek out the cross of Christ and pray to God to crucifie him upon it that so he may dye the Death of Christ and live the Life of Christ. So far as the path of Christ is visibly excellent to mans eye and necessary to the end he aims at the nature of man so far as it is it self cannot but pursue it Yet all this profiteth nothing All this desire after God all this sense of himself and his own condition all this breathing of his after the true teachings all this seeking of life and death and all this giving up both of life and death that it may become a new seed losing its old nature form shape and corruption All these motions of flesh all these motions of mans spirit profit nothing It is true All these are very excellent and very profitable in their own place and station but here in this place in reference to this end they profit nothing For first These are not of the right kind What ever of these come from man or grow up in the meer nature of man are not
the truth This is not the right seed nor is this the right earth wherein the right seed is sown This is but the nature but the wisdom but the righteousness of the first Adam nay although it were stirred up by the spirit of the Lord in man nay though breathed again from Heaven yet it would be no other This is not the nature not the life not the breath of the seed The son-like spirit and motions are only sown and grow up only in the son The true desire after God the true waiting for him the true repentance faith love c. grow only in him who is begotten from above in a new nature The Lord soweth the life of his own spirit only in the flesh of his holy Child Jesus and thence alone doth the true nature and motions spring up and there alone are they to be sound Secondly They are not true in their kind They are not in man so as man taketh them to be They are corrupted they are not pure Man doth not so truly love and desire God as he seemeth to himself to do He would not be so ready to hear his voice as he thinks he should be It is the son only that hath the spirit of obedience man is not pure is not upright no not in his own kind and way of obedience Neither is mans ear open to hear God It is the son alone whose ear God hath bored 't is his ear which he hath opened to hear as the learned Man hath but a bad ear at best and yet as bad as it is it is not opened Therefore all Gods charges against man will be very cleer when the nature and course of man is made manifest God chargeth him chiefly with two things with want of power and with want of will He cannot come to God though he would No man can come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him He would not come to God though he could Ye will not come to me that ye might have life There are three great exceptions against man in all he is and does all which are comprized in this phrase flesh which he that is able to consider the nature and course of man may easily observe 1. There is commonly a corruption a core of rottenness in his spirit and in all his motions He doth not know himself he is not so honest or upright as he taketh himself to be nor his actions so just and honorable He is not truly religious or just I do not mean spiritually but in his own kind He doth not love God he doth not desire to obey God he would not be Good if he would That which is in kind of this nature is so corrupted that God cannot own it for the thing that man would have it go for and thinks it to be O that there were such an heart in them that they would fear me c. Man deceiveth himself there is not such an honest obedient heart in him towards God as he thinks for Of all things man is apt to bless himself in the integrity of his heart though he is weak yet his heart is upright and though he cannot attain to be what he would yet he hath a true desire in him to walk with God but God will one day shew him that his heart was never right with him and that he cannot truly desire to walk with him And man if he could possibly observe and discern himself might at some times descry this naughtiness and corruption of his heart in these two particulars The one whereof is in that he doth not like to have it discovered but justifie himself against all the discoveries of God Man doth not like that light that searcheth too far into his hidden iniquity O how difficult it is to bring a conviction close to the heart of any man All will confess sin in general but their peculiar way of wickedness either in their worshipping of God or in their course and conversations they cannot endure to have touched There they stand upon their guard This is not Pride this is not Covetousness this is not Hypocrisie this is not the persecuting of Christ this is not Idolatry but the right way of worshiping God O read thine own heart and tremble in that 2 Chap. of Ieremy especially vers 23.25 34.35 Man purifieth his heart by his principles of light and knowledg he squares his worship life and conversation to his light and measure by the Word thus he painteth his Sepulcher not discerning the rottenness and corruption that is still within notwithstanding all this appearing truth and integrity The other is in that let God set him right in any dispensation he presently and most naturally turneth from it He is woond up by God against the hair but he sinketh down again of himself He is very difficultly brought to a state of rectitude in any kind but so far as he is he very suddenly apostacizeth from This also is abundantly set forth Ier. 2. vers 2.3 c. 2. There is always a weakness attending him If there be not a corruption yet certainly there is a weakness both in his spirit and motions If he be in any kind set right at any time yet his nature is frail If there be Religion if there be righteousness in him of any true stamp under any dispensation yet it is very poor weak and low This ye may see plainly in that people of God the Iews Look upon their Religion their Faith their Love there Obedience c. see what it was It was wrought in them with much difficulty They were hardly drawn to it What ado ●ad God to bring them to any thing He used many instructions many miracles many corrections much patience or else he had destroyed them many a time in the furnace and had never broght them forth And yet what were they when they were brought forth Alas a poor frail vessel a vessel long in making and yet when made very brittle How soon after every right constitution and reformation did they backslide and corrupt themselves which plainly evidences the frailty of their state They sung his praise they soon forgot his work so weak is man that though he be raised and set up upon his leggs yet he is not able to stand so 3. There is in man a continuall progress towards destruction That which is corrupt God destroyeth and that which is frail and weak dyeth of it self yea it s own frail nature inclineth it to that corruption which hasteneth its death Nothing can act above its nature Adam when he fell shewed the weakness of his nature The Prince of this World came and found somewhat in him to fasten upon Frailty is a property of the flesh Weakness is as proper to the earthly image as strength to the heavenly The seed of strength groweth up through weakness unto perfection and the seed of weakness groweth down from strength from all the strength wherein it is set
