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A81247 The morning exercise methodized; or Certain chief heads and points of the Christian religion opened and improved in divers sermons, by several ministers of the City of London, in the monthly course of the morning exercise at Giles in the Fields. May 1659. Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C835; Thomason E1008_1; ESTC R207936 572,112 737

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better Covenant established upon better promises But I must explain it before I admire it The Gospel Covenant is that whereby God upon the condition propounded of faith in Christ promiseth remission of sins in his blood and a heavenly life and that for this end that he might shew forth the riches of his mercy * Camero Here I shall propose the same considerations as in the former Covenant only still something more and more comfortably considerable in the consideration of the persons contracting namely God and man according to the proposed method 1. Consider Gods gracious condescention And now Beloved that I have named Gods gracious condescention were my heart but duly affected with it it would constrain me to stop and put in a large Parenthesis of admiration before I should speak a word more Will God after the loss of the natural communion wherein he created man will God when man d●eads his Majesty and trembles at his revenging justice will God then as a merciful Father enter into a Covenant of peace with poor undone sinners affrighted with the sense of sin and wrath O the incomprehensible ●ondescention of such unsearchable riches of grace that grace should abound according to sins abounding when sin over-flow d all its banks that God should make a way thorough the deep into the heavenly Canaan never can we enough admire such Extasying grace This is the first thing considerable 2. The second thing considerable is the duty which God requires in this Gospel Covenant and that is Faith faith whereby we embrace the remedy offered us We want a pardon and nothing but faith can receive it we want perfect Righteousnesse and nothing but faith can furnish us with it we want that which may make this Covenant effectual to us and make it a blessing to us and nothing can do any of these things but faith faith is the Antecedent Condition for which the Reward is given 3. The third thing considerable in the Gospel Covenant is the promise Now the promise of the Gospel Covenant is comprehended in the word Salvation therefore the Gospel is called the salvation of God Acts 28.28 And this is the great businesse of Christ to be a Saviour Isa 49.6 That thou mayst be my salvation to the end of the earth when the Angels preached the Gospel they thought they could not expresse their news in better language than to tell people of salvation that must needs be great joy to all people In short when Gospel Ministers come clad with garments of salvation as Heraulds do with the garments of their Office then Saints may well shout aloud for joy Psal 132.16 Now this promise of salvation contains all Gospel promises in it but they are reduced to these foure 1. Justification this is a priviledge which other Covenants were unacquainted with and without this what would become of poor sinful man And this may well be the first great Gospel promise I might name not some Verses but whole Chapters to prove it Rom. 4. and 5. Gal. 3. and 4. but in a word if you would know the preciousness of this promise Ask those that have but felt what sin is and they will tell you 2. The second promise contained in Gospel salvation is Sanctification Rom. 8.2 3 4. The Law of the Sp●rit of life in Christ hath made me free from the Law of sin and death for what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his own Son in the likenesse of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh that the righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit q.d. The efficacy and power of the sanctifying Spirit which gives life to believers frees us from the tyranny of sin and death and whereas the Law by reason of the corruption of our nature could not make us pure and perfect but rather kindled than extinguished corruption God hath cloathed his Son with our flesh to take away the guilt and power of sin that his perfect righteousnesse might be imputed to us and fulfill●d by us that we might not live according to the motion of our sinful nature but according to the motion of his holy Spirit 3. The third promise is the resurrection of the body You know the penal●y of sin is the death of soul and body though the soul be immortal yet its being miserable for ever may sadly be called an Eternal death Now let the guilt of sin be abolished and you do therewith abolish the punishment of it for gu●lt is only an obligation to punishmen● let sin be pardoned and the sinner is freed from death and though believers dye yet it is as a corne of wheat falls into the ground they thereby ob●ain a multiplied life John 6.54 Whoso eateth my flesh and drinke●h my blood hath Eternal life and I will raise him up at the last day 4. The last promise is Eternal life a spiritual blessed and immortal life in heaven John 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have Everlasting life The Covenant of Grace is excellent fitted to bring us to the chiefest good Now the chiefest good consists in communion with God that was broken by sin and can never be perfectly recovered till sin be abolished therefore when the guilt of sin is taken away by Justification and the filthinesse of sin is taken away by Sanctification and the penalty of sin taken away by Resurrection then what can hinder our communion with God when we have once obtained perfect holinesse nothing can hinder us of perfect happinesse Thus you have the promise of the Gospel-Covenant which was the third considerable in it 4. The fourth thing to be considered in the Gospel-Covenant is the Mediator of this better Covenant and that is Jesus Christ God-man blessed for ever through his dignity he hath purchased salvation Hebr. 9.12 14. By his own blood he entred in once into the holy place having obtained Eternal Redemption for us how much more shall the blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God c. And he is not only the Author of Eternal salvation by his merit and efficacy but the most absolute example and pattern to us how we should walk that we may obtain his purchased salvation Rom. 8.29 God did predestinate us to be conformable to the Image of his Sonne that he might be the first born among many brethren 1 Cor. 15.49 And as we have born the Image of the Earthly we shall also bear the Image of the heavenly And this is the only Covenant whereof Christ is Mediator the first Covenant needed no Mediator the Old Covenant as Legal take it without its sprinkling of Gospel and so chiefly Moses but in all respects meer men were Mediators but of the New Covenant Christ was Mediator but this I shall leave
and so are all sicknesses and miseries the tendencies to death of sin's making for God doth not afflict willingly no not to a bare grieving of the children of men Lam. 3.33 but as it follows in Adam all dye 1 Cor. 5.22 2. The sinful effects 2. As the experiences of misery so of the abounding of iniquity attest this there must be a root of bitternesse where there is so much bitter fruit Our Saviours question Does a man gather figs of thornes it may in this case with the same strength of reason be inverted Does any man gather thornes of a fig-tree or thistles of a vine if our nature be yet so sweet and good whence do the unsavoury fruits of vanity and rebellion in the youngest ones that I do not say of blasphemy and impurity whence do these grow why must young ones be so long under the menaces and rods of their Parents and Masters and as the event testifies all too little too to restrain them from undoing themselves and damning their immortal souls is not vertue as amiable as vice if we did but look upon them indifferently can there be more said for the ways of sin than for the ways of God which are pleasantnesse its self c and why then hath God so few and the world nay sinne and Satan so many servants They that converse with children or are any way concern'd in their education can set to their seal that this is true how often do they see puerum zelàntem if not worse wilful and obstinate children folly so deeply bound in their hearts that the rod of correction can hardly drive it out Prov. 22.15 I shall omit many other Arguments which might be brought for the further evidencing of this pollution in us but I know it is not their number but their weight that is considerable And I hope by these God will reveal so much of his light that we may see and be convinced of our own darknesse The second thing more generally concerning this subject to be considered is 2. What this corruption and spiritual pravity is what this corruption and inbred pravity is There are many names which Scripture and Antiquity have given unto it those which the Antients call it by you may read more largely in Aug. contra Julianum lib. 1. cap. 2. By him or about his time it began to be call'd original sinne which word we shall henceforth more frequently use for though it be not found in Scripture yet that which we intend by it being so clearly grounded on Scripture the name cannot distaste any who have not a quarrel against the thing no more than the name of Trinity or Sacraments and the like 1. From its name And in these too conveniunt rebus nomina there is good reason why 't is so call'd For 1. 'T is call'd original sinne because 't is in every one from his original it may say to every one as soon as thou wert Rivet in synops Theol. I am Or 2. Because 't is derived from Adam the original of all Man-kinde out of whose blood God hath made us all Acts 17.26 Or 3. Because 't is the original of all other sinne it is the seed and spawn out of which they all grow this is that lust which when it hath conceived bringeth forth sinne James 1.15 As for Scripture names Chemnitius in his Common place upon this subject reckons up above twenty whereby it is called in the Word of God I shall not insist on any besides those which I shall have by and by out of this Text to speak unto Which I should be too much prevented in if I should set down any certain definition of it to be here explained besides what every one may gather from what hath been already said only I cannot but mention those three things which make up as it were this original sinne and into which Anselm divides his definition of it 1. There is in original sinne the absence of original righteousnesse 2. And parts it consists of which is the image of God in which he made man at first for he makes him upright and all his workmanship when looked over is exceeding good 2. There is present in man its contrary image that is unrighteousnesse concupiscence c. A heart evil and only evil vitious habits even before there were vitious acts as afterwards a man hath the habits of grace infused before he acts graciously This souls disease is like unto those of the body where there is not only a privation or absence of the former good constitution but a present indisposition c. And though original sinne be not actual yet 't is active actuosum though not actuale The flesh l●steth against the Spirit and sinne worketh all manner of concupiscence Rom. 7.8 To understand these things the better we must know 1. That the soul of man cannot be indifferent to or altogether without either of these images or likenesses it hath either the image of a holy God or of a sinful man upon it to think that it is rasa tabul● like white paper without any thing good or bad written in it is but a Philosophical fiction which Scripture no where owns and Christianity every where explodes there are but two Cities made out of mankinde Aug. de Civitate Dei Jerusalem and Babylon there will be but two sorts at the last day Sheep and Goats and unto which should these neuters or indifferent ones belong 2. As none can be without one of these images so none have both of them A mans soul cannot be as some artificial picture representing on the one side a beauty on the other side a Monster light and darknesse God and Mammon Christ and Belial are too much opposite to enter into any fellowship or agreement in his soul No but 't will be ask'd whose image and superscription in the singular number thus too hath it 3. And as by this sin there is both the absence of Gods image and the presence of his enemies that is man by it is not what God is holy c. and is what God is not unholy c. so thirdly in this sin is considerable that debt which man owes unto Divine Justice to satisfie for this h●s irregularity God might require that man should make him satisfaction for this injury and 't will be exacted of all men out of Christ It is no small crime to break the seal to throw away the image and picture of any Prince or Soveraign Now as the former ingredients into this sin made us altogether sinful so this consideration makes us by nature altogether miserable And thus I have spoken to this subject i' th general and more by way of common place I shall now confine my self in that which is behind to speak of it only under those notions which this Text affords As 1. 'T is called here our Old man 2. The body of sinne 3. This is that also which
the whole earth mans baser part the body but his celestial part his heaven-born soul is contaminated by it the sun moon and stars in it are turn'd into blood 2. This Original sin is diffused derived and communicated 2. Diffusive whereas actual sins are not Personal faults of Parents are not imputed to Children and defile not their Children unlesse imitated or unbewail'd Childrens teeth are not set on edge by the sowre grapes their Parents thus eat but Original sin being the sin of the nature of the Parent becomes the sin of the Child and will be entailed further to the last man upon earth for Children have the nature but not the person of their Parents An Objection answered And let it not seem strange that God should suffer this original sin to be so vastly diffusive that he should not exempt his own people wholly from it There is the same reason that corruption should remaine amongst them which there was for the abode of the Canaanites amongst the Israel of God of old It tryes them and brings them often to Bochim and makes their life a vall y of teares and whilst they go on their w●y weeping and crying unto God by reason of it they beare precious fruit for God does make good come unto believers out of this great evil making it an Antidote against carnal confidence and self-love a meanes to exercise their faith and a sure evidence of his own power and presence in the keeping of them Besides it is farre better for us by this occasion to be under the second Adam then ever it could have been being under the first The first Adam was a head of clay of the earth earthly The second Adam is a head of gold 1 Cor. 15.47 The Lord from heaven Though we were made holy in the first Adam yet having a mutable will we might under him perish everlastingly but they that are in Christ shall not perish but have everlasting life a glory beyond what we could have had if we had continued in innocency for under that first Covenant we could have expected only a reward answerable to our own works but under the second we hope for glory in some measure proportionable to Christs merits Though we know not what that glory is yet this we know that when he appeares we shall be like him 1 Joh. 3.2 And in the mean while as the Israelites who were before but Brick-burners and potters by reason of the Canaanites amongst them learn'd the art of warre and became Renowned soldiers so the true Israel of God by this meanes put on their whole spiritual Armour and dayly fight the good fight of faith and become more than Conquerors to conquer a lust being more glorious than to conquer a Kingdome through Christ that strengthens them when these Philistines are upon them as upon Sampson then the Spirit of the Lord comes upon them 〈◊〉 and what lust is able to stand before his Spirit Josh 10 24 25 As Joshuah took the five Kings and shut them up in the Cave at Makkedah till the Battel was over and then slew them So the Lord is pleased to shut up and restrain the corruption of his people in the Cave of their body untill their warfare be finished but then he brings them out and slays them they shall then never see these enemies more And therefore holy Paul who cryes out Rom. 7.24 25. Who shall deliver me addes presently I thank God c. as if he had breathed the same breath out in praise which he had taken in in prayer for deliverance so soon does God answer prayer made against this sin according to his will And thus we have seen something towards the explaining of this difficult matter Application The nature of this undertaking being more to informe your judgments than to deal with your affections I shall the rather hope to be excus'd if I be not proportionably so large in the Application which I am now come unto and shall lay down what I intend to speak to under these two heads 1. Of Instruction 2. Of Exhortation to inform your judgment and to quicken your practice 1. If we all have corruption thus by nature inherent in us 1. Use of Instruction it may silence all complaints against God for exposing of us to such wants and miseries at our very entrance into the world and so all along during our continuance in it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whence come evils was a question which did much puzzle the Philosophers of old here we are resolved of it The evil of sin and sorrow com●s from this root No wonder now that our children are more miserable than the young ones of Beasts or Birds because they are more si●ful 2. Hence it follows that in the very best there is a mixture borh in their principles and actions There was two in Rebecca's womb there are two in their hearts the Old m●n and the New man nature a●d grace flesh and Spirit Hence that striving that ●ombate betwixt them daily The unregenerate person this sin reigns in his body is as a Temple and his soul as a Shrine for this his Diana This keeps the house and all things are in peace In the glorified Saint this sin is wholly done away this unclean thing does not go with him into the new Jerusalem Only the gracious person is the field in whom the flesh warreth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh He is like the Moon which hath its spots when it receives the fullest influence from the Sun sin in him will not dye willingly but as a dying man multiplies his stroaks at his enemy though they are comparatively but weak ones 2. Use of Exhortation For Exhortation let me recommend these following Duties 1. To a right knowledge of this sin 1. Get a right knowledge of thy self according to this doctrine it is folly in men to have travel'd much abroad and to be strangers in their own Countrey It will be found the greatest folly for thee to be never so knowing in other things if thou beest a stranger to thine own heart and dost not know that it is desperately wicked The very Heathens apprehended this precept 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Know thy self to be of such consequence as to grace it the more they said it came down from heaven I am sure it is Gods message unto you from this truth this day Know your selves unlesse you know your selves thus lost Christs coming will be in vain unto you John 3.4 10. for he came only for the lost sheep Nicodemus had never doubted so much of Regeneration and a new birth had he understood the defilement of his first birth I am afraid there are many Masters in Israel that are ignorant of this still or else they would labour not only to reforme their lives but especially to get new hearts also thou canst not kill one lust unlesse thou layest the Axe