and which is set about it into its own imperfection For a close of this I shall lay down these eight Conclusions following arising partly if not wholly from what hath been already asserted in this and the two preceding Chapters which may both help further to illustrate it as also to fence it from such corrupt consequences as mans flesh may be apt to draw from some parts of it singly considered by themselves to its own prejudice The Conclusions or Positions are these 1. There is in the spirit of man a naturall inclination towards Religion Mans very nature teacheth him his own weakness his want of God his dependance upon him his ignorance of him c. and so putteth him upon seeking after him praying to him relying upon him c. Or thus There are some reliques of the Image of God in man which though not unbroken yet are not quite rased out of his nature whereby he is inclined to aim at and seek after that which is naturally excellent the sum whereof may be reduced to these two heads viz. To acknowledg and worship God and to be just and merciful to the creature whereof his neighbor man is the principal part So that all that can be done in this kinde even to the utmost degree mans nature inclineth him to pursue though not perfectly but only in a broken manner according to his broken state 2. These reliques of the Image of God in man are more lively and active when God by any light of his shineth upon them or by any life from himself quickneth them A dispensation of Gods according to the Law much more a dispensation according to the Gospell raiseth up this broken shadow man making him appear as it were a new thing by stirring drawing forth and advancing that in him which before lay hid and as it were dead For man though he be dead in respect of spirituall life yea and in respect of the true and pure nature of his own life yet there is still a life in him which he haveing changed the name of and it also being changed in its appearance unto him thinks to be very pure and it may goe for life according to the present rate of naming things 3. There is an owning of man by God thus far there is a blessing of God attending him so far as he thus is and acts This is righteous this is good in man that though he be broken weak and corrupt yet to cherish those withered seeds of naturall goodness and excellency which still have a being in him though they have lost their beauty And the Lord will own man so far as he doth thus for he shal not lose his reward though this kind of reward be as it were of debt and not of grace For this reward is due from the nature of God to the nature of the creature which though it fall short of what it was and of what it should do yet is still to be owned in what it is and doth righteously though after a broken manner in this its broken state Or thus This broken Image of God this nature these motions are excellent in their kind It is the duty and excellency of man thus to be and thus to act And were mans nature and motions more perfect and accurate herein he could not but be happy and blessed in his kind and degree 4. Yet this nature and all these motions are not of the true kind not of that kind spoken of in the Scripture not of that kind to which the life and blessedness promised there appertaineth But that life and inheritance belongs to the new seed who are born not of the nature of the earthly Adam but of the nature of the Son who is the Lord from Heaven and such are all the powers in their spirits and all the motions of their spirits From this nature they know God they desire God they beleeve love pray wait hope c. and their knowledg desire faith love c. is of this nature Again 5. Though this nature and these motions be excellent in their kind yet they are no furtherance or advantage in reference to the grace of God or life of Christ which are not dispenced according to any excellencies of nature or any thing that the creature is doth or can do Though God who is perfectly good and just cannot but honor and reward every degree of goodness and justice according to its kind yet this reward doth not at all belong to the righteousness and excellency of nature namely to be any furtherance to this other kind of life and righteousness by Christ nay the excellency and righteousness of nature is more opposite to the Law of this life and its dispensation then the unrighteousness thereof He who is any way cloathed upon is more unfit for the immediate putting on of a new garment then he who is stark naked Nay 6. The motions of mans spirit in Religion and civil righteousness having such an apparant excellency in them stand more in the way of true life then open wickedness doth The way to life is not by any of this but by being broken to all this by being stripped of all this excellency of all this righteousness of all this life which is the hardest peece of work for him who is most richly clothed O how difficult yea impossible is it for him who is rich in this kind to enter into the kingdom of Heaven 7. Yet this is not to be thrown away for nothing but only in subordination to a better life Man is not to forbear worshipping of God and acting of common righteousness and to run into all manner of prophaneness and wickedness that he might be neerer the Kingdom but to see the emptiness of them in all his attainment and exercise thereof And he who is thus in his spirit is poorer is more stripped in the midst of all his exercising of Religion and Righteousness then he who is given up or giveth himself up to all manner of irreligion and wickedness 8. And lastly Hence it may appear that God will be just in condemning every man because there is that seed of Righteousness in his nature whereby he might be better and do better yea and would be so did he not choke it whereby he might walk more intirely with God in every dispensation for what God dispenceth to man he so dispenceth as that man may receive his light and walk with him by vertue of that grace and power of the Lord which cometh along with the dispensation For God dealeth not with man in his dispensations according to what he was in Adam but according to what he now is in his broken state And so he will judge them the Heathen by that law of the light of nature which is yet written in their hearts the Iewes by the light of that law which was dispenced to them by the hand of Moses and Christians by that light of the Gospel which was dispenced to them