when sin hath been committed and the raging of the affections are a little appeased then the minde returns unto its self and the Spirit that was resisted brings to remembrance those grievous and unavoidabl● threanings which the Law denounceth whereupon there follows 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Legal repentance that is a wishing that the Fact were undone and that he had not committed the sin that causeth that trouble but not that he is any better than before for shew him a new temptation and he presently runs after it though under trouble of minde and though expectation of wrath incredibly full of anguish doth sting and vex him intolerably But now Beloved where this ends well there the Spirit insinuates something to put him upon panting after a Redeemer and to get power against sin and this brings unspeakable joy and begets peace past all understanding thus you see the best effects of the Law is the bringing men to the Gospel which shews the fifth excellency of the Gospel-Covenant 6. The Gospel-Covenant is the better Covenant in respect of its objects or persons taken into Covenant and that under a double consideration their multiplicity and their quality 1. In respect of the number The Old Covenant belonged only to one people the New to Jews and Gentiles Abraham and his posterity were taken into Covenant and all the world beside were excluded those few others that were admitted it was by extraordinary grace and they were as it were planted into Abrahams family but now the partition Wall is broken down which as it were shut up the mercy of God in the confines of Israel Now peace is proclaimed to those that are far off as well as to those that are near that they might become one people this is a great mystery Colos 1.26 Certainly all may well say so as we are poor Gentiles and we are made nigh by the blood of his Crosse Col. 1.20 21. 2. The Gospel-Covenant is better in respect of the quality of the persons taken into it the Law is proposed to wicked secure and hardened sinners 1 Tim. 1.9 The Law is not made for a righteous man but for the lawless and disobedient for ungodly and for sinners for unholy and profane for murderers of fathers and murd●rers of mothers for men-slayers for whoremongers c. to restrain and bridle them but the Gospel lifts up broken-hearted sinners Luk. 4.18 He hath sent me to heale the broken-hearted to preach deliverance to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind to set at liberty them that are bruised to preach the acceptable year of the Lord The Law is to terrifie the conscience the Gospel is to comfort it * Gerhard l. c. 7. The last excellency I shall name is this the Gospel-Covenant is every way faultlesse it is the last and best Dispensation of Divine grace Hebr. 8.7 If the first Covenant had been faultlesse then should no place have been sought for the second as if he should say the Covenant from Mount Sinai was not such Quo non alterum posset esse perfectius * Grotius that man could not desire a better Hebr. 7.18 19. There is verily a disanulling of the Commandment going before for the weaknesse and unprofitableness thereof for the Law made nothing perfect but the bringing in of a better hope did by the which we draw nigh unto God plainly this is so excellent we cannot desire a better The Old Covenant is abrogated 1. As to the circumstance de futuro it all related to the future Messiah Christ is come and that consideration therefore ceaseth 2. 'T is abrogated as to the impossible condition of perfect obedience the Gospel sincerity of the meanest believer is better than the exactest obedience of the highest Legalist 3. 'T is abrogated as to the burden of Legal Ceremonies Priesthood and shadows God gave these things to them and the Gospel to us as we give nuces parvulo codicem grandi * Beda things of smaller value to a little childe but a good book to him when he is grown up They have lost their Temple their Priesthood their Unction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Chrysost c. We have Heaven for our Temple and Christ for our Priest and the Spirit for our Unction 4. The Old Covenant is abrogated as to the yoke of Mosaical policy we have nothing to do with the Judicial Laws of the Jews any farther than they are Moral or of a Moral equity Luk. 16.16 The Law and the Prophets were untill John Hebr. 7.12 The Priesthood being changed there is made of necessity a change of the Law And thus I have doctrinally shewed you the excellency of the Gospel-Covenant APPLICATION 1. This retorts wicked mens Reproaches into their own faces They cry out against the Ministers of the Gospel for preaching terrour to them Be it known to you the Gospel is properly employed in celebrating the mercy of God in the pardon of sin and comforting drooping sinners but in your doing what you can to put out this comfortable light you force us to fetch fire from Mount Sinai to take hold of you 'T is true the Law was given with Thunder and Lightning and terrible Miracles the Gospel was attested with a comfortable voice from heaven and healing Miracles but as sinners broken by the Law needed some Gospel-balm to heal their wounds so secure Gospel sinners need Legal threatnings to fright them out of their sluggishnesse and sleepy security If whispers of peace will not awaken them we must cry aloud to stir them up if it be possible to break off sinning and to minde salvation Sirs 't is no pleasure to us to speak words unpleasing to you you hinder us from work more purely Evangelical and which 't is a thousand fold more pleasure to us to be conversant about 'Pray take notice that were it not in love and faithfulnesse to your souls we would never be so poorly employed as to be pelting at your base lusts Do but try us Break off your soul-undoing wickednesse and you shall never hear us rate you any more you your selves being Judges ex gr Ask a sober man whether the lashing of drunkennesse makes him smart or not Ask a chaste person whether the naming of such Texts as Prov. 22.14 The mouth of strange women is a deep pit he that is abhorred of the Lord shall fall therein Prov. 23.27 An whore is a deep ditch and a strange woman is a narrow pit reproach him in short Ask one that 's conscientious whether he thinks the Minister hath a spite at him in his Sermon because he names 1 Cor. 6.9 10. Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdome of God Be not deceived neither Fornicators nor Idolaters nor Adulterers nor Effeminate nor Abusers of themselves with mankinds nor Thieves nor Covetous nor Drunkards nor Revilers nor Extortioners shall inherit the Kingdome of God Alas all these will tell
can they but rejoyce in them and sing of the mercies of the Lord for ever Why are you not more careful to walk worthy of this Grace There is a Decorum Ephes 4.1 a seemlinesse that appertains to every Calling This made Scipio that he would not accept the offer of an Harlot because he was General of the Army And when Antigonus was invited to a place where there was none of the best Company he was well advised by one to remember he was a Kings Sonne When you suffer your selves to be drawn away by your lusts to be ensnared by the World to be captivated by the Divel you forget the Decorum that should attend your Christian Calling Remember I beseech you First That it is a Holy Calling and therefore be ye also Holy in all Manner of Conversation Methinks it should sound as harshly in our ears to hear of a dark Sun as a wicked Christian Secondly It is an High Calling Do you live High Scorne Basenesse Blush to appear in your Old Raggs To be seen Catering for your Lusts as you use to do Crown your selves with the Starres Cloath your selves with the Sunne Tread the Moon under your Feet Let the Gospel be your Crown Let Christ be your Cloathing Let the World be your Foot-stool Let Hidden Manna be your constant Dyet Keep Open House to all Comers Set your Spiritual Dainties before them Bid them feed Heartily and Welcome And for Discourse Tell them what great things God hath done for your Souls Thirdly It is an Heavenly Call Let your Conversations be in Heaven you have a good Correspondent there Maintain a constant Trade and Traffick thither Expect Returns thence Lay up your Treasure there where neither Moth nor Rust doth corrupt nor can Thieves break through and steal Be alwayes preparing for your passage thither Fourthly It is an Immutable Call Do not droop and hang your Heads for the Changes and Mutations there are in the World The Foundation of God standeth sure though the Foundation of States be Overturned Overturned Overturned the Lord knoweth who are his and will cause all things to Work together for their good But what if now there be many amongst you that are not Effectually Called In the third and last place I addresse my self to them Men and Brethren if you have any sense of the excellency of your Immortal Souls any Love to them sutable to that excellency any care and solicitousnesse sutable to that love Do not resist the Holy Ghost Make the best Use you can of the Means of Grace To day if you will hear his Voice harden not your hearts If he now Knock at the Door of your hearts and you will not Open you know not how soon you may come to Knock at the Door of his house and he will not Open. Diog. Laertius Thal. It is Reported that Thales one of the Grecian Sages being urged by his Mother to marry told her at first it was too soon and afterward when she urged him again he told her it was too late Effectual Vo●ation is our Espousal unto Christ all the time of our life God is urging this Match upon our Souls his Ministers are still wooing for Christ if now we say it is too soon for ought we know the very next Moment our Sunne may set and then God will say it is too late They that are not Contracted to Christ on Earth shall never be Married to him in Heaven THE TRUE BELIEVERS Union with CHRIST JESUS 1 COR. 6.17 But he that is joyned unto the Lord is one Spirit YOU have lately seen the Portraicture of our Lord Jesus drawn as it were at length Introduction both as to his Person and Offices together with the Means and Mann●r how he hath dearly purcha'st Redemption for us Method now requires that we lay before you how that Redemption and the benefits thereof come to be effectually applied unto us There we had the balme of Gilead and the plaister spread what remains but that it be now applied There we had a Bethesda an healing Fountain open'd but the Pool of life heals not unlesse the Patient be put in and the Angel of the Covenant Stir the waters Salvation for sinners cannot be obtain'd without a pu●chase this purchase is not significant without possession this possession not to be procured without application this application made only by union this union clearly held forth in the Text viz. He that is joyned unto the Lord is one Spirit Coherence In the close of this Chapter our Apostle seriously dehorts his Corinthians from that grosse that soul-polluting sinne of Fornication His Arguments which he lets flie as so many Barbed Arrows at the fifth Rib of Uncleanness are drawn 1. Partly from the end to which the body is appointed The body is for the Lord Ver. 13. The body was made for the God of holinesse therefore not to be prostituted to Lust and uncleannesse Ver. 19. The Holy Ghosts Temple ought not to be converted into a Stye for Satan That 's the first 2. Partly from that honour which by the Lord to our bodies is vouchsafed Know ye not that our bodies are the members of Christ Ver. 15. Believers bodies are the members of Christ therefore not to be debauch't so far as to be made the members of an Harlot This second Argument is back't and amplified by the words of the Text He that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit q. d. There is a near and dear union betwixt the Lord Jesus and true believers much what resembling that which is betwixt the head and members Only here 's the difference that union is carnal this spiritual He that is joyn'd to the Lord is one Spirit i. e. he is spiritually one or one with the Lord in Spirit therefore ought not to be one with a strange woman in the flesh Having thus beaten up and l●vel'd our way to the Text I shall not stand to shred the words into any unnecessary parts but shall extract out of them such an Observation as I conceive strikes a full eighth to the minde of the Spirit of God in them And 't is plainly this Observation True Believers are closely united unto Christ Iesus The word which we render a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Agglutinatus joyned imports the nearest strictest closest union This truth I shall endeavour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cleanly to explain solidly to confirme practically to appy 1. For the Explication of this truth Explication It will be of consequence to lay before you Query 1 1. Whom we understand by true believers Sol. 1. Not such as are united unto Christ by a meer external prosession Sacramental admission or presumptuous perswasion Such as these are said to believe in Christ John 3.23 and yet they are such so hollow so false that Christ dares not trust them Ver. 24. These are dead Branches John 15.2 Saplesse stakes in the Churches hedge Reformad●'s and Hangby's only
in Christs Regiment whose names are not registred in Aeternitatis Albo Wooden legs of Christs body such as have no true spiritual vital functions and operations Such as have a f●rme of godlinesse but deny the power thereof 2 Tim. 3.5 Sardys-like they have indeed a name that they live but are dead Rev. 3.2 With th se our Proposition meddles not 2. But true believers i. e. such as are united u●to Christ by Internal Implantation Living fruit-bearing branches John 15.5 Such as have not only Christs picture drawn on their fore-heads but Christs Spirit quickning their hearts Ephes 3.17 Nathanaels Israelites indeed John 1.47 Jews inwardly Rom. 2.29 Such as are really and effectually by the Spirit and Word of God call'd out of a state of sin enmity misery into an estate of grace union reconciliation so that now Christ is in them and they in Christ John 17.21 23. They reposing themselves in Christs bosome by love and Christ dwelling in their hearts by faith These are the Believers our Observation intends Query 2 2. What kinde of union it is that is betwixt the Lord Jesus and true Believers Sol. 1. Negatively what kinde of union it is not 1. Not a grosse carnal corporeal union not a union of bodies Christ is in heaven Acts 1.11 3.21 we on earth 2. Not an hypostatical persona● union such as is that ineffable union of the Divine and Humane natures in the person of our Immanuel the Lord Jesus 'T is indeed a union of persons but not a personal union Believers make not one person with Christ but b 1 Cor. 12.13 one body and that not one body natural but mystical True indeed the Church is call'd Christ 1 Cor. 12.12 but that is meant of the whole Church made up of head and members which is Christ mystical Now 't is not rational to apply that to any one single Believer which is proper only to the whole body Besides should there be a personal union betwixt the Lord Jesus and true Believers then would there be as many Christs as Believers But to us as there is but one Father so but one Lord Jesus 1 Cor. 8.6 Add that then very action of Believers would be of infinite value as is the obedience of Christs Humane nature by reason of its hypostatical union 3. Not an essential substantial union not such an union as makes Believers in any wise partakers of the substance of Christs Godhead Those expressions of Nazianzen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of old and English't by some of us of late viz. Being Godded with God and Christed with Christ are harsh and dangerous if not blasphemous To aver that Believers are partakers of the substance of Christs Godhead is to ascribe that to Believers which we dare not affirme of Chrissis Manhood it self concerning which we say that it was inseparably joyned together with the Godhead in one person but yet c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Concil Chalcedon without the least conversion composition or confusion True indeed Believers are said to be partakers of the Divine d 2 Pet. 1.4 nature but how not of Gods substance which ●s wholly incommun cable but Believers by the exceeding great and precious promises as by so many Conduit-pipes have excellent graces conveyed unto them whereby they are made like to God in knowledge righteousnesse and true holinesse wherein the Image of God which was stamp't on man at his Creation consists Ephes 4.24 Col. 3.10 4. Not such an union as mounts up Believers to an equality with Christ in any respect He is the blessed and only Potentate the King of Kings and Lord of Lords 1 Tim. 6.15 In all things he hath and must have the preheminence Col. 1.18 The best of Saints have but their Ephah their Homer their stint and e Ephes 4.16 measure of excellencies and Divine Endowments But now Jesus Christ in his Humane nature united to the Divine was sanctified and anointed with the Holy Spirit f John 3.34 Psal 45.7 Hebr. 1.9 above measure we have but our mites drams scruples in him are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Col. 2.3 Our Lord Jesus is his Fathers Gazophylacium the great Magazine and Store-house of infinite excellencies It pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwell Col. 1.19 Yea in him dwells all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily Col. 2.9 Three gradations the Godhead the fulnesse of the Godhead all the fulnesse of the Godhead dwells in Christ bodily 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. not only truly and really in opposition to the Ark and Temple in which the Godhead was typically but personally to distinguish the indwelling of the Manhood of Christ from all accidental extrinsecal and integral unions Thus Negatively 2. Positively What kinde of union it is that is betwixt the Lord Jesus and tru● B lievers g Nostra ipsius conjunctio non miscet personas nec unit substantias sed affectus consociat confaederat voluntates Cypr. Cyprian tells us in the general 't is not such an union as speaks a conjunction of persons or a connection of natures but a consent of wills and confederation of affections but this is too lax and general more particularly therefore it is 1. A spiritual union He that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit i. e. one with Christ not in a grosse and carnal but spiritual manner As man and wife united make one flesh Gen. 2.24 so Christ and Believers united by the Spirit and Faith make up one spiritual Christ Believers are made partakers of one and the same Spirit with Christ Christs Spirit is really communicated to them and abides in them 2. A mystical deep profound union This is a great mys ery saith the Apostle but I speak of Christ and the Church Ephes 5.32 We read of three great mystical dazling unions of three distinct persons united in one God 1 John 5.7 of two distinct natures meeting in one person in our Immanuel Luke 1.35 Col. 2.9 of two distinct natures and persons united by one Spirit that 's the union betwixt Christ and true Believers This is a great mystery a deep union Hence it is that it is compared to the mystery of the very Trinity as being like to the union of persons in the Divine nature Christ in the Father Believers in Christ and Christ in Believers Joh. 14.20 So Christ prayes Joh. 17.21 that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us Hence may be gathered a likeness though not an equality of union In the union betwixt Christ and Believers is shadow'd out the union betwixt Christ and his Father This is one of the great Arcana Evangelii 't is a mystical union 3. And yet it is a true real union not a fancy only not an imaginary union not like the union of the mouth and meat in a dream Isa 29.8 No but
evil is ever present but to do good he hath no minde so that he must needs cry out I have sinned and must return or else I perish now reproof finds ready acceptance from him the Ministers of God shall meet with no murmuring if they cry unto him Thou art the man for he is apt and ready to draw up a Bill of Inditement and read a large accusation against his own soul his iniquities now finds him out and followeth him every where that it becomes alive and appears against him with vigour not admitting the least of Apology but leading him to Condemnation and laying him open to the Curse due unto them that break the Law and therefore he now 3. Sentenceth himself as accursed of God and bound over to Divine fury the conscience of his guilt concludes him under the condemnation of the Law that he seeth cause to wonder at his very being concludeth himself unworthy the least of mercy and God to be just in the greatest of judgments which lie upon him and so proceedeth to judge himself and seal up his own soul under the curse standing under the continual expectation of Gods fiery indignation to be revealed from heaven determining it self a debtor to the Law and as such liable to justice and in it self unable to make the least satisfaction so that now the soul doth not only assent unto the Law as true in all its threats but app yeth them unto himself confessing unto him belongs shame and confusion hell and horrour wo and eternal misery that he knoweth not how to escape but if God proceed against him he is most miserable and undone forever and so is constrained with anguish of soul to cry out What shall I do to be saved This is then the first part of humiliation when the soul in this due order and judicial method of conviction is brought to a sight of sin to see God offended the Law violated the soul damned and destinated to everlast●ng woe if not Redeemed by the mercy of a God who hath established Jesus Christ his Son to be a Lord and Saviour to g ve Remissi●n and Repentance and so it proceeds to the sorrow for his sin as committed against God Second part of humiliation The second part then of penitential humiliation is contrition or sorrow for sin as committed against God Herein the soul is not only acquainted with but afflicted for its guilt seeeth not only that it is a sinner but sorroweth under and is ashamed of so sad and sinful an estate the stony heart is broken the Adamantine soul dissolved he rends not his garment but his heart and goeth out and weepeth bitterly He seeth with shame his many abominations and rendeth with soul-distressing sorrow and anguish the Curse of the Law that is due unto him and considereth with almost soul-distracting despaire the doleful estate into which his sin hath resolved him for he seeth God with whom he is not able to plead to be highly offended and therefore must with Job confesse that he is n t able to answer when God reproveth Job 40.4 5. he is vile and must lay his hand on his mouth though in his pride he hath once spoke yet now he hath no answer yea twice but he dare proceed no further Well seeing that all contending with God is but a da kening counsel by words wi hout knowledge and so he becomes submisse and silent under the saddest of affliction inflicted by God Psal 51.4 Lam 3.39 Crying out Against thee thee only have I sinned And why should a living man complaine for the punishment of his sin the soul is in it self confounded on the sense that God claps his hands against him for his sin therefore his hea●t cannot endure or his hands be strong Ezek. 22.13 14. Compunction of spir●t is the only condition of the convinced Penitent he seeth he is liable to the curse of the Law and his only outcry is What shall we do to be saved He being convinced that he hath crucified the Lord of life is pricked at the heart and in all approaches unto God he is ashamed and amazed bec●use a man o● polluted lips nay Isa 6.6 sadly seeing that sin overspreads him Isa 64 6. his very righteousnesse is as a menstruous cloth he like the poor Publican stands afar off and dares not so much as lift up his eyes to heaven and his only note and eccho is Lord be merciful to me a sinner Luke 18.13 he humbleth himself under the hand of God as having deserved the most heavy of plagues his haughty spirit is now laid low within him he is wholly resolved into sorrow even godly sorrow it is his grief that guilt is on his spirit but his greater grief that his sin is gone out against God a gracious and an holy God a just and an holy Law his sorrow is a sorrow of candor and ingenu ty not so much that he is liable to the lash and obnoxious to the curse as that a Father is offended the image of his God defaced his grand complaint is I have sinned against God his soul-affliction and heart-trembling is God is offended the frownes of God sink deeper and seize more sadly on his spirit than the sharpest of his sufferings his earnest cry is for the joy of Gods salvation he is not only afflicted with the terrours of the Law Psal 51 12. which he confesseth belongeth to him but is melted with merciful Ministrations of the Gospel of which he is so unworthy he cannot look unto Christ but with a spirit of mourning moved by the strength of the remedy to see the heighth of his malady and by the dolor of a Saviour Zech. 12.10 made sensible of the depth of his miserie by the mercy and love manifested to so great a sinner he is led to mourn over a gracious Saviour like Mary Magdalene he loveth much and manifesteth it by lamenting much Luke 7.47 because much is forgiven Thus then the believing sinner comes home by weeping-crosse findes conviction and contrition antecedaneous acts unto his conversion a sense of and sorrow for his sin precursive parts of his Repentance and God holds this method in g ving Repentance for sundry wife and gracious ends which he hath propounded to be effected As 1. To suit them for and engage them to set an esteem on Christ Jesus and the Remission of sin in him The whole need not the Physician but the sick and Christ came not to call the righteous to repentance but the sinner Mat. 9.12 The hunted beast fl es to his Den and the pursued Malefactor to the hornes of the Altar the chased man-killer to his City of Refuge so the humbled sinner unto Jesus Christ like Paul slaine with the sense of sin and constrained to cry out O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of sin Rom 7.24 25. it soon seeth and saluteth Christ for
alteration of his will and affections that he shall not more disallow than detest the sinfulnesse of sin he no sooner seeth his iniquity but he loatheth himself because of his abominations sin was never so much the object of his affections as now it is the object of his passions what he before loved desired delighted in he now by Repentance hateth feareth envieth with David he hateth every false way and the very workers of iniquity if he be surprised by the difficulty of his estate or distemper of his minde with an act of sin he loatheth himself because of it and with Paul professeth I do the things that I would not do the very existency of sin in him is his intolerable burden Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of corruption is his out-cry death is desired because he would sin no more he would rather be redeemed from his vain conversation than from wrath to come penitent An●elme had rather bein hell without than in heaven with his iniquity and therefore he yet recedes Thirdly Into an abstinence from nay actual resistance of sin he puts away the evil of his doings forsakes his way abstains from the appearances of evil he is now ashamed of what he hath sometimes acted with eagernesse he now preacheth the Gospel he sometime destroyed and blesseth the name he blasphemed he is not only restrained himself but he labours to reclaime others from iniquity nay not only is his hand with-held from sin but his heart is set against it his study is to mortifie his earthly members and his resolution that sin shall not raigne in his mor●al body that he should obey it in the lust thereof he is careful to avoid all occasions and inducements unto evil he feareth to make provision for the flesh to fulfill the lust thereof his hearty prayer is that he may not fall into temptation but be delivered from evil he resisteth all sinful assaults striveth against sin unto very blood his righteous soul is grieved for the sins of others all his complaint under sorrows is against sin his care is to be rid of sin his fear of falling into sin So that the Gospel-penitent maketh a perfect recession from sin all sin sin in its kinde not in its species or degree not only this and that sin but sin which is contrary to Gods Law and Image be it sin small or great natural and near allied unto him it is his care to keep himself from his own iniquity the sin of his complexion calling constitution or condition he will not indulge his right eye or right hand in opposition to Gods holinesse No pleasure profit or honour shall willingly hi●e him to the least iniquity the penitent eye judgeth sin by its complexion not its composition by its colour not by its weight he determines of it not by comparison with it self but its non-conformity to Gods Law so that if you say of any thing there is sin in it you have said enough to set the Gospel penitent against it for he is turned from all evil yet take along with you this cautionary Note that you run not into sinful despaire and despondency in observing your penitent Recession from sinne viz. Sins existency and sometimes prevalency Caution is consistent with a penitent recession and turning from it Sin may remain though it doth not raigne in a gracious soul Who is there that lives and sins n●t If we say sin is not in us we are lyars and the truth is not in us The righteous themselves often fall Noah the Preacher of Repentance to the old World becomes the sad pattern of impiety to the new World Penitent Paul hath cause to complain when I would do good evil is present with me Sin abides in our souls whil'st our souls abide in our bodies so long as we live we must expect to bear the burden of corruption sin exists in the best of Saints by way of suggestion natural inclination and violent instigation and enforcement of evil and so taking advantage of the difficulty of our estate and distemper of our minds it drives us sometimes into most horrid actions even Davids Adultery or Peters denial of Christ which of the Saints have not had a sad experience hereof nor must it seem to us strange for Repentance doth not cut down sin at a blow no it is a constant militation and course of mortification an habit and principle of perpetual use not action of an houre o● little time as we have Noted before it is a recession from si● all our days though sin run after us if once we be perfectly freed from sins assaults we shake hands with Repentance for we need it no more so that let it not be the trouble of any that sin is in them but let it be their comfort that it is shunned by them that you fall into sin faile not in your spirits let this be your support that you flie from fall out with and fight against sin the true penitent doth evidence the truth and strength of his Repentance by not admiting sins dictates without resi●●ance not acting sins precepts without reluctance when he deviseth evil his minnde is to serve the Law of God and he approveth of that as good he doth what he would not the Law in his members rebels against the Law of his minde and leadeth him captive and therefore he abides not under sins guilt or power without remorse if he be drawn to deny his Master he goeth out and weepeth bitterly he is in his own eye a wretched man whil'st oppressed with a body of corruption nay he retireth not into sinful society without repining his soul soon thinks he hath dwelt too long in Meshech and in the Tents of Kedar the wicked are to him an abomination whil'st then any soul maintaineth this conflict and so visibly disalloweth what he sometime doth he may safely say it is no more I but sin that dwelleth in me for his servants you are to whom you yield your selves servants Rom. 6.16 and comfortably conclude that as a Gospel-penitent he turneth from all sin and that is the first part of the formality of Repentance the second naturally followeth and that is Second part of conversion Reversion to God a reception of God God and God only becomes the adequate object of Gospel Repentance man by sin hath his back on God by Repentance he faceth about all sin doth agree in this that it is an aversion from God and the cure of it by Repentance must be conversion to God when God calls for true Repentance it is with an if thou wilt return O Israel return unto me Jer. 4.1 and when Repentance is promised it is promised that the children of Israel shall return and seek the Lord their God and David their King and shall fear the Lord and his goodnesse Hosea 3.5 And when they provoke one another to Repentance it is with a come let us return
whose smell is fragrant odoriferous and so full of seeds as no fruit more such is peace of all outward blessings the chief and full of the seed of all blessings it is therefore call'd the bond of peace Ephes 4.4 as if other blessings were the bundle but peace the bond that did comprehend them all Yet holinesse is that which beareth the Bell and maketh the musick in the ears of God and if the sound thereof be not heard before the Lord we shall surely dye Therefore it is observed that the Relative which is not plural as referring to peace and holinesse both nor is it feminine as referring to peace at all but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as referring only to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holinesse Here are two great points contained in this Text. Doct. 1. P ace is a high duty rich blessing and singular benefit that a Christian is bound to follow pursue presse after and labour for and that with all men The duty is pressed strictly in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendred here with the softest follow and in other places it is rendered to follow after 1 Cor. 14.1 Phil. 3.12 to pursu● 1 Pet. 3.11 to presse unto Phil. 3.14 And we have a full proof for all Rom. 12.18 If it be possible as much as in you lieth live peaceably with all men We must see there be no default on our part that all the world is not in peace but that we follow pursue presse hard after peace as far as possibly we may and to the utmost that lies in us and that with all men so saith the Text also But I must leave this small Pomegranate peace that I may ring out the Saints Bell of holinesse the sound and force whereof I heartily pray may reach all your hearts not ears or rather that the sound thereof in all your hearts may be heard in the Lords ears not ours that ye dye not yea that Religion dye not otherwise I may fear that Englands passing Bell is tolling at the departure of our glory and we may call the next generation Iohabod But the other and present point is this viz. That true and real holiness is the grace the duty the state the trade which every Christian is bound to follow pursue press after with might and main as he ever thinks to look God in the face 2 Cor. 7.1 Having these promises let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the fear of God perfecting holinesse what is that but to follow it follow after pursue presse hard to it so 1 Pet. 1.15 Be ye holy as God is holy there is as much or more pursue follow it still that you take up with no scant measure no low degree of it I call it 1. A grace and so it is yet more it is not one single grace alone but the conjunction of all graces To say it is a star is too little it is a constellation or the way of holinesse is as the lactea via altogether starry so holinesse is all grace 2. I call it a duty and so it is but much more it is the sum and Epitome of all duty All duties of the first Table are referred to holiness as all of the second Table to righteou ness Luke 1.75 Yea duties of the second Table are call'd holinesse 1 Thes 4.3 7. 3. I call it a state it is not an act or habit but a state nor a state of a Christian but the state of Christianity the state of consistency and continuance or growth there are some states we passe through as the man through Infancy childehood youth but abides in the state of Manhood we passe through the New birth to be born no more of mortification Rom. 6.9 11. Rom. 8.15 to dye no more of bondage to fear no more but in this state once we must persist persevere live dye in it 4. I call it our trade and so it is our noblest profession and course of life 1 Pet. 1.15 Be holy in all manner of conversation 2 Pet. 3.11 What manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation This is the trade and businesse we should ply in the whole course of our lives Now it may be asked what this holinesse is And I would answer and if the time would bear it open the definition which is this True holinesse is that inward through and real change wrought in the whole man of a formerly vile sinner by the Spirit of God What holiness is whereby his heart is purged from the love and his life from the dominion and practice of fo●mer sins and whereby he is in heart and life carried out after every g●od 1. I call it a change and so it is it is not from nature custome education it is not an habit form but a change Christiani fiunt non nascuntur creantur non generantur and a mighty and manifest change it makes it is therefore call'd a new birth new creation a new creature resurrection c. Is there not a change when a childe is born when a dead person raised a blinde man receiveth sight Yea whatsoever is call'd holy is eo nomine changed from its common use when a person or a garment or a place or a vessel or a day were called holy all such were changed as to their use serving now for sacred and Religious Services such is Soul-holinesse a Soul-change There are three great changes wrought in a Christian at times First One in Justification 1. Ne imputetur when a guilty sinner hath sin taken away that it is not imputed The second in Sanctification when a sinner living and wallowing in sin hath sin taken away 2. Ne regnet the power of it that it doth not raign The third is in Glorification 3. Ne restet aut omnino sit when the sanctified person hath sin taken away all remainders of it that it hath no being left Now though the first and last of these are both perfect changes and Sanctification is not perfect here yet upon some account some have called that change wrought in Sanctification the greatest change of the three for compare it with Justification Justification is a change of the state not of the person a change without not within the man In Sanctification there is a real change and that within the man In Glorification also is a perfect change it being the highest state of the three but the change is not so great as in Sanctification glory and grace differ but gradually there being no opposition between them as between grace and sin The change is not so different between the Morning light and the Noon-day brightnesse as between the Morning light and the Midnight darknesse 2. I call it an inward change to distinguish it from civil hon●sty 3. A through change to distinguish it from restraining or conforming