in his own spirit He is the truly natural Son of God Now this nature cannot be deceived because as it floweth from truth alone so it is purely truth in it self and knoweth not how to entertain or admit of any thing but truth It s nature is perfectly shut up against every lye and deceit it naturally turneth from it and thrusteth it away Its nature hath nothing in it to receive any thing of that nature and therefore cannot receive it Now he which is naturally true and cannot take in a lye surely he cannot possibly bring forth a lye Hence ariseth the certainty of all the senses of Christ and of all the motions of Christ Namely from their nature They are of a true of a perfect kind and cannot but act truly according to their kind 2. From his union with the Spirit His nature is not only excellent right and of a perfect kind but it is also in union with the original from whence it sprang Adam might be in union with the root of the flesh but if he were yet that root will not preserve its off-spring therefore he fell But Christs nature is in union with the root of the Spirit therefore he cannot miscarry both because that root cannot but preserve its seed and because that nature cannot but be sucking nourishment from the root There is no nature might in reason be more independent in respect of its own excellency and fulness and yet no natu●e is more dependent which ariseth from its constitution and is its wisdom and safety There is absolute certainty in the root and there is no less certainty in Christ for the very same certainty which is in the nature of the root springeth up in him yea his nature being in union with the root hath also communion with it insomuch as he enjoyeth the truth there in the time of his light and is comprehended by it in the time of his darkness 3. From his Life Christ hath a Life in him sutable to his nature A true Life a Spiritual Life a Divine Life His Spirit as it hath the nature so also it hath the Life of the Spirit of God All his motions spring from his own life and so cannot but be as certain unto him in his kind yea much more his life being of a more certain kind as our motions which spring in us from our life are to us in our kind We are not certain about the things of God because our life is not of the same nature with the things of God but he is very certain because his is Our knowledg at best is but revealed it is but given in to our life but his knowledg is natural it floweth from his life Hence it is that every thing every motion unto him is so pleasant and satisfactory namely because it is so natural because it flows from such a power of life Man attains his skil and understanding in divine things by the sweat of his brows by the labor and toyl of his spirit and it troubles him much to bring it forth to defend and manage it Yea his own heart and Soul if it be a little awakened and enlarged cannot but find fault with it but Christs skil and understanding springs up in him and flows forth from him and both in its springing up and flowing forth answers the truth largeness and capacity of his nature 4. From his Light He hath a proper light to see the things of God with He hath the same light with God As he lives in the same Country breaths in the same air hath the same nature spirit and life so he hath the same light He is called the light Ioh. 1.7 Iohn came for a witness to bear witness of the light He himself was not that light but to bear witness of that light verse 8. That was the true light verse 9. The light of men and Angels was a true shadow The light of the Prophets was a true Testimony but he is the substance He is that true light which all other lights did but shadow out and testifie concerning There is an eye proper to every kind of things that is to be seen an eye in every nature sutable to the nature of those things which it is to behold and there is also a light proper to every eye Now Christ having both the eye and the light how can he chuse but see certainly Gather up these together He that hath a true nature which hath a true eye in it He who is in union with the spirit of God which is truth and who himself is truth in him He that hath the true life in him for his motions to spring from the true life to guide his eye with And lastly He that hath the true light to see in how can he chuse but be certain in what he thus views And so his seed having the same nature with him the same Spirit the same Life the same Light how can they miss of the same certainty They cannot but be guided naturally unto the same things and upon the same terms of infallibility But now man Adam take him at his best who never had this nature but was from the beginning the earthly man who never was in this kind of union with the spirit who never had this life or light in him how can he understand these kind of things He may desire to be like God from a sight of the excellency of his nature being and life and fumble about the things of God but he cannot possibly pierce into them He may gather many apprehensions into his mind and approach in his way of reasoning to a certainty but he cannot reach the truth He cannot know eternal Life it is beyond the capacity of his nature He may perhaps reason that there must needs be an eternal Life and a way unto it but he cannot possibly conceive what that eternal Life is nor tread the path that leads to it But the Son or any of the seed cannot miss of it for it is written in their nature That Spirit that Life that Light which guides to it descends of it self upon them springs up of it self in them Use 1. Take heed of contradicting Christ in this Testimony of his which he giveth out upon knowledg Christ ●●me from God from the light of God bringing the light of God with him He tells you the truth here the true state of things as he saw and knows them to be with God And this is his Testimony that the present state and course of things tends to a future that at the last day Life and Death shall be dispenced and that the only way to life then is by beleeving now Christ testified truly and wisely He understood what he said He spake upon ground He spake what he saw by the light and in the bosom of God Wilt thou from thine own head from a strong fancy or reasoning in thine own mind contradict this and say There is no such thing
only to the Law of pure nature Nor can they properly be said to be subject to that for of it self it floweth from their nature and that in a way of subjection to them so that they may be rather said to be Lords over it All the dispensations of God with all the Laws of them flow from that life which is in Christ and his seed from which life they come in which life they are comprehended to which life they are inferior and owe subjection And though the Lord exercise his Son under them for a season so that they are above and he below they Lords and he a Servant under them yet when the heir is grown up to his age understanding and liberty it cannot but be otherwise And this is the right and proper state and posture of things whereas all things are now out of order the first last and the last first when every inferior nature is comprehended in and subject unto the superior When the sensitive part is subject to the rational the rational to the spiritual the spiritual to the divine The creature to man man to Christ Christ to God And when this is effectually sprung up brought forth and perfected then cometh the Kingdom the universal Kingdom the Kingdom both of God of Christ and of man Then God shall reign when he hath pitched his Tabernacle built up his Temple erected his Throne and Kingdom wherein he will reign When he hath taught his Son and his creature perfect subjection to himself then will he reign in them both Then Christ shall reign When he is become perfectly subject when he hath throughly learned obedience by the things that he hath suffered and hath given up his life to the will of the Father and lain in the grave during his pleasure Then will the Lord at length raise him up to the Crown give him the Kingdom set him at his own right hand and he shall reign henceforth in God and with God Yea When man hath learned this lesson from Christ and hath laid down his life also and buried it in the grave of Christ and there let it lie the time of Christs pleasure Then will Christ also at last raise him up in his own life even as God raised up Christ in his life and he shall reign in Christ and with Christ in God for ever and ever And now tell me ye that have skill which is the most Honorable of these Gods reigning in Christ and in man Christs reigning in God and in man or mans reigning in God and in Christ. Surely God will manifest his skill in imparting himself wholly and fully to his Christ and Christ will shew the same skill and will not fall short in it of conveying all to man that God imparts to him If the whole river cannot run intirely and perfectly every where it will not be satisfied in it self it will not be able to satisfie the desire of its nature which is after this manner to empty it self The Lord will sow liberally that he may reap liberally Nor is it any dishonour to him for us to see acknowledg and hold forth the greatness Excellency and Majesty of him in his seed Hitherto the Worshiping even of God by the mouths and in the spirits of most men hath been Idolatry but hereafter ye shall see man worshipped without Idolatry When the Lord clotheth the flesh of his seed with his own Spirit the spirit of man so soon as ever he beholds it shall fall down before it Yea all the Angels of God shall worship him The meanest Life of Christ in the lowest of his seed if any thing here may be termed mean or low shall deserve the greatest worship of the highest Angels Only use not Liberty for an occasion to the flesh The flesh will be entring into all the spiritual things of God but it is only into the flesh of them and to serve the flesh by them This they who are the seed in the true nature cannot do and they who are advanced to be a type or representation of the seed in any dispensation and so have a taste of the nature life and liberty of the seed are carefully to avoyd the doing of it in that dispensation wherein they are placed by the spirit of the Lord. The spirit of life in the seed cannot do thus This is clean contrary to the nature of that life nor the humane spirit neither so far as it dwells in and is comprehended by that life But that which is but spirit in a type or by vertue of a dispensation but is still flesh at root in its own in most nature is very prone to do thus yea as also the flesh which hangs about that which is spirit in truth both which prejudice themselves very much there and therefore should endeavour watch and pray that they might avoyd it Only use not Liberty for an occasion c. Ye may use all your Liberty only do not abuse it If it be in any kind an occasion or advantage to the flesh ye abuse it If ye manage it so as to satisfie any desire any delight of the flesh this is not true Liberty rightly made use of but the Liberty of the Gospel injured The Liberty of the Gospel it sets free the spirit but it is a yoke of bondage to the flesh it binds up the man wonderful-strait in all his nature and motions letting him not one whit-further loose then he is new made in this new life That Liberty therefore which feeds and satisfies the flesh which gives scope to the carnal spirit of man is not the truth And if there be any light which the spirit of man hath by the Revelation of the Gospel whereby he apprehendeth and practiseth such liberty he understandeth not that light he abuseth that light More particularly There are three main ways of abusing this liberty or the flesh is very apt to take occasion by this liberty to corrupt it self and prejudice the life of its spirit chiefly in these three respects In reference to its Temper in reference to its Rest in reference to its Motions What the spirit slays by true spiritual Liberty the flesh getting into the outside of it quickens and what the spirit thereby quickeneth the flesh thereby slayeth 1. The flesh is apt to take occasion by Gospel-Liberty to corrupt it self in its Temper to begin to lift up it self as if it were something The flesh when it s own nakedness is discovered to it and when it is cast into grievous bonds feeling the fetters and shakles of sin death and misery about it it is mightily ashamed but when it feels these fallen off and in stead thereof it finds it self clothed with the life and liberty of the spirit it begins to prick up its ears again and look upon it self as some-body O how low were the people of the Iews both in the eye of the world and in their own thoughts before the Lord clothed and adorned them but
afterwards how loftily did they look upon the rest of the world and scorn them even as dogs Neither were the converted Gentiles altogether free from this snare but they were apt likewise to boast not only over the rest of the world but over the Iews also Rom. 11. 2. The flesh will also take advantage hereby to corrupt it self in its Rest. There is a rest for the people of God a rest from all the toilsome motions of the humane spirit which the flesh will lay hold on to neglect what it should do and the doing whereof doth not contradict or interrupt this rest but floweth from it The flesh by this liberty will be apt to think it is become its own and may neglect any duties or ordinances duties of love and service ordinances of worship c. as it shall think good whereas the flesh hath no more liherty in this respect then as it is drenched into and truly led by the spirit The spirit of the Lord is free and so far as our spirit yea and as our flesh also is taken into the spirit of the Lord it partaketh of this freedom But the flesh which is in part thus advanced must know its place and distance It must know as well how to descend stand and walk in its present place relation and order as to ascend and maintain fellowship with the Lord. But this the flesh till it be throughly mortified cannot learn to do but will be continually seeking its own honour and ease and abusing all the light life and liberty of the spirit therefore the Lord hath great reason to keep the flesh very short even in his choicest ones 3. The flesh will also think it hath liberty to do what it pleaseth and so will make use of this liberty to glut it self with all manner of vanity and sensuality The flesh which naturally longeth to take its fill of the delights of the flesh doth as naturally incline to take all advantages and will not stick to bend aside the very light life and liberty of the spirit thereunto O what draughts of vanity will it now swill down when once it feels it self fenced from the fear of