grace which produceth some particular and partial change but not a total and universal 4. A real change to distinguish it from hypocrisie which makes shew of a great and goodly change but is only outward and seeming not inward and real which three are often taken but as often mistaken for holinesse 5. Wrought it is neither natural nor acquired or taken up by the power of our own free will or force of others perswasion strength of reason convictions resolutions from within or without Hence we are said to be Gods workmanship Eph. 2.10 To be wrought to the same thing 2 Cor. 5.5 6. In the whole man 1 Thes 5.23 The God of peace sanctifie you wholly and I pray God your whole soul and body and spirit be k●pt blamelesse c. So that if you ask where is the seat of this holinesse is it in the head or heart or conscience or outward man I answer in no one but all of them it is as leaven that leaveneth the whole lump it is as the soul tota in toto tota in qualibet ●arte The understanding in a new sanctified person is enlightned to discern spiritual things which before he understood not his memory sanctified to retain what is good and shut out what is hurtful conscience awakened to check for sin and exc te to duty will subdued to embrace good resist evil affections orderly placed to love fear desire delight it and to hate and what is sutable to holinesse and the whole outward man for speech actions behaviour yea habit and dresse is composed as becometh holinesse 7. Of a formerly vile sinner grace makes a mighty change when it works effectually none so bad so far gone but it can br ng home Ezek. 16.6 Esay 55.13 it findes one in his blood and leaves him clean it findes a thorn and leaves a mirtl● it meets with a Publican and Harlot and leaves a Sa●nt it meets with a bloody Persecutor and hellish Blaspheme● and turns him into a Preacher or Martyr as Paul it findes men as bad as bad can be and leaves them in as good a state as the best 1 Cor. 6.9 10 11. 8. By the Spirit of God we may not ascribe it to the vertue of Ordinances or worth of Instruments 1 Cor. 9.11 But ye are washed but ye are justified but ye are sanctifi●d by the Spirit of our God Art n●ture education can do nothing here it is not by might or power but by the Spirit of God Zach. 4.6 9. Whereby the heart is purged c. here the parts of holinesse which are two mortification and vivification Esay 1.16 17 Cease to do evil learn to do well The first is privative The second positive Grace works right when there is first a leaving of old sin it is not putting a new piece on an old garment or clapping a new Creed to an old life or new duties to wonted courses Deut. 22.9 10 11. this were to sowe with divers seeds or wear a garment of woollen and linnen which God hates but there must be as to the privative part 1. A heart purged from the love of every sin there may be sin left in the heart no sin loved and liked the evil that I do I ha●e sin and grace may stand together Rom. 7.15 not love of sin and grace 2. A life from the practice and dominion of sin sin remains still but raigns no more he was a servant of sin Rom. 6.17 18. and had members enough to be instruments of sin a mouth to speak it a tongue to speak for it a wit to invent for it reason to argue for it hands and feet to work and walk fot it purse to spend upon it there is none of these now Secondly and the other part is yet much better he is in heart and life carried out after every good it is not a bare breaking off of sin that makes a Christian it is one half of a Christian but there must be a turning from sinne and bringing forth fruites meet for Repentance You have both these parts 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and perfect holinesse c. To come to the Reasons of the point which are foure Reas 1. This is Gods great designe therefore should be ours It is the greatest design God hath upon his people in all he doth to and for them All the immediate acts of God and all his mediate tend to this 1. All Gods immediate acts Pitch where you will carry it to the first of Gods acts towards man in Election God hath chosen us before the foundation of the world Ephes 1.4 2 Thes 2.13 that we should be holy So that I may not say If I am Elected I shall be saved though I live in sinne but if Elected I must be Sanctified and dye to sinne 2. Take all the acts of the three persons apart 1 Pet. 1.14 15. 1 Thes 4.7 First The Father if he adopt if he regenerate if he call it is that we should be holy Secondly It is the end designed by all that Christ did his Incarnation Hebr. 2.11 Hebr. 13 12 Eph. 4.26 27. Life Death Doctrine Example Humiliation Exaltation Prayers Promises Threats Miracles Mercies yea of his Intercession in heaven that we might be sanctified Thirdly It is the end of all that the Holy Ghost doth All the works of the Holy Ghost may be referred to three heads 1. His gifts 2. Graces 3. Comforts and all these tend to holinesse 1. All the gifts of the Holy Ghost if a gift of prayer of conviction terror c. it is to sanctifie thee if of knowledge utterance c. it is to make others holy 2. A l his graces What is Knowledge Faith Repentance Love Hope Zeal Patience given for but to make thee holy yea they are the several parts of thy holinesse it self which is made up of nothing but the graces of the holy Spirit 3. All the comforts of the Spirit are given to strengthen our hands in holinesse What is the peace of God love of God pardon of sin assurance of salvation joy in the Holy Ghost Spirit of Adoption given for but to make us more watchful humble lively in holinesse The Privy Seals of Justification must be attested in Letters Patents under the broad Seal of Sanctification or it may be well suspected Jeremy had two Evidences of his purchase Jerem. 32.10 one sealed the other open so must we 2. The mediate acts of God whatsoever they be in Providences or Ordinances First All ways of Gods Providence to his people tend to their sanctifying 1. If God afflict he saith to sicknesse Go and pull me down that proud sinner that he may be sanctified Go saith the Lord to the winds and storms of the Sea blow and beat the Ship to awaken me that sleepy Jonah Jonah 1.17 2.10 swallow him up saith he to the Whale the Lord spake to
body which hath fasted and prayed and joyned sincerely with the soul in holy services shall one day behold the face of God with comfort Christ will say Are not these the eyes which have been lift●d up unto God in my service Are not these the ears which have hearkned to my word Remember this when your bodies are wearied and tired in the worship of God The more thou servest God with thy body the more glory it shall have at that day 4. Labour to get gracious souls here and you shall have glorified bodies hereafter 5. Labour to be united to Christ by a lively faith and he will be your resurrection and your life It is the great promise of Christ that he will raise up the body at the last day John 6.39.40 54 58. that is raise it up to life everlasting 6. Labour to have part in the first resurrection Revel 20.6 Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection I know this Text is differently interpreted but sure I am according to the judgement of all learned men there is a double resurrection the one spiritual the other corporal the one of the soul the other of the body Those Texts Ephes 2.1 Col. 2.13 John 5.25 do without all doubt speak of the spiritual resurrection By nature we have dead souls dead in sins and trespasses void of spiritual life as perfectly under the power of sin as a dead man is under the power of death and as unable to do any thing that is spiritually good as a dead man is to do any work Now a soul dead in sin shall be damned for sin but if thy soul be quickned and made alive if the Lord hath infused principles of grace into thee and given thee a new heart and a new spirit if regenerated and born again then thy bodily resurrection shall be happy It is very observable That the Resurrection is called Regeneration Mat. 19.28 In the regeneration that is as many interpret it in the resurrection If spiritually regenerated thy resurrection shall be most happy and glorious O pray unto God and labour for regeneration and a new creation and that thou mayest have a share in the first resurrection 7. Heaken to the voyce of Christ and of his Spirit and of his Ministers and of his Rod and then his voye at the resurrection when he shall call thee out of the grave shall be a happy voyce If thou stoppest thine ears and wilt not hearken to the voyce of the Rod nor to the voyce of his Word and the Ministers of it thou shalt hear the voyce of the Archangel calling thee out of the grave whether thou wilt or no and the voyce of Christ saying Go ye cursed ito Hell-fire c. 8. Count all things dung and dross that thou mayest gain Christ and be found in him at that day not having thine own righteousness but the righteousness which is of God by faith in Christ and be willing to do any thing if by any means you may attain to the resurrection of the dead Phil. 3.8 9 11. that is either to a happy resurrection or rather to such a degree of grace which the Saints shall have at the Resurrection 9. Remember and carry daily in your mind that saying of S. Jerom Whether you eat or drink or whatsoever you are doing think with y ur selves That you hear the Trumpet sounding and the voyce of the Archangel saying Arise ye dead and come to judgement Vse 5. A Divine Project how to make your bodies beautiful and glorious and beautiful in an ominent degree in a supersuperlative measure beautiful as the Sun in the Firmament as the beautiful Body of Christ which so dazzled Pauls eyes that it put them out To make your bodies Majestical Immortal and Impassible and that is by labouring to glorifie God with them and to get an interest in Christ and to get gracious and beautiful souls O that this word were mingled with faith Methinks if any Motive could prevail with you that are Gentlewomen and rich Ladies this should Behold a way how to make your bodies eternally beautiful What trouble and pains do many women that are crooked endure by wearing iron-bodies to make themselves stait What labour and cost are many women at to beautifie their rotten carcasses Hearken to me thou proud dust and ashes thou guilded mud that labourest to beautifie thy body by vain foolish and sinful deckings and trimmings and thinkest thy self deckt in the want of decking That pamperest thy body in all voluptuousness and makest thy self by thy strange fashions so unlike thy self as that if our civil forefathers were alive again they would wonder what strange monster thou wert Hearken unto me I say and consider thy madness and folly by labouring so much to adorn thy body with the neglect of thy soul thou undoest both body and soul The onely way to make thy body beautiful is as I hove said to gain Christ to have a part in the first resurrection and to get a gracious soul and then thou shalt be sure hereafter to have a glorious body Excellent is that saying of Bernard Christ hath a treble coming Once he came in the flesh for the good of our souls and bodies now he comes in the Spirit by the preaching of his Ministers for the good of our souls At the last day he shall come for the good of our bodies to beautifie and glorifie them Noli O homo praeripere tempora Do not O fond man mistake the time This present life is not the time for thy body it is appointed for the beautifying of thy soul and adorning it with grace and holiness The Resurrection is the time wherein Christ will come from Heaven to make thy body glorious How quite contrary to this do most people live Let it be our wisdom with the children of Issachar to have understanding of the times 1 Chro. 12.31 Let us labour to get our souls beautified by Christs second coming with Justification and Sanctification and Christ at his third coming will make our bodies glorious above expression The Day of Judgement asserted ACTS 17.31 Because he hath appointed a Day in which he will judge the world c. SAint Paul perceiving the Idolatry at Athens his spirit was stirred in him ver 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his spirit was sowred and imbittered in him Paul was a bitter man against sin That anger is without sinne which is against sinne Or the word may signifie he was in a Paroxysme or burning fit of zeal and zeal is such a passion as cannot be either dissembled or pent up with this fire he dischargeth against their Idolatry ver 22.23 Ye men of Athen● I perceive that in all things ye are too superstitious for as I passed by and beheld your devotions I found an Altar with this Insc iption 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the unknown God Nor doth the Apostle only declaime againg the false god but
Magistrates themselves under terrors for their vitious actions and those who are not subject to any humane Tribunal why do they with such fury reflect upon themselves for their crimes certainly it proceeds from hence that natural conscience dreads the supreme Judge seeing nothing is able to shelter them from his Tribunal nor restrain his power when he will take vengeance on them In vain doth the Atheist reply that these fears are the product of a common false opinion which is conveyed by education to wit that there is a God who is provoked by sin and that ignorance increases these terrors as little children fear bug-bears in the dark for 't is certain First That no Art or endeavour can totally free a sinner from these terrors whereas groundlesse fears are presently scattered by reason and this argues there is an inviolable principle in nature which respects a God We know there is nothing more disturbs the spirit than fear and every person is an enemy to what torments him hence the sinner labours to conquer conscience that he may freely indulge himself in sin but this is impossible for conscience is so essential that a soul cannot be a soul without it and so inseparable that death it self cannot divorce a man from it perire nec sine te nec tecum potest it can neither dye with the sinner nor without him 't is true the workings of it are unequal as the pulse doth not always beat alike but sometimes more violent and sometimes more remisse so this spiritual pulse is not always in equal motion sometimes it beats sometimes it intermits but returns again those scorners who run a course of sin without controule and seem to despise hell as a meer notion yet they are not free from inward gripes conscience arrests them in the Name of that God whom they deny although they are without faith they are not without fear desperate sinners ruffle it for a time and drench themselves in sensual pleasures to quench that scintilla animae that vital spark which shines and scorches at once but all in vain for it happens to them as to Malefactors who for a time drown the apprehension of their danger in a Sea of drink but when the fumes are evaporated and they seriously ponder their offences they tremble in the fearful expectation of the Axe or Gallows A sinner may conceal his fears from others and appear jolly and brave when conscience stings him with secret remorse as a Clock seems to be calme and still to the eye but 't is full of secret motions within under a merry countenance there may be a bleeding heart To conclude so far is a sinner from being able to quench these terrors that many times the more they are opposed the more powerful they grow thus many who for a time breathed nothing but defiances to conscience and committed sin with greedinesse yet conscience hath with such fury returned upon them that they have run from profanesse to superstition as fugitive slaves are forc't back to their Masters and serve in the vilest Drudgery fearing severe punishments 2. The best men who enjoy a sweet calmness and are not disquieted with the terrors of conscience they abhor that Doctrine which discards the fear of a Deity so that those who are most freed from these terrors believe them to be radicated in nature and grounded upon truth and those who esteem them vain are most furiously tormented with them in which respect the Divine goodnesse shines forth in the greatest lustre towards those who love and fear him and his justice against those who contemn it thus Caligula who was the boldest Atheist in the world yet when it thundred ran with trembling under his bed as if God from heaven had summoned him to judgement whereas Socrates who was the Heathens Martyr died with the same tranquility of spirit wherein he lived 3. 'T is worthy of our serious thoughts that these terrors of conscience are most dreadful when the sinner approaches death the sense of guilt which before was smothered is then revived conscience like a sleeping Lyon awakes and destroys at once experience t●lls us many sinners who have lived in a sencelesse dye in a desperate manner and from whence doth this proceed but from the presages of a future judgement conscience anticipates the vengeance of God then the Alarums are encreast and the storme is more violent for the soul being sensible of its immortal nature extends its fears to Eternity and trembles at him who lives for ever and can punish for ever Argument 3. The consent of Nations agrees in the belief of a God although the Gentiles did grossely mistake the life and essence of the infinite Deity imagining him to be of some humane forme and weaknesse and in this respect were without God in the world yet they conspired in the acknowledgement of a Divinity the multiplicity of their false gods strengthens the Argument it being clear they would rather have any God then none and this belief cannot be an imposture because 't is First Universal What Nation so barbarous as not to worship a God certainly that which is common to all men hath a foundation in nature Secondly 't is perpetual falshoods are not long lived but the Character and Impression of God is indelibly sealed upon the spirits of men Thus we see the Universal Reason of the World to Determine there is a God 2. The Scripture proves there is a God to faith Psal 19. David speaking of the double manifestation of God by his Works and his Word appropriates a converting power to the Word this exceeds the discovery of God in the Creation in respect of its clearnesse and efficacy Psalme 138.2 Thou hast magnified thy Word above all thy Name There are more apparent Characters of Gods Attributes and Perfections in the Scripture than in the Book of Nature in the Creation there is Vestigium the foot-print of God but in the Word there is Imago his Image and lively Representation As the Angels when they assumed visible bodies and appeared unto men yet by the brightnesse and Majesty of their appearance discovered themselves to be above an humane Original so the Scriptures although conveyed to us in ordinary language and words yet by their authority and sanctity evidence their Divine descent and that there is a holy and righteous God from whom they proceed There is a vehement Objection urged by Atheists in all Ages against a Divine Providence and consequently against Gods Being We may hear the Tragedian thus resenting it Sed cur idem Qui tanta regis sub quo vasti Pondera mundi librata suos Ducunt orbes hominum nimium Securus ades non sollicitus Prodesse bonis nocuisse malis Senec. Hippol. The afflicted state of innocency and goodnesse and the prosperous state of oppression and wickednesse Honest men suffer whilest the unrighteous and profane swim in the Streames of Prosperity hence they concluded fortuna certa aut incerta
natura had the charge of these sublunary things even the holy Prophet himself was liable to this temptation Psal 73.9 10 11 12 13 14. he saw that as the clean Creatures were sacrificed every day the Turtle and the Lamb the Emblems of innocency and charity whilest the Swine and other unclean Creatures were spared Plutarch and Seneca and Cicero have rendred satisfaction concerning this method of the Divine Providence So good men were harrast with troubles when the wicked were exempted and this shook his faith but by entring into the Sanctuary of God where he understood their end he comes off with victory now for the removing this Objection Consider First we are not competent Judges of Gods actions we see but one half of Ezekiels Vision the Wheels but not the eye in the Wheels nothing but the Wheels on which the world seems disorderly to run not the eye of Providence which governs them in their most vertiginous changes The actions of God do not want clearnesse but clearing What we cannot acquit is not to be charged on God as unjust the stick which is streight being in the water seems crooked by the refraction of the beams through a double medium we see through flesh and spirit and cannot distinctly judge the ways of God but when we are not able to comprehend the particular reasons of his dispensations yet we must conclude his judgements to be right as will appear by observing Secondly The sufferings of the righteous do not blemish Gods justice 1. God always strikes an offender every man being guilty in respect of his Law Now though love cannot hate yet it may be angry and upon this account where the judgements of God are a great deep unfathomable by any finite understanding yet his righteousnesse standeth like the high Mountains as it is in Psalme 36. visible to every eye if the most righteous person shall look inward and weigh his own carriage and desert he must necessarily glorifie the justice and holinesse of God in all his proceedings 2. The afflictions of good men are so far from staining Gods justice that they manifest his mercy for the least sin being a greater evil than the greatest affliction God uses temporal crosses to prevent or destroy sin he imbitters their lives to wean their affections from the World and to create in them strong desires after heaven as long as the waters of tribulation are on the earth so long they dwell in the Ark but when the Land is dry even the Dove it self will be wandring and defile its self When they are afflicted in their outward man it is that the inward man may be revived as birds are brought to perfection by the ruines of the shell that is not a real evil which God uses as an instrument to save us Who will esteem that Physitian unjust who prevents the death of his Patient by giving a bitter potion 3. If the Righteous be thus afflicted upon earth we may conclude there is a reward in the next World if they are thus sharply treated in the way their Countrey is above where God is their portion and happinesse Thirdly The temporary prosperity of the wicked reflects no dishonour upon Gods justice or holinesse for God measures all things by the Standard of eternity a thousand years to him are as one day Now we do not charge a Judge with unrighteousnesse if he defer the execution of a Malefactor for the day the longest life of a sinner bears not that proportion to eternity besides their reprieve increases and secures their ruine they are as Grapes which hang in the Sun till they are ripe and fit for the Wine-presse God spares them now but will punish them for ever he condemns them to prosperity in this world and judges them not worth his anger intending to poure forth the vials of his wrath on them in the next Fourthly The more sober Heathens have concluded from hence there is a judgement to come because otherwise the best would be most miserable and the ungodly prosperous from hence they have inferred that because all things are dispenc't in a promiscuous manner to the just and unjust in this world therefore there must be an after-reckoning Fifthly There are many visible examples of the goodnesse and justice of God in this World either in rewarding afflicted innocency or punishing prosperous iniquities He that shall read the story of Joseph and consider that wonderful chain of causes managed by the Divine Providence how God made use of the treachery of his brethren not as a sale but a conveyance how by the Prison he came to the principality must conclude there is a watchful eye which orders all things And how many instances are there of Gods severe and impartial justice there is no State or History but presents some examples wherein an exact proportion in the time measure and kind between the sin and punishment is most conspicuous the unnatural sin of Sodom was punish't with a supernatural showre of fire and brimstone Pharaoh had made the River guilty of the blood of the Hebrew Infants his first plague is the turning of the River into blood Adonibezec is just so served as he did by the seventy Kings Judas who wanted bowels for his Lord wanted bowels for himself in life and death for he hanged himself and his bowels gushed out and thus the punishment as a hand points at the sin and convinces the World of a Deity Use 1 Vse 1. This is just matter of terror to Atheists which are of three sorts 1. Vita 2. Voto 3. Judicio First To those who are practical Atheists vita in life who live down this truth denying God in their lives sad and certain it is that many who pretend they know God yet so live they as if there were no Deity to whom they must give an account Such are the secure that sleep in sin notwithstanding all Gods thunder and if ever sleep were the true image of death this is the sleep The sensual who are so lost in carnal pleasures they scarce remember whether they have a soul if at any time conscience begins to murmure they relieve their melancholy thoughts with their company and cups like Saul sending for the Musick when the evil spirit was upon him The incorrigible who notwithstanding the designes of Gods mercy to reduce them although Providences Ordinances conspire to bring them off from their evil ways yet they persist in their disobedience Let such consider it is not a loose and ineffective assent to the being and perfections of God which will save them God is not glorified by an unactive faith nay this will put the most dreadful accent and the most killing aggravations on their sins that believing there is a God they dare presumptuously offend him and provoke the Almighty to jealousie as if they were able either to evade or to sustain his wrath 't is the greatest prodigy in the World to believe there is a God and yet
to the root of it that is in thy heart if thou cuttest but the branches off and for a while refrainest only the outward acts of sin upon the next temptation or occasion they will grow the faster as Rivers that have for some time been kept up by Banks run the more violently after they have broken them down 2. To confession of and humiliation for it 2. Be perswaded to make confession of and be humbled for this sin this original sin some think that Moses who was the penman of Psalme 90. ver 8. understood those words of this sin Thou hast set my secret sins in the light of thy countenance Remember this corruption though never so deeply hid in thy heart with all the parts of it is as perfectly seen by God as if it were set in the light of his countenance which is a thousand times brighter than the Sun in all its glory We read of Ahabs mourning as well as of Davids and of Judas's repenting as well as of Pauls and why were not Ahabs and Judas's sorrow accepted as well as the others O e remarkable difference I will observe in them Ahab that we read of mourned only for the judgement denounced and Judas repented only of the outward act committed but neither of their tears or sorrow went to the root to bewaile the Original of all this their impiety which we have seen Paul did and we know David practis'd Psal 51.5 He sayes not only Deliver me from bl●od-guiltinesse but I was conceiv'd in sin c. and that is as well matter of his sorrow as the other Possibly you would think much if I should recommend Austines example to you who confessed he had need of mercy not only to pardon those sins which he had committed but for those sins which if grace had not restrained him he should have committed and certainly we owe as much to this soul-physitian for preventing those diseases which otherwise we should have faln into as we owe him for recovering of us out of those diseases which we did fall into nay plures sunt gratiae privativae quam positivae thus too And therefore let me bespeak Gods dearest children in the words of the Prophet to Babylon Isa 47.1 Come sit in the dust Gods own inheritance is as a speckled bird as he complaines Jer. 12.8 Oh be not Ingrati gratiae Unthankful to grace You have heard a sad parallel between Adam and you but Oh that you might be like Adam in one thing more Sensus peccati conscientiae stimulus c. Ger. when he had sinn'd 't is said his eyes were opened Gen. 3.7 by which some understand that God gave him a sight of his sin awakened his conscience so that he saw from what blisse and into what misery by sin he was now cast He thus by lamentable experience understood good and evil Oh that your consciences were awakened that your eyes were opened too I shall pray for you as the Prophet did for his servant and afterwards for the Syrians that came to take him Lord open the eyes of these men 2 King 6.17 20. I am sure the more grace ye have the more sense of this sin you will have also Paul a Christian complains of it though Paul a Pharisee did not If ye have been prevailed with by the other exhortations ye will yield up your selves to the power of this 3. Exhortation Look out for remedy and help against it Did you but understand your condition by reason of this sin and were humbled for it you would engage all that you could against it First then In your selves Set your selves against this sin in your own hearts Thou canst not be a man after Gods own heart till thy heart be cleansed and made like unto God A true Christian takes more care to get rid of the evil than to rejoyce in the good that is in him though both be a duty being it is better not to see a friend which we know will do us no hurt then not to see an enemy which unseen will certainly kill us When Elisha would cure the waters of Jericho 2 King 2.21 he did not cast salt into the pots or dishes that might take it up but into the spring that sent it forth Labour to get thy heart which is the spring and issue of life or death season'd with grace Means to be used Blessed be God there are meanes to cure you of this evil 1. Faith in Christ Cast the wood of his Crosse into these bitter waters he was circumcised yet had no filthy foreskin of his own but of ours to do away 'T was our filth that was washed off in his Baptisme 2. The in-being of the Spirit of Christ prevails against the in-dwelling of sin Behold I have shewn you a mystery if ye would not all die and that eternally ye must all be changed 3. Prayer is a means in order to this David Paul others were troubled with this evil and they pray'd go thou and do likewise Let it be thy daily prayer Armado homine meipso libera me Domine From the evil one my self good Lord deliver me thou complainest of bad times oh complain more of a bad heart The flood came upon the whole world not so much for their actual abominations though great as for their heart-corruptions Gen. 6.5 Gen. 8.21 If we ever be owhelmed with sufferings it is for th s Abomination in chief Oppose thy self against this sin in thy relations weaken the Kingdome of Satan everywhere 2. In our relations childlen especially especially in thy children If their head-ake you pity them and enquire after remedies for them alas spiritually every part is distempered they are blind lame poor naked and what not that speaks misery Oh hard-hearted Parents that have not once gone to the heavenly Physitian for their poor children 't is usually said venenati non patiuntur inducias they that are poyson'd must not be dallyed with but presently some antidote if I may so call it given them They do but pledge you in this cup of deadly wine and will ye not the rather be instrumental to help them to the cure being ye have help'd them to the disease Wherefore do ye think your ch ldren came into the world in such a piteous manner what do they cry for Vox naturae clamantis c. the Naturalist will tell you 't is out of want that some body might cloath them feed them care for them c. But a Christian will tell you God hath given them bitter teares and cryes to lament their spiritual necessities and to beg spiritual remedyes Their insignificant voice signifies thus much whil'st they are yet dumb Nihil aliud faciunt nisi deprecantur they speak aloud in their manner Oh carry us to the Laver of regeneration let us be washed in the fountaine set open for sinne c. Surely God who hath not caused their tender
any receive not him this wrath tarries still and will cleave to and abide upon him for ever John 3.36 He speaks with authority Luke 19.27 Those mine enemies bring them and slay them before me and it shall be done 3. That the Psalmist makes it as it is a point of wisdome in the greatest to kisse the Son with a kisse of homage and subjection Psal 2 11 12. least he be angry what is the danger of that and ye perish in the war of your hopes and purposes and never compasse grace nor glory If his wrath be kindled but a little blessed are all those which put their trust in him 4. That then ye may plead with the Lord with humble boldnesse Psal 74.1 Why doth thine anger smoak against the Sheep of thy Pasture remember thy Congregation which thou hast purchased of old the rod of thine inheritance which thou hast redeemed c. 5. And assure your hearts of welcome Prov. 21.14 A gift in secret pacifieth wrath and a reward in the bosome strong wrath Mark their policy Acts 12.10 and be assured the relations of Christ are beloved of the Father Job 33.24 Then he is gracious to him and saith Deliver him from going down to the pit I have found a ransome 2. To those which the Lord hath translated out of their natural condition 1. Bring the work often to the touchstone that you may not boast in a false gift gold will endure the test and be more fully manifested to be gold indeed and finding the work to be right live with an enlarged heart to the praise of that grace which hath made this change 2. Deal seriously in the mortification of sin which God only strikes at and in order thereto count sin the worst of evils if this were done and throughly and fixedly done in our spirits there is nothing of any other directions would be left undone To set up this judgement there needs 1. Ploughing carefully with the Lords heifer viz. search into the Oracles of God there and there only are lively portraitures of sin and the genuine products and traine of sin 2. The eye-salve of the Spirit We are blinder than Batts in this matter and are indisposed very much or rather wholly to let this truth sink down into our hearts 3. Applications to the Throne of grace None but those which deal in good earnest in heaven will see the hell and mystery of sin in themselves He gives the Holy Ghost to them which ask him 4. Excussions and communings with your selves Prov. 20.27 The spirit of man is the candle of the Lord searching all the inward parts of the belly and duly made use of will tell many stories correspondent to the Word of truth use conscience and use therewith another and bigger candle to rummage the dark room of thy heart with Superadde to conscience the succours of the Word and Spirit and thou shalt do something in the search and finde out convictively the swarms of evil in thine own heart 5. The work of grace There will be else a beam in the eye and plaine things will not be plaine to us Gods work holds intelligence and is of amicable affinity with his Word grace hath the only excellent faculty in looking through sin 6. Attendance to the Lords administrations against sin God writes in great letters in the world what he had first written in the Scriptures every breach by sin should lead down into more hatred brokennesse of spirit and shame before the Lord for sinne This is the engaging evil this engages God and the holy Angels and Devils and the very man against himself Nothing can be his friend to whom sin hath made God an enemy Wo to the man that is in this sense alone and hath heaven and earth and hell and all within the Continent of them against him it is impossible for that mans heart and hands to stand strong This is the mighty prevailing evil Never was man so stout as to stand before the face of sin but he shivered and was like a garment eaten up of moths This hath fretted the joynts of Kingdomes in pieces Psal 39.11 and made the goodliest houses in the world a heap of rubbish Zech. 5.4 will make Bab lon that sits as a Queen an habitation of Divels Rev. 18.2 and the hold of every foule spirit and a Cage of every unclean and hateful birds made the Angels Divels and heaven it self too hot for them Never were the like changes made as by sinne grace makes not changes of richer comfort than sin doth of dismal consequence it is made by the Holy Ghost an argument of the infinity of the power of God to pardon and subdue sinne Micah 7.18 3. Bear all afflictions incident to an holy course chearfully The Martyrs went joyfully into the fire because the flames of hell were quenched to them bore their Crosse easily because no curse and damnation to them in Christ Jesus Gal. 3.13 4. Reduce your anger to the similitude of Gods which is very slowly kindled and is an intense holy displicence only against sin Psal 103.8 and is cleans'd from all dregs of rashnesse injustice and discomposure such zeal should eat us up John 2.17 MANS IMPOTENCY TO Help himself out of that misery ROM 5.6 For when we were yet without strength in due time Christ dyed for the ungodly IN this Chapter there are two parts in the first the Apostle layes down the comfortable fruits and priviledges of a justified estate in the second he argues the firmnesse of these comforts because they are so rich that they are scarce credible and hardly received The firmnesse and soundnesse of these comforts the Apostle representeth by a double comparison 1. By comparing Chr st with Christ and 2. Christ with Adam Christ with Christ or one benefit that we have by him with another from the Text to ver 12. then Christ with Adam the second Adam with the first to the end of the Chapter In comparing Christ with Christ three considerations do occur 1. The efficacy of his love towards us before justification with the efficacy of his love towards us after justification the argument standeth thus if Christ had a love to us when sinners and his love prevailed with him to die for us much more may we expect his love when made friends if when we were in sin and misery shiftless and helpless Christ had the heart to die for us and to take us with all our faults will he cast us off after we are justified and accepted with God in him this love of Christ is asserted in the 6. verse amplified in the 7. and 8. verses and the conclusion is inferred verse 9. much more then being now justified by his blood we shall be saved from wrath through him The second Comparison is of the efficacy of the death of Christ and the efficacy of the life of Christ 't is absurd to think that Christ rising from the dead
and said Thou art Christ the Son of the living God and Jesus answered and said unto him Blessed art thou Simon Bar-Jona for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in heaven It so farre transcends the capacity of humane reason that reason cannot so much as approve of it Gerhard Alting when it was revealed without inward illumination and perswasion of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 2.9 10 14 15. Eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither hath it entered into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him but God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God but the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned but he that is spiritual judgeth all things and hereupon it is called the N●w Covenant not in respect of the time that it had no being before the incarnation of Christ but in respect of the knowledge of it the knowledge of the Legal Covenant was born with us and it was fore-known to nature but the Gospel-Covenant was who●ly new revealed from the bosome of the Father it was administred by new Officers confirmed by new Sacraments let into the hearts of people by new pourings out of the Spirit therefore the Apostle prayes Ephes 1.17 18. * Maccovius That the God of o●r Lord Jesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the Spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledge of him the eyes of your understanding being enlightened that ye may know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints God would never have instituted the Legal Covenant but for the Gospels sake Galat. 3.24 Wher●fore the Law was our School-master to bring us unto Christ The Law was a sharp School-master by meanes whereof the refractory and contumacious minds of the Jewish people might be tamed for Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to ev●ry one that believeth 2. The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of it the Law was a Doctrine of works commanding and prescribing what we should be and what we should do Gal. 3.12 And the Law is not of faith but the man that doth them shall live in them But now the Gospel requires faith in Christ for righteousnesse and salvation Rom. 3.21 But now the righteousnesse of God without the Law is manifested therefore saith Augustine faith obtaines what the Law commands we have no help from the Law * Gerhard the condition of the Law is simply impossible it finds us sinners and leaves no place for repentance * Camero and notwithstanding the sprinkling of Gospel that there was with the Law yet it was but obscure And that shall be the next particular 3. The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of holding forth Christ in it though the Gospel is one and the same whereby all Saints are saved in all times for there was not one way of salvation then and another since Acts 10.43 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his Name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sinnes Yet the Doctrine of the Gospel was more obscure in the Old Testament Umbratili per se inefficaci ceremoniarum observatione c. Amyrald partly through Prophesies of things a great way off and partly through types Christ was wrapt up in shadowes and figures in the Gospel the body of those shadowes and the truth of those types is exhibited the Land of Canaan was a type of heaven Israel according to the flesh was a type of Israel according to the Spirit the spirit of bondage of the spirit of Adoption the blood of the Sacrifices of the blood of Christ the glory of divine grace was reserved for Christs coming they had at most but starre-light before Christs coming * When Christ first came it was but day-break with them Christ was at first but as a morning starre 2 Pet. 1.19 though soon after he was as the sun in the firmament Mal. 4.2 The Apostle saith Heb. 10.1 The Law having a shadow of good things to come and not the very image of the things and in this respect it was that the Apostle saith the Gospel was promised to the Fathers but perform'd to us Rom. 1.1 2. It was hid to them and revealed to us Rom. 16.25 26. and not only by fulfilling of Prophesies which we may see by the comparing of Scripture but by the Spirit Ephes 3.5 The mystery of Christ in other ages was not made known unto the Sons of men as it is now revealed unto his holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit They had but a poor discovery of Christ but we have the riches of this mystery made known unto us Col. 1.26 27 * Alting The old Covenant leads to Christ but 'tis a great way about the Gospel Covenant goeth directly to him their Ceremonies were numerous b●rdensome and obscure those things that represent Christ to us are few easie and cleare * Synops pur Theol. 4. The Gospel-Covenant is the better Covenant in respect of the form of it the promises are better promises the promises of the Law are conditional and require perfect obedience Lev. 18.5 Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and my judgements which if a man do he shall live in them the condition you see is impossible Beloved 'pray ' mistake not there is expresse mention of eternal life in the Old Testament Isa 45.17 Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an everlasting salvation ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world without end Dan. 12.2 Many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake some to everl●sting life and some to shame and everlasting contemp and that the Law cannot save us that is accidental in respect of our d●filement with sin and our weaknesse that we cannot fulfill the condition Rom. 7.12 The law is holy and the Commandment holy and just and good and it is the Word of life Acts 7.38 Who received the lively Oracles to give unto us and the Apostle brings in Abraham and David for examples of Justification by faith Rom. 4.6 13. but yet their promises were chiefly temporal we have the promise of temporal good things in the New Testament as well as they in the Old only with the exception of the Cross Mark 19.29 30. Verily I say unto you There is no man that hath left house or brethren or sisters or fathers or mother or wife or children or lands for my sake and the Gospels but he shall receive an hundred fold now in this time houses and brethren and sisters and mothers and children and lands with persecutions that was the exception with persecution