that danger which was its only curb Now will every fleshly spirit take its swindg according to its temper and inclination some in more gross and sensual some in more refined and spiritual pollutions Thus that wherein the breath life and spirit of the Gospel lieth An holy Temper an holy Rest and holy Motions the flesh getteth into and corrupteth and thereby eateth out all the excellency and vigor of life which was let out in the dispensation destroyeth that precious savour and leaven which it had from the life conceiveth with some new seed of spiritual filthiness and at last bringeth forth a more unclean filthy birth of the flesh then its womb was capable of before But by love serve one another Man would have liberty to reign He would have every thing serve him He maketh use of his Light his Life his Liberty to serve himself and to make every thing else serve him But the life in Christ and his seed which floweth from the Love of the Father and dwelleth in love delighteth to serve It will be serviceable to every thing but especially to that nature which is the same with it self This nature teacheth it not only self-love which every nature teacheth but also to love its neighbor here as it self Christ though he was a King and had a Kingdom yet he came not here to reign but to serve And all his seed who partake of the same life follow him who is their guide in the same steps As they have the same nature of love with him so the same nature guideth them to the same service of love The love that is in Christ and the love that is in the Saints maketh their humane spirit with all the life liberties and enjoyment of it which it either hath in it self or receiveth by the Gospel to serve both the life of their own spirits and the life in one another and that under all the weaknesses in which it is sown or can grow up It is more pleasant and natural to Christ and his seed to deny their Liberty and enter into bonds for the advantage of others then to enjoy it for their own satisfaction The Liberty of their natures the Liberty of their spirits they cannot lose and as for the Liberty of any outward practise it is not of so much value as to be maintained to anothers prejudice Liberty can exercise and enjoy it self as much in the forbearance as in the use nay it is direct bondage not to be able to wave it in such a case He is a slave he is in bonds he hath not a large and free spirit who can only reign but cannot serve who cannot deny himself with the same ease and content wherewith he observeth himself He is bound up in his Nature he is restrained in his Liberty He is free but in part he hath not arrived at the compleat temper of the life for the life can do both and hath a time and season for both XI Of the low Ebb which the Lord Christ was brought to by his Death and Sufferings PSAL. 22.6 But I am a worm and no man a reproach of men and despised of the people THis is the state and condition of Christ in the time of his Death This is his dying sence or his sence when he is dying of his own state and posture therein In the midst of his life while the Power of God rested in him and the Glory of God shone upon him he was a God and no man He was one with the Father one in substance one in life one in motion operation and enjoyment But now in the season of his Death in the time of his desertion and affliction while that life fails and gives up the ghost for want of the presence and influence of God and by the power and force of the enemy as he was before lifted up far above the state of man so now he falls far beneath it I am a worm and no man That excellency which is in man that excellency which may yet be found in man even in his broken state Christ is stripped of when his own life dies so that in truth he is not a man not so much as a man This is not an hyperbolical or passionate expression but the expression of a true sense from a true understanding Which will appear more cleerly if we consider these things which are most eminent in man as his Beauty his Majesty his Wisdom his Strength his Intercourse with God all which Christ was stripped of in the time of his Death in all which respects he was more like to a worm then a man 1. For the Beauty of man Man is evidently the most lovely the most comely piece of the whole Creation He is as it were the extract the quintescence of the Creation
exactly formed As Christ is exactly formed to be the beloved of God so Man is exactly formed to be the beloved of Christ. And as the Godhead pleaseth it self in the beauty and loveliness of Christ so Christ and in him the Godhead pleaseth himself in the loveliness of man God saith to Christ and Christ saith to man Thou art all fair my love there is no spot in thee Long before this world was both the delight of God and of Christ was in and about man Before the mountains were settled c. While as yet he had not made the Earth nor the fields c. Then was I by him Rejoycing in the habitable parts of his Earth and my delights were with the sons of men Prov. 8.25 26. 30 31. 2. There is a Majesty in man God who appointed man to be his Vicegerent set a stamp of his own Majesty upon him And this is yet to be seen in man there are the reliques of it yet in his nature and a sense thereof in the nature of the Creatures There is a stamp of subjection upon all the creatures and a stamp of dominion and Majesty in man 3. There is Wisdom in man Man is as it were the head of the wisdom of the Creation Man hath a light in him beyond the Creature whereby he can comprehend it mannage it and make it to serve him He hath a great root and principle of wisdom in him whereby he knoweth both God himself and the creature and can effect strange things He can foresee and provide for good and against evil He can search out what he wants yea and make use of what he finds Look upon the wisdom which man yet hath and ye shall find that he is as it were a God and liveth like a God in compare with the rest of the Creation 4. Man hath Strength too Strength sutable to his estate Take him with that addition which his wisdom adds to his strength and he can doe great things Take him with his engines and he is stronger then any other part of the Creation nay then all the rest of the Creation put together What can he not do what can he not suffer The Spirit of a man will beare his infirmities All the infirmities which ordinarily befall man nay all the infirmities proper to man there is strength in the spirit of man to graple with Indeed when God doth break man when God doth wound him then he groweth weak but otherwise man hath a great deal of strength yet remaining The Egyptians are men and not God and their Horses flesh and not spirit when the Lord shall stretch out his hand both he that helpeth shall fall and he that is holpen shall fall down and they all shall fail together O what a weak thing is man in the midst of all his strength when God comes to deal with him But set God aside and who knoweth his strength What buildings would man raise what defences would he make for himself what would he be what would he do what would he suffer did not the Lord provide