We have three notable advantages in our temporal promises beyond what they had in theirs 1. The Old Covenant had special promises of temporal good things in the Land of Canaan for the preserving of their Mosaical policy untill the time of the Messiah to be born of that people promises of long life c. The New Covenant hath promises of all good things necessary without any such clog All good works shall be rewarded and he promiseth to give a present temporal reward in part of payment Eph. 6.8 Whatsoever good thing any man doth the same shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free and which is more 1 Tim. 4.8 Godlinesse is profitable unto all having promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come 2. The temporal good things promised in the Old Testament were symbolical they prefigured spiritual benefits by Christ we have them without any such adjoyned significations Col. 2.17 They had a shadow of things to come but the body is of Christ They had a more sparing taste of heavenly good things in earthly benefits we have a more streight and direct way unto eternal life 3. Promises of temporal good things were in the Old Covenant more frequent in the New Covenant more rare and this I name as their excellency because they are thrown in as meer additions to spiritual promises * Alting Ma. 16.33 Seek ye first the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse and all these things shall be added unto you this for temporal promises And for spiritual promises which are the best of the Gospel-Covenant not only the conditions of those promises are more easie for whereas it was Do this and live Gal. 3.15 now it is Believe and thou shalt not come into condemnation * Camero Joh. 3.18 but the condition is also promised Jer. 31.34 I will make a New Covenant with the House of Israel and with the House of Judah not according to the Covenant that I made with their Fathers in the day that I took them by the hand to bring them out of the Land of Egypt which my C●venant they brake although I was an Husband unto them saith the Lord but this shall be the Covenant that I will make with the House of Israel after those dayes saith the Lord I will put my law into their inward parts and write it in their hearts and will be their God and they shall be my people and they shall teach no more every man his Neighbour and every man his brother saying Know the Lord for they shall know me from the least of th●m unto the greatest of them saith the Lord for I will forgive their iniquity and I will remember their sinnes no more Gods hearty good will is herein manifested Jer. 32.41 I will rejoyce over them to do them good and I will plant them in this land assuredl● with my whole heart and with my whole soul If you say these are Old-Testament promises and belonged to them to whom they were spoken and were not only Prophetical so as to concern another people * Calv. Instit I grant it Rom. 3.19 We know that what things soever the Law saith it saith to them who are under the Law But they had not that efficacy of the Spirit to make these promises so effectual as was Prophesied and promised for the times of the Gospel * Synop. pu th Joel 2.28 And it shall come to passe afterwards mark that afterwards I will poure out my Spirit upon all flesh c. The measure of the Spirit which they did receive tended mostly to bondage Gal. 4.24 25. but the Spirit is to us a Spirit of Adoption Rom. 8.15 And therefore the Gospel is specially called the Word of Gods grace Acts 20.32 as if all the grace that God had formerly expressed had been nothing in comparison of this Rom. 6.14 Ye are not under the Law but under grace Law and grace are opposed as condemnation and mercy thus the Gospel is the better Covenant in respect of the promises of it 5. The Gospel is the better Covenant in respect of the effects of it the Old Covenant shews us sin doth accuse us and declares us guilty before the judgement of God Rom. 3.19 20. That every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God therefore by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight for by the Law is the knowledge of sinne It subjects us under the curse and condemneth sinners for the transgressing of Gods commands Deut. 27.26 Cursed be he that confirmeth not all the words of this Law to do them and all the people shall say Amen So Gal. 3.10 it is the ministry of death 2 Cor. 3.6 7. but now the Gospel that proclaims pardon of sin and lifts up with quickening consolation Isa 61.1 2. in the Law God is considered as reproving sin and approving righteousnesse in the Gospel as remitting sin and repairing righteousnesse and therefore the Word of the Gospel is called good seed Mat. 13.3 The seed of Regeneration 1 Pet. 1.23 The Word of Reconciliation 2 Cor. 5.18 19. The Ministration of the Spirit Gal. 3.2 The Word of faith Rom. 10.8 The Word of life Phil. 2.16 The power of God Rom. 1.16 That whereby the righteousnesse of God is manifest Rom. 3.21 The destruction of unbelievers is not the end of the Gospel but that is through their own fault Polan Syntag. eventus adventitius an accidental event God abundantly declares in the Gospel that he delights not in the death of sinners but in the saving translation of them by faith and repentance from the power of darknesse into the Kingdome of his dear Son The best effect of the Legal Covenant is the bringing man into the Gospel-Covenant and 'pray ' observe how when it is most effectual it turns over the sinner to the Better Covenant 1. It discovers sin to us Rom. 7.7 I had not known sin but by the Law but wherefore is it that we know sin at all that we might be compelled to seek reparation in the Gospel-Covenant Gal. 3.21 22. The Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the promise of faith in Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe 2. The Old Covenant restrains sin there is a natural stupidnesse in mens consciences but then when the dreadful threatnings of the Law still sound in their ears man is somewhat affrighted and hath some reluctancy though afterwards the Law of the minde is led captive by the Law of the members and man forbears sin as having a bridle put upon him Ringente interim intus tumultuante appetitu corrupto though he be restrained from sin yet it is but a kinde of coactior it ends best when it ends in a spontaneous and voluntary inclination of the minde to forsake sin and hate it and that is the work of the Gosp●l-Covenant 3. The Old Covenant works fear
eum Deus And for this may be rationally urged 1. That in the whole wo●k of our Redemption effected by Christ Jesus Christ had a respect no● unto himself but unto us It is for us that he humbled himself to the Death of the Crosse for us men and our Salvation 2. Jesus Christ had right to all the Honour Glory and Majesty which now he is possessed of in Heaven by vertue of his being the Sonne of God and the glory which he hath now in Heaven John 17.5 he had with God before the world was 3. The freeness of Gods love in giving Christ and of Christs in giving himself for us was such that the main intention of God was that not Christs but our estate might be bettered John 1. ●18 Rom. 9.5 if the Son of God had never left the bosome of the Father he had been for ever God bl ssed in himself But such was the love of the Father that he gave his only begotten Son that we might not perish Joh. 3.16 who believe but might have everlasting life 4. It is fit to be considered that the glory which Christ hath in Heaven in sitting at the right hand of God is such that it cannot be merited by the sufferings of the Humane nature of Christ And therefore it is said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath fr●ely given him a name above every name This last interpretation of the Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is that to which most of our Protestant Divines do incline I will not here undertake to determine the Question I find it the judgement of some of our Learned Divines Dr. Featly Mr. Anthony Burgesse That there need be no Controversie about this thing for the Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 notes order but whether the order of causality or antecedency or both may be consistent with the Analogy of Faith 1. For if we look upon Jesus Christ as rewarded for his sufferings for us we may thence be assured that our sufferings for him though of another nature shall be eternally rewarded Psal 58.11 2. Or if you note the order only that Jesus Christ was first humbled and then exalted we may thence learn that before honour is humility Prov. 18.12 1 Pet. 5.6 and that if we Humble our selves under the mighty hand of God in due time he will exalt us Leaving therefore this Question I proceed to the Doctrine of Christs Exaltation as it is laid down in this Text. Doct. It pleased God the Father for his own glory that the Lord Jesus Christ after he had been deeply humbled should be highly exalted Thus it pleased God that he who had humbled himself to the death of the Cross Heb. 7.26 Phil. 2.7 Acts 3.15 1 Cor. 2 8. Acts 2.36 Heb. 2.16 1 Pet. 3.22 should be made higher than the Heavens and he who had taken on him the form of a Servant should now appear in Heaven like himself the Prince of life and he that made himself of no reputation should now be in Heaven the Lord of Glory and the same Jesus who was crucified God hath made both Lord and Christ and He who took not on him the nature of Angels but took on him the seed of Abraham is exalted above Angels being gone into Heaven and is on the Right Hand of God Angels and Authorities and Powers being made subject unto him There is a word in the Text that is very Emphatical which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath highly exalted The Elegancy of the Greek tongue is singular The Apostle hath a notable word Ephes 3.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 3.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Minimorum minimus Beza Minor minimo Cor. a Lap. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Emphaticus est hic notandus Pleonasmus q. d. Super omnem altitudinem exaltavit super-exaltavit Ambros Multiplicavit sublimitatem ejus Syr. Sublimitate sublimavit eum Arab. Insigniter extulit Justinianus lesse than the least of Saints and here we have a no less remarkable word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath highly exalted him God hath exalted Jesus Christ above all Exaltation the Exaltation of Jesus Christ was super-superlative The Latine Version of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exaltavit eum he exalted him is too low to express the sublimity of the Greek word We have here an elegant and an emphatical Pleonasme which the Greek tongue borrows of the Hebrew as is frequently used in the New Testament as it is said of the Magi when they saw the Star they rejoyced with great joy Mat. 2.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so when Christ came to Celebrate his last Passeover he saith to his Disciples Luke 22.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 With desire have I desired to eat this Passeover So it is sa●d here the Lord Jesus Christ was very highly exalted he was exalted with all Exaltation Jesus Christ in his Resurrection was exalted in his Ascension he was highly exalted in his sitting at the right hand of God he was very highly exalted above all Exaltation Christ in his Resurrection was exalted above the Grave in his Ascension above the Earth and in his Session at Gods right hand he was exalted above the highest Heavens It is very Remarkable how the steps of Christs Exaltation did punctually answer to the steps of his Humiliation There were three steps by which Jesus Christ descended in his voluntary Humiliation Heb. 2.16 2 Cor. 5.21 Gal. 3.13 Gal. 4.4 Heb. 7.22 1 Cor. 5.7 First His Incarnation by which he was made of a woman and so became man he was made sinne and so became out Surety he was made a Curse and so became our Sacrifice This was the largest step of Christs Descension and Humiliation for it was more for the Son of God to become the Son of man than for the Son of man to die and being dead to be buried and being buried to continue in the state of the dead and under the power of death untill the Third Day Answerable to this degree of his Humiliation was his Resurrection for as by his Incarnation he was manifest in the flesh Rom. 1.3 4. the son of man made of the seed of David according to the flesh so by his Resurrection from the dead he was declared to be the Son of God with power according to the Spirit of holiness The Resurrection of Christ was the first step of his Exaltation He was declared to be the Son of God Clarificatio Christi ab ejus resurrectione sumpsit exordium Aug. He was alwayes the Son of God even during the dayes of his flesh but then he was openly declared to be the Sonne of God that he could by his own Almighty Power raise up the Temple of his Body which the Jewes had Destroy'd The second step of Christs Humiliation was his poor painful and contemptible life and his painful shameful and cursed death of the Cross Heb. 5.7 He was found in
and hast Redeemed us unto God out of every kindred and tongue and people and Nation Rev. 5.9 10. and hast made us unto our God Kings and Priests c. This is the daily work of glorified Saints in Heaven to cast down their Crownes before that Throne where Christ sitteth The Saints departed Rev. 4.10 are discharged from those weights and clogs of corruption which did hinder them from this duty while they were in the body Heb. 12.1 Rom. 7.24 Rev. 4.6 and cumbred and pestred with the body of death They are never weary though they never rest day nor night saying Holy holy holy Lord God Almighty which was and is and is to come And thus I have shewed you how things in Heaven do bow the knee and are subject to the Name and Authority of the Lord Jesus II. Things on earth i. e. Good men and Bad men 1. Good men Psa 110.3 the Children of God who by the grace of Christ are made a willing people in the day of his Power for such is the heart-turning power of Gods Grace that of unwilling Isal 48.4 he makes us willing God by degrees removes out of our necks the Iron sinew that hinders us from stooping and bowing to Christ Grace by degrees doth take away that enmity in our mindes Col. 1.21 Rom. 8.7 and that carnal-mindedness which neither is nor can be subject to the Law of God By nature we are Children of disobedience as well as others Rom. 7.23 Eph. 2.3 and are willingly subject to no Law but the Law of our Members nor to no will but the wills of the flesh but the Grace of God removes that stoutness of heart contumacy and Rebellion which is in us naturally against Christ and so sweetly and powerfully inclines their wills Psal 119.6 1 Joh. 5.3 Veniat veniat verbum Dei si sexcenta nobis essent colla submittemus omnia that they follow the Lamb wherever he goes and have Respect unto all the Commandments of Christ and not one of them is grievous A Child of God willingly submits his Neck to the Yoke of Christ 2. Evil men they also must bow the knee to Jesus Christ and though their subjection be not voluntary and ingenuous yet bow they must and bow they do and partly through the awakening of a natural conscience partly by a spirit of bondage and fear of wrath they are as it were compelled to render many unwilling services and subjections unto Christ Non peccare metuit sed ardere Aug. Which compulsory subjection ariseth not from a fear of sinne but from a fear of Hell All these because they do not willingly bear the yoke of Christ they shall unwillingly become his foot-stool Mat. 11.29 Psal 110.1 And they do not so much honour Christ as Christ may be said to honour himself upon them The wicked do give honour to Christ as unwillingly as ever Haman cloathed Mordecai and proclaimed before him Hester 6.11 Thus shall it be done to the man whom the King will honour III. And Lastly The Devils in Hell are forced to yield subjection unto Jesus Christ and so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things under the earth infernalia things in hell do bow their knee unto him For if in the dayes of Christs Humiliation he hath exercised power over the damned spirits and they have acknowledged him and his Soveraign power over them much more are they subject to him now in the dayes of his Exaltation I shall not need to show you how often the Devils crouched to Christ whilst he was here on earth The Devils were not only subject to his Person but to those that commanded them in his Name for so the seventy Disciples returning gave Christ an account Luke 10.17 Lord say they even the Devils are subject unto us through thy Name In one story we finde that the Devils did three times prostrate themselves at the feet of Christ Saint Luke relates the Story of the man possessed with a Legion of Devils 1. First one of the Devils in the name of all the rest thus supplicates Christ Luke 8.28 What have I to do with thee Jesus thou Sonne of God Most High I beseech thee Torment me not 2. When Christ commanded the uncleane spirits to come out of the man Ver. 31. they besought him that he would not command them to go out into the deep that is into Hell Ver. 32. 3. The Devils a third time besought Christ that they might go into the Herd of Swine Thus those proud and rebellious spirits were forced to bow even in the dayes of Christs fl●sh James 2.19 And therefore much more now Chr●st is exalted do the devils tremble We read that Christ spoiled principalities and powers Col. 2.15 and made a shew of them openly Triumphing over them In which Scripture we may observe that Christ hath disarm'd and triumph't over Satan The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alludes to the manner of the Conquerour who disarm'd the Captives and afterwards they led their Captives in chaines when they made their Triumphant entrance so the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do signifie alluding to the Romane Conquests and Triumphs Thus the Lord Jesus Christ by his death overcame the Devil Heb. 2.14 Eph. 4.8 Duo in cruce affixi intelliguntùr Christus visibiliter sponte sua ad tempus Diabolus invisibiler invitus in perpetuum Orig Missilia Triumphalia and by his Ascension he led Captivity Captive and gave gifts alluding still to the manner of the Romane Triumphs when the Victor in a Chariot of State ascended up to the Capitol the Prisoners following his Chariot or else drawing it with their hands bound behind them and there were pieces of gold and silver thrown amongst the people and other gifts and largesses bestowed upon the friends of the Conquerour The Devil ever since the death Resurrection and Ascension of Christ hath been overcome and spoiled For by the death of Christ the Devil was unarmed and shackled but presently after he was gag'd and silenc'd and all his Oracles struck dumb and speechless and so the Devils divested of their long-enjoyed power and they forced to bow though unwillingly to Jesus Christ Hence it is said that the Devils tremble Jam. 2.19 because they know Christ as their Judge but not as their Saviour They must bow because they cannot help it But it may be objected Object If all the Devils in Hell and all the wicked men here on earth do bow the knee to Christ how comes it then to pass that the Devil and his instruments do continue their Rebellion and mischief against Christ and his Church 1. To this is answered that even the Devils of Hell are bound to bow the knee unto Jesus Christ though like wicked Rebels they have refused to do it And so much we gather from that Answer of Christ to the Devil who when he had the impudence and