a worm to gnaw at the Root of his spirit 5. Man hath a kind of intercourse with God He is yet neerer to God and hath yet more converse with him then the residue of the Creation His relation is of it self closer and his Communion more intimate God speaketh more directly to him provideth more directly for him Gods voice to and care over things is in a great degree in reference to him and for his sake And he knoweth God loveth God trusteth in God calleth upon God in another way and after another manner then the rest of the Creatures can There is yet a touch left there yet remains a wilde portraict of the glorious work of God upon man This is in part a taste of the excellency of man this is his nature this is his life this is his estate still in some degree though fallen exceedingly short of its own glory truth and fulness But now The life of Christ is far beyond the life of man He exceeds man further then man doth the creatures The Beauty of Christ wonderfully exceeds the beauty of man Christs beauty is of a deeper a purer a more inward nature The very rayes and lustre of the inward spirit of the divinity dwell in him and shine from his face There is wonderful beauty in the nature visage and in all the motions of the life and spirit of Christ His faith his love his sweetness meekness patience c. O how resplendent All that is beautifull in man he hath in him after a much more lovely manner and a peculiar beauty of his own besides And so his Majesty is also far greater Man in all his Majesty cannot but admire at and bow before the Majesty of Christ in his person words and gestures He appeared like one of another region He spake with another manner of spirit and in such a way as was sutable to the Majesty of his own spirit He taught as one having authority And though he was exceeding full of love and tenderness yet his Majesty kept his disciples so in awe that they durst not ask him any question but very humbly and with great fear and reverence The Wisdom also of Christ did far transcend the wisdom of Man The root thereof was of a better kind planted in better earth deeper rooted more carefully attended and of a better growth Christ was able by the skill and vertue of his nature to contrive spiritual designs to manage spirituall affairs to provide for spirituall good and against spirituall evil yea far more skilfull was he in his spiritual estate then man in his naturall A very wise and understanding shepheard able to walk himself and guide all his sheep through all danger distractions oppositions intricacies and deaths into the full truth and substance of life And the Strength of Christ is great too What cannot Christ do what cannot Christ suffer The Life of Christ can better dye its death then man can his It can goe through weakness better It can endure to be far more weak and in that weakness dye a far more bitter death It can run through all conditions all duties all afflictions all dispensations with ease and delight I know how to want saith Paul and how to abound yea I can do all things through Christ strengthening me And in another place he instanceth in the worst and hardest things expressing at what an height he felt his life able to maintain it self in the very midst of them Therefore I take pleasure in infirmities in reproaches in necessities in persecutions in distresses for Christs sake for when I am weak then am I strong 2 Cor. 12.10 Lastly Christs intercourse with God how sweet how full is it He is ever conversing with God God is ever conversing with him He eyeth God in every thing in all spiritual motions in all natural motions In spiritual motions he hath to do with nothing
is from the true knowledg of himself Man would fain be broken There is an apprehension upon him that the way to life is through death for this which he possesseth he may see he may feel and so may easily be convinced that it is not life and therefore he cannot but long and earnestly desire to pass through it that so he may come at life But this Baptism none can baptize himself with He alone can do it who baptized Christ. It is the Life alone which is capable of this breaking for the outward vessel belonging to the seed or in which the seed is sown hath its capacity in and from the Life and he alone can break it who formed it The Lord alone can build and the Lord alone can destroy this kind of fabrick This wise and accurate destruction requireth the same skill and vertue which issued out and built up the nature and Life of Christ and his seed The Prince of darkness can never attain so much as to administer any degree of this death further then he is inabled instructed and assisted thereunto from the root of all things whose wisdom skill and power goeth along perfectly in every thing though it be not comprehended in or apprehended by any thing Now as all death and brokenness hath affliction and misery in it so this beyond all And as man will aspire after this death so he will fancy that he hath this kind of misery upon him but yet in the midst of all his pangs he knoweth not what belongs to it There are three great scenes in the death of Christ in each of which there are many various strains steps and degrees all which man can imitate very accurately but cannot reach to the truth of any of them 1. There is the death of corruption The life and spirit of Christ cometh forth with power against the corruption of mans nature and with the sword of God slayeth it in so much as he in whom the life of Christ is truly sown and springeth up shall find himself dying unto his sinfull nature dayly This is one scene 2. There is the death of the excellency of mans nature Sin must dye and righteousness must live yea and then righteouseness must dye also When the life of Christ at first breaks forth in man O says he that this filthy nature might be destroyed and that I might be brought forth in holiness and righteousness but little doth he then think that all this holiness and righteousness must come to judgment and dye also The Spirit of the Lord can judge and find fault with the very nature and life of the Image of God not as it is now corrupted but as it was at first planted in the first Adam The same God which sindeth fault with the first Covenant can also find fault with the first creature as it was brought forth under that covenant and can so judge it unto death and destruction 3. There is the death of the Son even of all the excellency of his life and nature as it was brought forth in the flesh Eternal life in the life thus received dyeth Christ thus alive dyeth even to the nature of this his life and to the spirit from whom he received it The Spirit who gave him this life and who kept this life pure in him he slayeth it yea Christ himself offereth up this life without spot to God through the eternal Spirit These are the three parts or stages of death which God mentioned at the beginning upon mans fall namely The death of the Serpent the death of man and the death of the Son Now there are counterfeits of all these Many seem to be dead to their corruptions who are not and many seem to be dead to the excellency of nature when it is but by the skill life and excellency of nature that they attain this seeming death Many also seem to drink very deep into the death of the Son who never yet tasted of that life of his which is to dye This is the first thing whereof this condition consists viz. A throughly broken state in it self 2. To this there is added in the second place a through sense of it in themselves They are not only broken but they feel themselves broken They are not only stripped and left naked but they feel both their stripping and nakedness In other cases a man may be poor and miserable yea blind and naked and yet take himself to be rich and happy c. but it is not so here This kind of breaking is lively and of quick sense in the spirits of them that are broken This is such a death as he throughly feels who dyes Christ felt himself to be a worm and the seed of Christ feel their brutishness and want of understanding Adam was cast into a deep sleep while Eve was formed out of him but Christ is awake and by the quickness of his awakened spirit forms his Church and the vigor of that life in his Church suffers in its death 3. There is also a through sight and contempt of it by the world and of them because of it God carries on the death of Christ and his seed openly in the eye of the world As God kindleth and setteth up this lamp in the view of the world so he putteth it out also in their view The symptomes of this death the symptomes of this breaking are so visible and manifest that it cannot be hid That life that power that activity that stirring of God in their spirits words behavior whole course c. is put out and gone They as manifestly appear all this season in the world without it as formerly they did with it And the world now despiseth them That which gained esteem and glory from the world being gone they cannot but despise them and so much the more by how much they began to honour them There is such a lustre and glory in the life of Christ when at any time it discovers it self within mans center as man cannot but acknowledg and subject himself with all his life and excellency before but when man sees all this fallen and himself still standing where he was This which made such an appearance above him being fallen beneath him Christ being dead and he alive how can he now but despise this appearance of the life and lustre of Christ and so much the more because of its former glory The exceeding low fall of the highest glory is most contemptible Never man spake as Christ spake and never man did as Christ did even to the eye and in the sense of the world He hath done all things well c. What Power and Authority did he bear in the very spirits and consciences of his greatest adversaries How did he every where so take with the people that his malicious and unjust enemies durst never meddle with him But in his death in his broken state he lost all He was not only a worm and no man when he
hath been testified unto you and from whence that testimony may come for ought ye know Have ye dealt ingenuously with the Lord in this point or rather have ye not watched for the halting of those which have testified that so ye might harden your spirits in your own invented ways For if ye could make good that they once were the Lords yet they are not now his unless the same spirit and light did again lead into them and quicken them The Lord loveth Spirit and Truth but regardeth not a dead form although it were the very same wherein his Spirit once did live Can ye blame the Lord for preparing a stumbling block for you or for suffering or giving you up to stumble when ye your selves desire it Ye will have such and such Ordinances paths and practises to be the ways of the Lord every one according to his own imagination and cannot endure to hear any thing to the contrary Ye will be judging and measuring the things of God before ye have received either an eye or light or measure from him But I injure you ye have eyes ye have light ye have the reed of the Word and can measure things aright by that It is well so it must be But assuredly the Spirit of the Lord hath tryed and judged all your light all your ways all your knowledg and practises in Religion and hath found them scanty in his ballance scanty even of that true light nature and spirit which he seeketh to worship him and which he alone delighteth to be worshipped in Alas Sirs ye may please your selves awhile but ye cannot stand before the blasting breath of the Lord which bloweth upon all flesh and corrupteth it If the Lord hath testified against your duties as being things which he requireth not at your hands against your Ordinances and ways of worship as not being those which he hath appointed against your graces as not being of the nature of his Life and Spirit against your evidences for Heaven and happiness as not being such as will endure his tryal and touchstone yea against your very foundation as not being that which the Spirit of the Lord hath layd but which your own spirits by your own art and skill a little heightened perhaps by your study of the Scriptures and other exercises of your mind have fastened and built all upon I say If the Lord hath testified these things against you the Lord will not fail to make them good and whatsoever your confidences to the contrary are ye shall not prosper in them O consider this if ye love your Souls It is not a building upon Christ after the flesh it is not either a beleeving or obeying from any rational knowledg from a knowledg of the understanding though the heart and affections be never so much heated therewith accompanying it never so vigorously which will save any man but a building of a new nature upon the new nature of Christ. It must be a building of a new nature for Christ saveth his building his people his seed his Church and it must be built or founded upon the new nature of Christ for Christ himself saveth not according to the oldness of the letter but according to the newness of the Spirit It is not the building of such a new nature upon such a Christ as man will call so but a building of the truth upon the Truth Alas what a poor imaginary thing is the Christ which many if not most apprehend Christ consisteth not in the name but in the nature and in the spirit of the thing Now who knoweth the nature of Christ or of that God which dwelleth in Christ Who knoweth the nature of his Wisdom the nature of his Goodness the nature of his Greatness the nature of his Life Spirit c. Who knoweth the nature of the Father which begat or the nature of the Son who was begotten either in his life or death yea who knoweth himself Man doth not build himself I mean his own nature upon Christ but that which he calleth himself upon that which he calleth Christ. Here will appear to be strange work when the Lord searcheth into it Wonderful serious are men in their Religion and yet through the present thick darkness little do they know what they do Little do they perceive how they build an imagination upon an imagination It is very true that the Apostles had a true knowledg of Christ and that they came forth