the end of our faith but the salvation of our souls 1 Pet. 1.9 All the prizes were not equally valuable See Learned Dr Hammond upon Phil. 3. when we come to the Goale here we finde no Tripodes Shields or Caps but Crowns and no mean Crowns but glorious ones no fading Crowns but everlasting ones Who would not with the Apostle but pressed toward the mark Lastly That we may have greater comfort and assurance that we shall not wax weary and faint in our course and consequently not misse of those glorious rewards There 's no Calling that hath so high and heavenly assistances as this hath God that calls to this Race engages his power to carry us through it The Son of God intercedes for us the Spirit of God is ready to comfort us the Angels of God have the charge of us to keep us so that we shall not dash our feet against a stone the spirits of just men made perfect though they be not acquainted with our particular wants yet in general they tender our conditions and help us by their prayers all the people of God are constant sollicitors for us at the Throne of Grace besides those helps they afford us by their watching over us by their counsels instructions admonitions rebukes examples the chearfulnesse and alacrity of some in the ways of God having a great and happy tendency to prevent the wearinesse and discouragements of others Thus it is an high Calling Thirdly It is a Call without a sound or if it have any it is heard by none but them to whom it is directed A good Divine calls it an in visible Call Vocatio invisibilis Alting Occultis itineribus sapor nobis vitalis infunditur as Ennodius speaks by hidden paths and passages the vital savour is infused into us the seed grows up we know not how Mark 4.26 the Spirit secretly winds himself into the soul Christ comes into our hearts as he did into the house where his Disciples were met John 20.26 the doors being shut Thus it is ordinarily though I will not deny but that sometimes it may be o●herwise Acts 2.1 The Spirit may come with a mighty rushing and Christ with holy violence break open the doors of our hearts Saul could well tell the time and other cir umstances of his conversion Divina gratia adhuc in utero matris impletus Cypr. in Epist ad Jubaianum but it is likely the holy Baptist cou●d not in whom the Father saith there was a Spirit of grace as soon as a Spirit of life The corruptions of some will out as it were by insensible breathings but so obstinate and inveterate are the spiritual distempers of others that they must have strong Vomits violent Purges and all little enough to clear them for a man of a good nature as they call it liberal education much restraining grace to take and give notice punctua●ly when his state is changed is very difficult whereas this is no hard matter for a grosse and scandalous piece of debauchery becoming afterwards an example of piety We must not expect the same account from Mary Magdalen and Mary the mother of our Lord in poi t of Conversion yet they both rejoyced in Christ as their Saviour This I have the rather spoken that I might enter a Caveat ag●inst those rig●d and severe Tryers of mens spiritual estates whom as I have heard nothing will satisfie but the Precise time of Conversion I acknowledge these men great Artists and good Work-men but it is in frami g New Racks for mens Consciences since the Old Popish ones are broken I make no Question b t a weak Christians soul may be as sadly strained to give an Account of his Graces as it would have been to give an Account of his Sinnes had he lived in the dayes of Auricular Confession Beware my Fr●ends of the Devils Sophistry Fourthly and lastly It is an Immutable Call immutable as God Himself as his Electing Love the living Fountain from whence it springs Not as the World loves doth God love they love to Day and hate to Morrow wearing their Friends like Flowers which we may behold in their Bosomes whil'st they are fresh and sweet but soon they wither and soon they are laid aside whereas the love of God to his people is Everlasting and he wears them as a Signet upon his right Hand which he will never part with Not as the World gives doth God give Men give liberally and repent suddenly but the Gifts and Callings of God are without Repentance Rom. 11.29 So much for the properties of this Call and so much for the opening of the point Shall I speak a word or two of Application APPLICATION Beloved in the LORD I have answered you many Questions I beseech you answer me a few Me said I Nay answer them to God and your own Consciences First Are you of the number of the Called Called by the Gospel I know you are but that may be your misery Are you Called according to the purpose that only can be your Happinesse Is your Calling Inward and Effectual We hope it is why we have some Convictions some Inclinations to good so had Herod so had Agrippa so may a Reprobate by the common work of the Spirit I would be loth you should be but almost Christians lest you be but almost saved Tell me then is the whole frame of your hearts altered Is sinne odious Is Christ precious Doth the prcie of heavenly Commodities rise in your hearts and the price of earthly Trumpery fall Do you love God and his Sonne Jesus Christ in sincerity Then I can assure you not in the word of a mortal man which is as good as nothing but in the Word of God that cannot lye even in the words of my Text You are Called according to his purpose Secondly If you be Effectually Called Why do you not answer that Call in receiving Christ in all his Offices in obeying Christ in all his Commands in meeting Christ in all his Ordinances Why do you not give all Diligence to make your Calling and Election sure Shall the Children of this World still be wiser in their Generation than the Children of light They rest not till they have assured as they suppose their Earthly Tenements Why do not we bestir our selves as much to Assure an Heavenly Inheritance Why are you not more thankful for this Grace Why are you not more joyful in it How did the Wise men of the East rejoyce when they found Christ born in Bethlem Is it not matter of greater joy to finde Christ born in your hearts Tell me is it nothing to have your Names written in the Book of Life To have God for your Father Christ for your Husband and Brother The Spirit of Christ for your Comforter The Angels for your Servitors All the Creatures at your Beck These are the Noble Priviledges of those that are Called according to the purpose of God How
we are as really united unto Christ as the members of the body are to the head Hence are we said to be h Ephes 5.30 members of his body of his flesh and his bones As the head communicates real influences to the body so doth Christ to Believers communicates to us his Sp●rit graces fulnesse spiritual light life strength comfort Joh. 1.16 4. A close near dear intimate union Like that of the food with the body which it nourisheth Hence Believers are said to eat Christs flesh and to drink his blood John 6.54 Such an intimate union as that one possessive particle is not sufficient to expresse it not said my Vineyard is before me but my Vineyard which is mine is before me Cant. 8.12 5. An inseparable perpetual indissoluble union A marriage knot which neither men sins sorrows death nor Divels are able to dissolve Who or what can separate us from the love of God The Apostle clearly resolves his own question i Rom 8 38 39 I am perswaded that neither life nor death c. Believers are held in Christs hand he that would break this union must first be too hard of fist for Christ yea and for his Father too No man shall pluck them out of my hand my Father is greater than all and no man can pluck them out of my Fathers hand Joh. 10.28 29. And thus we have dispatch't the second Question 3. What are the efficient causes of this union Sol. 1. The efficient causes of this union are either principal or less principal 1. Principal and so this great work of union being opus ad extra 't is indivisum and so ascribed 1. In common to the whole k 1 Pet. 5.10 John 6.44 45. Ephes 2 6 7. Godhead Hence we are said to be call'd by God the Father into the fell●wship of his dear Son 1 Cor. 1.9 So likewise this union is ascribed to the Sonne The dead shall hear the voice of the Sonne of God and live Joh. 5.25 Joh. 10.16 2. But more especially the Spirit of God in a more peculiar sense is said to be the principal Author of this union He it is that knits this marriage knot betwixt Christ Jesus and true Believers Look as l Acts 4.24 Creation in some respect is appropriated to the Father m 1 Pet. 1.18 Redemption to the Son so the Application of that Redemption to the Holy Ghost 'T is by one Spirit that we are all baptized into one body 1 Cor. 12.13 'T is by the Holy Spirit the Comforter That we are convinced of sin righteousnesse and judgment Joh. 16.7 8 9. 'T is by the Holy Ghost that we are renewed Tit. 3.5 2. Lesse principal or the means or instruments of union These are twofold outward inward 1. Outward Generally all the Ordinances of God by the Ordinances it is that we come to have n Job 22.21 acquaintance that is union and communion with Jesus Christ 'T is by these golden pipes that golden oyle is conveyed to us from that golden Olive Zech. 4.12 More especially 1. The Word read preach't meditated on believed improved 'T is by hearing and learning of the Father that we come to Christ Joh. 6.44 45. The Holy Scriptures were written for this end that through them we might have fellowship with the Father and his Sonne 1 Joh. 1.3 The way to have Christs company is to keep Christs words Joh. 14.23 2. The Sacraments those spiritual Seals and Labels which God hath fix't to his Covenant of Grace 1. Bapti me By one Spirit we are baptiz'd into one body 1 Cor. 12.13 Hence we are said to be buried with Christ by Baptisme into death Rom. 6.3 4. Baptisme styled the Laver of regeneration Tit. 3.5 By Baptisme we put on Christ Gal. 3.7 2. The Lords Supper this is a great means of strengthning and evidencing our union and advancing our communion with Christ Jesus We are all made to drink into one Spirit 1 Cor. 12.13 Hence that 1 Cor. 10.16 The bread which we break is it not the communion of means arg●ments evidences of our communion with the body of Christ The wine which we drink is it not the communion of the blood of Christ Thus much for the external means of union 2. Inward internal intrinsecal means of union on mans part i. e. faith Not a bare historical miraculous temporal dead faith No but a living working justifying saving faith Christ comes to dwell in our hearts by faith Ephes 3.17 'T is by faith alone that we receive Christ Joh. 1.12 That we come unto him and feed upon him Joh. 6.56 'T is by faith that a Believer lives in and to Christ and Christ lives in and for a Believer Gal. 2.20 Thus much for the Explication of the termes of our Proposition for the fixing of it on a right Basis I now proceed to the second part of my discourse viz. Now That there is such a spiritual mystical real close inseparable union betwixt the Lord Jesus and true Believers 2. Confirm appears three ways 1. From those many synonymical terms and equivalent expressions whereby the Scriptures hold forth this union Christ is said to be in Believers Col. 1.27 Rom. 8.10 To dwell in them Ephes 3.17 To walk in them 2 Cor. 6.16 So are Believers said to abide in Christ as he abides in them 1 Joh. 4.16 Joh. 15.17 To dwell in Christ as Christ in them Joh. 6.56 To put on Christ to be cloathed with him Gal. 3.27 Each of these expressions clearly import that near and intimate union that is betwixt the Lord Jesus and true Believers The King of Saints hath two Mansion houses one in heaven the Throne of his glory another on earth a Tabernacle of flesh the heart of a Believer which is the seat of his delight Prov. 8.31 his lesser Heaven Isa 57.15 66.1 2. 2. From those several similitudes by which the Scriptures shadow out this union Believers are said to be lively stones 1 Pet. 2.4 5 6. Christ the living foundation the chief corner-stone on which they are built Ephes 2.20 21. Believers are styled living branches Christ the true Vine into whom they are engraffed and in whom they bring forth fruit Joh. 15.1.5 Christ the faithful loving discreet Bridegroom Believers his Loyal Affectionate obedient Spouse Ephes 5.31 32. Cant. 2.16 5.1 Believers are intitled Christs body Ephes 1.23 Bone of his bone flesh of his flesh Ephes 5.30 Christ the Believers head Ephes 1.22 In a word the head and mystical body are call'd Christ 1 Cor. 12.12 In all these Resemblances he that runs may read the union betwixt Christ and Believers pourtrayed out to the life unto us 3. From that communion which there is betwixt Christ and true Believers Omnis communio fundatur in unione Communion where ever it is of necessity argues union as the effect necessarily implies the cause Believers they communicate with Christ in his fulness Joh. 1.16 In his o 2 Cor 5.21 Solus
made the righteousnesse of God in him 2 Cor. 5.21 That since he hath borne our griefs and carried our sorrows since he was wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities 't is but just that our Peace should be obtain'd by his chastisements and that by his stripes we should be healed Isa 53.4 5 6 c. 6. If believers c. Hence we gather a cogent and conclusive Argument for the Saints blessed Resurrection at the last day Christ the believers Head is risen risen as their Head risen as the se●ond Adam From hence the Apostle strongly argues for the Saints glorious resurrection 1 Cor. 15.13 14 15 c. If the head be got above surely the body shall not away lie under water True indeed the ungodly and unbelievers shall be raised also Dan. 12.2 Joh. 5.29 There shall be a u 2 Cor. 5.10 general resurrection of the dead both of the just and unjust Acts 24.15 and 17.31 But here 's the difference The bodies of the wicked shall be raised up in dishonour by Christ as a powerful and offended Judge John 5.27 28 29. To receive their just sentence and condemnation 2 Thes 1.6 8 9. Matth. 25.33 But the bodies of believers by the Spirit of Christ and by vertue of his resurrection as their Head shall be raised in power spiritual incorruptible and made like to his glorious body 1 Cor. 15.20 22 23 42 43 44. Because he lives they shall live also and have livery and seisin given them of those joyes and gloryes which neither eye hath seen nor ear heard nor can enter into the heart of man to conceive 1 Cor. 2.9 and so shall they be ever with the Lord 1 Thes 4.17 Thus much by way of Corollary for information of the judgement I now proceed to the second Vse which more immediately reflects on the heart and life and that is an Use of 2. Examination Whether there be really and indeed such a spiritual close intimate union betwixt our souls in particular and the Lord Jesus To this purpose give me leave to put the probe into your consciences by a serious proposal of these five Questions Quest 1. Hath Christ given unto you his holy Spirit He that is joyn'd to the Lord is one Spirit saith the Text. If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his w 1 Joh. 3.24 Rom. 8.9 Whatever member is really united to the Head hath a natural spirit a soul enlivening of it and acting in it So saith the Apostle Hereby know we that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his S●irit 1 Joh. 4.13 Now this Spirit where ever it is it is 1. A praying Spirit a Spirit of supplication of faithful sincere fervent constant humble supplication Zech. 12.10 Ask then thy soul Canst thou Dost thou go to God and cry as a child with reverence and confidence Abba-Father Rom. 8.15 Does this Spirit help thine infirmities Rom. 8.26 and enable thee to understand both for whom and what and how thy prayer is to be made Does it work and quicken in thy heart at least at some times in some measure such apprehensions affections and graces as are requisite for the right and acceptable performance of so heavenly a duty 2. A mourning Spirit It puts a believer into a dove-like frame Ezek. 7.16 mourning for the losse of its Mate yea mourning for the offence of a gracious God as for the losse of an only sonne Zech. 12.10 Tell me then poor soul Art thou apt ever and anon to strike on thy breast with the contrite Publican x Jer. 31.19 to smite on thy thigh with broken-hearted Ephraim and in an holy consternation of spirit to ask thy self What oh y Jer. 8 6. what have I do●● Does thy Gods bottle and thy tears therein for sin as sin speak for thee 3. A sanctifying Spirit z 1 Cor. 6.11 1 Pet. 1.2 and that with respect to sins graces duties 1. Sinnes The Spirit where ever it is 2 Thes 2.13 mortifies the deeds of the flesh Rom. 8.13 Speak then is thine old man crucified at least as to dominion with thy Christ Rom. 6.6 more especially not to speak of thy more grosse dangerous dishonourable sins Dost thou spit out the sweet morsel under thy tongue Dost thou with Samuel hue thy delicate Agag in pieces with David keep thee from * Psa 18.23 thine iniquity that iniquity to which thy constitution custome calling interest mostly incline thee what sayst thou to thy Isaac Benjamine Absolom Dalilah Herodias the Calves at Dan and Bethel Tell me Art thou apt sadly to remember thine own evil wayes and to loath thy self in thine own sight for all thine iniquities and for all thine abominations Ezek. 36.31 2. Graces Speak Believer Art thou renewed in the Spirit of thy mind hath the Spirit of God re-instampt that glorious Image of God viz. Knowledge Righteousnesse and true Holinesse which thou lost in Adam Ephes 4.24 As thy cloathing is of wrought gold so especially is all thy glory thy chiefest glory within Dost thou find thy graces stirred up increast and strengthened with might by the Spirit in the Inner-man Eph. 3.16 Hath the North-wind so risen the South-wind so come and blown upon thy Garden that the spices thereof flow forth Cant. 4.16 In a word Dost thou more and more grow in grace 2 Pet. 3.18 Beholding the glory of the Lord art thou changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3.18 Art thou still perfecting holinesse in the fear of God 2 Cor. 7.1 3. Duties Where ever the Spirit is it causeth effectually causeth the man to walk in Gods S●atutes to keep his judgements and to do them Ezek. 36.27 It worketh in believers both to will and to do Philip. 2.13 To performe natural moral spiritual duties to spiritual ends in a spiritual manner and that 1. Freely Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty 2 Cor. 3.17 Christs people in the day of his power are a willing people voluntiers in his service Psal 110.3 What say'st thou art thou drag'd to duty as a Bull to a stake as a Swine to slaughter or rather is it thy meat and drink to do thy Gods Will John 4.34 Do the wayes of wisdome seem wayes of * Prov. 3.17 pleasantnesse to thee and all her paths dost thou look upon them as peace 2. Regularly Those that live in the Spirit walk in the Spirit Gal. 5.25 i. e. by the Spirits light according to the Spirits rule the Word of God the great standard of Truth What then dost thou kindle a fire on thine own hearth and compasse thy self about with thine own sparkles d●st thou walk in the light of this fire and in the sparks that thou hast kindled my meaning is Dost thou forsake the Law and Testimony Gods cloud and pillar and follow the guidance of that ignis fatuus