with a true knowledg of Christ and it then being the time of light that the Spirit of the Lord also went forth to quicken that knowledg where it pleased him unto the hearers But what knowledg is it whereupon men now build Who now knoweth the nature of the Lords Anointed which is the only Saviour Who looks into the Scripture now with a new eye I am sure with an old eye no man can see the things of God But I see the things of God wilt thou perhaps say therefore my eye is new Nay but thou seest with the old eye and therefore thy sight is not right Take heed lest thou be convinced of this too late O Lord God that ever man should give scope to himself in so great vanity as to lay the stress of his own eternal condition upon the motions of his own blind dark nature But who doth thus I acknowledg to thee O man that in thy light and according to thy measure thou doest not so but in the light of the Lord and according to his measure who doth not so Tell me true Doest not thou built upon Christ according to thy creaturely understanding Ah Strait is the gate and narrow is the way that leadeth to life the fleshly reason the fleshly understanding the fleshly affections of man are too gross to enter into either The first Adam how excellent soever cannot lay one stone in the building of God The eye of mans purest Reason cannot read one line in the Book of God O who knoweth God or his Christ or his Worship or any of his Truths We have a great deal of knowledg in the world why all sorts know but yet my spirit saith to all the sorts of this present generation Who knoweth God neither do I speak about the degree but concerning the true nature of knowledg The gross unclean spirit of man which it still is in the midst of all its Legal and Evangelical washings cleanness and purity cannot possibly see or be acquainted with the Lord. No unclean eye no unclean heart no unclean hand c. can ever come near the Life and Nature of God but only that which is truly changed Nothing can live in the presence of God but that which hath the true Life and Nature of God in it which groweth not from any institution or form of Religion whereby so many appearing changes are wrought in the world but from a true seed sown in the spirit of man by the Spirit of the Lord. Now do not mistake me
and so still prejudice your selves as if I went about to disswade you from duties Ordinances reading of the Scriptures praying hearing of the Word and the like No I disswade you not from any of these nor from any thing else wherein ye might truly serve and enjoy God as I am sure ye might in the true knowledg use and exercise of these but only from setting up dead things in stead of these which become not the things themselves by your esteeming or naming them so that so ye might once come into a capacity of seeking and serving the Living God I do not dehort you either from building up an house unto the Lord or from worshipping him there with his worship but this I testifie unto you that it will not be good for you to build up the Lords house with your materials or to set up your worship there in stead of his calling these the Lords and forming them as like as possibly ye can unto that which was once the Lords that so they may pass the better both with your own spirits and before men Certainly this will not be profitable for you in the upshot It would have been better for you to have sunk down in that desolation which ye so despise then to build with such hewen stones They who are Christs are taught by God to follow the Lamb whithersoever he goes Out of fleshly Egypt into the straitned Wilderness Out of the Wilderness in an entangled path to Canaan Out of Canaan into the Wilderness again The seed of Christ are not to set up a fleshly rest in Canaan but to be led again by the spirit into the Wilderness for the exercise of their spirits and they are not afraid to follow the spirit though out of Canaan and into the Wilderness I will lead them in paths they have not known saith the holy one of Israel Vain foolish man will limit the holy one of Israel and follow him only in such paths as he knows but the true-spirited child which understandeth the nature and truth of his guide is not afraid to follow him any whither And if ye can hear consider this I speak not at random There are secret pure hidden paths of Faith Love Worship Obedience c. wherein God and some of his people meet know own and after a sort enjoy one another even in this Wilderness where their spirits are fed by him and his life and nature embraced by them But the outward Court is given to and prophaned by the Heathenish spirit of man and can be no more fit for the spirit of the seed until it be again measured and purified by the Spirit of the Lord. If ye do not plough with the right heifer this will prove a very strange riddle to you Yet it is never a whit the less true in it self for your not apprehending or not relishing of it Take heed of fleshly wisdom take heed of a fleshly line it is always dangerous but then most of all when it appeareth as if it were spiritual Ye cannot measure any thing aright by a fleshly understanding of the Scriptures He that beginneth in the spirit may turn aside and end in the flesh But he that beginneth in the flesh can never in any part of that line arrive at the spirit This will one day appear as manifest as it is now true that he that beginneth not with a right spirit with a right principle with a right nature cannot be right in any of his motions Neither in his Faith nor in his Love nor in his hopes desires prayers or any other part either of his outward or inward worship and obedience O that it would please God to uncover the truth and to swallow up that thick vail which lieth as yet upon all Nations ERRATA PAg. 2. l. 19. r. a rising p. 6. l. 8. for a r. or l. 18. 24. for stay r. stage p 7. l. 3. dele an p. 8. l. 20. d. or p. 16. l. 9. d. of p. 23. l 4. r. throw l. 34. r. plainly p. 27. l. 3. for in r. is p. 28. l. 34. r. observing p. 39. l. 23. r. disperse l. 31. r. these p. 42. l. 2. d. in l. 3. r. in them p. 43. l. 5. r. power l. 24. for then r. there p. 57. l. 32. r. Region p. 58. l. 18. r. reacheth p. 60. l. 32. add fourthly p. 63. l 19. r. if he could l. 20. r. in this kind of nature p. 109. l. 7. for in r. is FINIS Some Books extant of this Authors to be had at M r Giles Calvert's Shop at the black spread-Eagle at the West end of Pauls 1. A Voyce out of the Thick Darkness c. 2. Light or Darkness Displaying or hiding it self as it pleaseth and from or to whom it pleaseth c. 3. Several fresh inward Openings concerning several things which the Day will declare of what nature they are to which Iudgment they appeal for Iustice c. 4. An Eccho from the Great Deep c. 5. The Fundamental Rights and Liberties of the People of England Discovered c. 6. The Life of a Christian which is a Lamp kindled and lighted from the Love of Christ c. 7. A Question about Government c. These out of print Four Questions about the Teachings of God A Touchstone or Tryal of Faith The great and sole Troubler of the Times or a Map of Misery A Word for the Commonweal