thy safety and thou art s●cure because hood-wink't Thy security is not from want of danger but discerning Alas how dreadful is thy condition that liest every minute exposed to the cruel courtesie of every Divel Lust Temptation Judgment The sentence is past against thee in the next Scene expect the Executioner He that believeth not is condemned already Joh. 3.18 19. Poor soul a deluge of wrath is pouring down in full streams upon thee and thou art as yet shut out of the Ark. The Avenger of blood is at thy heels and thou not yet got into a City of Refuge A shower of brimstone falling on thee and thou hast no Zoar to flie unto The destroying Angel with his drawn Sword at the threshold and the lintel posts of thy door not sprinkled with blood But 2. If the winde do not le ts see whether the Sun cannot prevaile Poor self-destroying Caitiff Look yonder on that amiable Jesus Christ for a marriage between whom and thy precious soul I am now woing Do but observe his condescending willingnesse to be united to thee That great Ahashuerus courts his own captive Hester The Potter makes suit to his own clay Wooes thee though he wants thee not is infinitely happy without thee yet is not cannot be satisfied but with thee Heark how he commands intreats begs thee to be reconciled 2 Cor. 5.20 Swears and pawns his life upon it that he desires not thy death Ezek. 33.11 Seals this his oath with his blood and if after all this thou art fond of thine own damnation and hadst rather be at an agreement with hell than with him see how the brinish tears trickle down his cheeks Luke 19.41 42. He weeps for thee that dost not wilt not weep for thy self Nay after all this obdurate obstinacy is resolved still to wait that he may be gracious Isa 30.18 Stands yet and knocks though his head be wet with rain and h●s locks with the dew of the night fain he would have thee open the door that he may come in and sup with thee and thou with him Rev. 3.20 Thus much for a whet to sinners my next address is 2. To Saints that are indeed united unto Christ Jesus Four words of advice I have for you Oh that they might stick as Goads as Nails fastened by the Masters of the Assemblies 1. Be very fearful of that which may in any sort weaken your union with Christ Beware of committing of approving thy self in the least compliance with any the least sin Say not as Lot of Zoar is it not a little one Sin approved is that very Dalilah that cuts off the locks and makes a Believer a prey to every Philistine Sin is that that separates between us and our God the great make-bate between heaven and earth Isa 59.2 'T is true a Saint shall never be left so to himself or sin as that sin shall bereave him of his Jewel his Grac● or God but may and doth often steal away the key of his Cabinet his evidence his assurance I opened to my Beloved but my Beloved had withdrawn himself and was gone Cant. 5.6 Sin is that that will soon grieve away that holy Spirit by which we are seal'd to the day of Redemption Ephes 4.30 2. Wis●ly improve this your union with Christ f Frustra est potentia c. 'T is not enough to have unlesse we use Christ Not enough to have a Well of salvation but we must draw water and drink it too Isa 12.3 if we intend a benefit by it 'T was the looking on the Brazen Serpent that cured those that were stung Not enough for Saints to have faith by which to live but they must live by the faith that they have Gal. 2.20 i. e. they must by faith draw continual supply of grace comfort strength from Christ as the branch does sap from the root as the members do influence from the head as the pipe does water from the fountain This your union then must be improved 1. Under the fear and sense of wrath When God begins to thunder and to write bitter things against thee Now now let faith recollect it self and say Why I am united unto Christ in whose wounds is room enough to hold and in whose heart readinesse enough to receive all that flie unto him Matth. 11.28 True indeed there is a terrible storme of justice gathering over my head ready to fall upon me but my Christ to whom I am united is my g Isa 32.1 2. shelter a flood of vengeance but I am got into the Ark. Destruction near but Christ is my Passeover my little Sanctuary Able willing to save to the uttermost with all kinds and degrees of salvation Hebr. 7.25 2. In solicitations unto sin when sin comes like a Potiphars wife and offers deadly poyson in a golden Cup. Now now let faith answer I would consent but that I am united unto Christ How can I do this great wickednesse and sin against my Christ Gen. 39.9 I could easily do this and this if I were not Alexander But now I cannot gratifie this lust but I must needs be disloyal to my Christ my Husband to whom I am married If I take the cold in my feet 't will immediately flye up into my head every sin is an affront to my Christ 3. In the use of all Ordinances let faith use them frequently reverently but not in the least rest on them or be satisfied with them any farther than they advance our union and communion with Christ Look on prayer without a Christ as meer words and sounds Sacraments without a Christ as empty Vials without a cordial Hearing without Christ as a Cabinet without a Jewel Be only so far satisfied with the Ordinances as thou findest them to be * Zech. 4.12 golden pipes conveying golden oyle into thy soul 3. Labour more and more for a frame of Spirit sutable to this union 1. An humble self-abasing frame Say Alas Lord what am I what my Fathers house that so great a Christ should so far stoop beneath himself as to be united to so poor a worme a clod of earth a masse of sin a nothing a lesse a worse than nothing Isa 40.15 17. That strength should be united unto weakness light unto darknesse life unto death heaven unto earth unto hell That incorruption should marry it self unto corruption Immortality to mortality The King of Kings the Lord of Lords to such a captive unpared unwash't unshaven captive as I Ezek. 16.4 5 6. 2. A trusting relying depending frame o● spirit for supply of all temporals h Qui misit filium immisit Spiritum promisit vultum quid tandem denegabit He that hath given thee his Sonne what can he deny Rom. 8.32 He that hath given thee an Ocean will not deny thee a Drop If thou hast the Kernel thou shalt not want the Shell if thy Father vouchsafe thee bread Manna the Ring a Kisse he cannot well deny thee husks If thou
of a reason God sends his Gospel proclaiming Acts 3.19 Repent ye and be converted that your sinnes may be blotted out His Ministers proclaiming We then are Embassadors of Christ 2 Cor. 5. as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled unto God Why dost thou hate thy soul and say I will not why wilt thou not Is it because it doth not concern thee or because eternal life and death are trifles small little things not worth thy considering or doth any body hinder thee No no our Saviour gives the true account Ye will not come unto me that ye might have life Let me entreat this small request of thee for Gods sake for thine own take the next opportunity and spend half an houre alone let thy spirit accomplish a diligent search pursue this inquiry to some issue am I justified or no if not what will become of me if it should happen sometimes such things fall out that I should dye now presently I cannot promise my self that I shall see to morrow morning Thus go on and bring it to something before thou leavest give not over till thou art not only clearly convinced of but heartily affected with thy guilt not only to see but feel thy self to be the man who art undone without an interest in this justification Be in good earnest thou canst not mock thy God and is there any wisdome in mocking and cheating thy own soul What thou dost do it heartily as unto the Lord as for thy life as one that would not rue thy self-deceiving folly when it cannot be recalled and if thou art hearty and serious in these reflexions 1. Thou wilt deeply humble thy self before the Majesty of the Judge of all the earth with that self-abhorrence and confusion that becomes one who feels himself even himself being Judge most righteously condemned 2. Thou wilt sollicite and assail the Throne of Grace with all redoubled favours and holy passionate importunities of prayer and supplication giving God no rest till he hath given thee his Spirit according to his own promise Luke 11.13 Ezek. 36.26 27. To help thee to performe the conditions of the Gospel-Covenant plead his own promise with him Wrestle with him for a broken and clean heart for faith for repentance unto life for these are not of thy self they are the gift of God let him not go till he hath blessed thee with these blessings in Christ Jesus This will confound every sinner at the day of Judgment that when he might have had grace yea the Spirit of grace for asking he either asked not or if he did it was so coldly as if he were contented enough to go without Now if thou art in good earnest God is I assure thee in full as good earnest as thou he is ready to meet thee Try but once whether it be in vain to seek him all that ever tryed found it good to draw near to God and found him easie to be entreated he useth not to send the hungry empty away He that commands us to work out our salvation with fear and trembling he it is that worketh in us both to will and to do of his own good pleasure Phil. 2.12 13. Secondly To them that are the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus Let me beseech them 1. To walk worthy of God who hath called them to his Kingdome and Glory to adorn their holy profession take the Exhortation in Pauls words Col. 2.6 As ye have received Christ Jesus the Lord so walk ye in him Receive not this grace of God in vain the interest of your comfort obligeth you hereunto hereby you will know that you know him that you are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.1 that there is no cond mnation to you if you walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit and herein will your Father be glorified John 15.6 if ye bring forth much fruit 2. To live up to the comfort of their state 1 John 3.1 Ye are already the sons of God it doth not yet appear what you shall be Who shall lay any thing to your charge it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth it is Christ that dyed c. Rom. 8.33 Go eat thy bread with joy and put on thy white rayment God now hath accepted thy works Eccles 9.7 8. I conclude this particular and the whole discourse with the happy effects and fruits of Justification which every Believer hath as good a right and title to as the Gospel it self the Word of the God of truth can give him as I finde those sweet effects and consequences set down in my Text and the words next following it 1. Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ 2. By whom also we have accesse by faith into this grace wherein we stand and rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God 3. And not only so but we glory in tribulation knowing that tribulation worketh patience 4. And patience experience and experience hope 5. And hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given unto us Wherefore the righteous shall be glad in the Lord and all the upright in heart shall glory Psal 64.10 THE BELIEVERS DIGNITY and DVTY LAID OPEN In the High-Birth wherewith he is PRIVILEDGED And the honourable Employment to which He is called John 1.12 13. But as many as received him to them he gave power to become the Sons of God even to them that believe on his Name Which were born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God IN this Chapter Christ the principal Subject of the Gospel is admirably and Seraphically described 1. By his Divintiy as co-eternal and co-essential with the Father verse 1. 2. 2. By his discovery or manifestation 1. In the work of Creation ver 3. 10. 2. In the work of common providence ver 4.5 9. 3. In the work of gracious providence he being in the world and coming to his Church as our Immanuel God incarnate ver 11. 14. 3. By his entertainment which was 1. Passive his entertainment was poor the world knew him not ver 10. He was as a Prince disguised in a strange Country the Church sleighted and rejected him as Rebels do their natural Prince ver 11. And such entertainment Christ meets with at this day in his Truths Ordinances Graces Ministers and his poor members c. Object Was not Christ entertained by them what else means their harbouring him at Capèrnaum their flocking after him admiring of him seeking to make him a King c. Answ True they entertain'd him for a while civilly and formally upon self-interest but not spiritually by saving Faith Love and Obedience John 6.26 Matthew 11.21 23. Quest 1. Did Christ find no entertainment at all Answ This rejecting of Christ was not universal some did
thee Et tu fili Seventhly Wait and long for the perfecting of thy Adoption Rom. 8.23 Here below children cannot without impiety desire and long for the full inheritance Filius ante diem patrios inquirit in annos But it s otherwise with heavenly heires who could have no inheritance unlesse their Father lived who inherit the whole together with their Father yea their Father is their main inheritance all other Comforts being but accessory Use 4 4. Of Consolation to Gods children for the effectual application of which comfort two things are very considerable First The grounds of Consolation Secondly The tryals and discoveries of our filiation whereby we may be assured of our r●ght to and interest in these comforts The general ground of Consolation is our filial priviledges Filial priviledges are which are more particularly 1. Fatherly affections which for tendernesse and vehemency are called mothers bowels Isa 49.15 As a Father God pities his children Psal 103.13 and spares them Mal. 3.17 Parents bowels yearn most towards their weakest Children and such a Father is Christ Matth. 12.20 We pity a Childe that is poysoned not so a Serpent to whom poyson is natural If thou favour not thy self in sin God will favour and pity thee because of thy very infirmities Hebr. 4.15 2. Fatherly provision God will never fall under the foule aspersion of being worse than an Infidel which he blames so much in unnatural Christians 1 Tim. 5.8 This priviledge Relates to the necessities of Gods Children It s well observed by a Modern Writer To have no necessity at all is Gods sole priviledge To have necessities immediately supplied is the happinesse of glorified Saints To have necessities mediately supplyed is the comfor of Saints on earth To have necessities without any supply is the misery of the damned Now Divine provision undertakes for all these supplies mediately here immediately hereafter Fatherly provisions are fourefold answerable to the proportionable wants of Children First for maintenance and God provides no lesse than all good things for his Children Psal 34.9 10. 1 Tim. 4.8 especially the best things Compare Matth. 7.11 Luk. 11.13 Secondly A calling Gods care extends to the particular calling of every one of his Children much more to their general calling 1 Cor. 7.20 Rom. 1.7 Thirdly Marriage their civil marriages are made in heaven Prov. 19.14 much more their spiritual match with Christ Joh. 17.6 9. Fourthly an inheritance Though their portion be not here below yet God gives them portion in things here below which sweetens and sanctifies all their enjoyments Gen. 33.5 But the best portion here is nothing to their heavenly inheritance 1 Pet. 1.4 3. Fatherly protection Deut. 32.6 10 11 12. which is ever seasonable for time sutable for kinde proportionable for degree universal against every danger and constant as long as danger threatneth immediate by God himself Isa 27.3 Or mediate by Creatures Ordinances Providences Comforts Crosses Graces Temptations c. 2 Cor. 12.7 4. Fatherly education with all requisites thereunto for which this Father alone can undertake as First Dociblenesse God alone can make his children apt to learn Secondly Teaching by precepts direction examples illumination manuduction exercise and inclination making them willing to learn Job 36.22 Thirdly Correction and that 1. By chastisements bodily or spiritual 2. By crossing their will and worldly designs 3. By teaching them to crosse their own wills Psal 94.12 This correction is a great branch of the Covenant Psal 89.30 34. All these priviledges God affords them gratis Children pay nothing for provision protection education c. Matth. 17.26 5. Fatherly Communion A Father is very familiar First With his little Children Secondly With his grown Children To assure us hereof God is pleased to take upon him a threefold Relation 1. Of a Friend 2. Of an Husband 3. Of a Father compare John 14.21 23. Revel 3.20 This for the grounds of Consolation which every one is ready to catch at but only children have a right unto This makes way for the last head and a grand case of conscience Namely How shall I make it out that I am a genuine Son and not a Bastard or Stranger In managing this discovery I shall mix together the tryals of both filiations by Regeneration and Adoption And first Sons are like their Father 1. Tryals of our sonship they are usually the Natural and Moral Pictures of their Parents This in its measure holds true of Gods Children who resemble their Father 1. In light Ephes 5.8 2. In love 1 John 4.7 3. In life Ephes 4.18 5.1 Secondly Children honour their Parents 2. Obedience is both a negative and affirmative tryal John 8.47 Mal. 1.6 and that 1. By Reverence 1 Pet. 1.17 2. By Obedience 1 Pet. 1.14 3. By pliablenesse Rom. 8.14 Slaves are driven but Children are led 4. By coming oft into and delighting in his presence Compare Job 1.6 P●al 139.18 Thirdly We may know our Sonship by our spirit every Childe of God hath 1. A Spirit of faith and dependance 2 Cor. 4.13 2. A Spirit of prayer Rom. 8.15 The first cry after the New Birth is Abba Father Acts 9.11 God hath no Childe but can ask his heavenly Father blessing 3. A Spirit of Evidence Rom. 8.16 Ephes 1.13 14. 4.30 The Spirit alwayes witnesseth though his witnesse be not alwayes heard 4. A Spirit of liberty 2 Cor. 3.17 of liberty from the bondage of sin Satan the world and fear Joh. 8.32 Hebr. 2.15 of liberty to Christ and duty Psal 119.32 5. A Spirit of waiting Rom. 8.23 Sixthly and lastly A Spirit of love not only to God and his children 1 John 5.2 but also to our very enemies Mat. 5.44 45. Hence Gods Children like their Father are peace-makers Mat. 5.9 To conclude Art thou like God dost thou honour God as a Father hast thou the Spirit of God then mayst thou comfortably claime and enjoy all the forementioned priviledges and infinitely more than heart can conceive or tongue expresse Art thou covetous here is a treasure for thee Art thou ambitious here is the highest honour Art thou voluptuous here is an Ocean of pleasure Art thou in danger here is an Ark and Haven of security all these in the hand of filiation and that above any created desire or comprehension with infinite security to all eternity OF Saving Faith ACTS 16.31 Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved THe words are the satisfactory Answer of Paul and Silas to their Keepers serious demand to whose strictest care and custody they were committed by the Magistrates of Philippi upon the complaint of the covetous Masters of a gainful Servant-maid possessed with a spirit of Divination upon whom the Apostle wrought an undesired and displeasing cure after eminent Testimony born by her to them and their Doctrine God answereth their couragious singing in Prison by an earthquake shaking the foundations of the house and the stout heart of
42.3 weak as a bruised reed through dimness and scantiness of knowledge as a building laid upon a weak or narrow foundation cannot be strong weakness of assent strength of temptations natural timorousness Rom 4.19 20. Act 6. suspiciousness and lowness of spirit In others it is strong and they are full of Faith as Steven having clear and large knowledge c. Both weaker and stronger may be considered either as Habitual in the root and principle or Actual as exercised toward Christ and the promises For the Definition or Description of Faith I shall not heap up words in mentioning many but take up with that full and excellent one of the late Judicious Assemb●y in their larger Catechism that Christians may with more readiness and safety entertain it Description Faith is a Saving Grace wrought in the heart of a sinner by the Spirit and Word of God whereby he being convinced of his sin and misery and of the disability in himself and all other creatures to recover him out of that lost condition not only assenteth to the truth of the promise of the Gospel but receiveth and resteth upon Christ and his righteousness therein held forth for pardon of sin and for the a cepting and accounting of his person righteous in the sight of God for salvation It hath here for its Genus or general and common nature a Grace it being compared with Love Hope c. they herein agree The word Grace distinguisheth it from other Habits even good and vertuous that are acquired this is a Grace or gracious disposition or habit infused A Saving Grace to distinguish it from and set it above common Grace and make it one of those better things that accompany salvation Heb 6.9 The Subject is twofold Subjectum Recipiens Occupans 2. Subject Subjectum recipi ns The first the Subject receiving it or in which it is most ordinarily called the Subject and this is The heart of man a sinner elected and called 1. It is Man that believeth not Angels for of their Faith we have no ground to speak It is Man not God and the Spirit in us but man through them Yea Man singularly not of another but of him that hopeth for life the Just shall live by HIS Faith not by anothers 2. It is the Heart of man with the heart man believeth Rom 10.10 the Heart includeth Will and Affections it is not the Vnderstanding onely nor so much though that necessarily makes way Coming to Christ is a spontaneous motion of Will and Affections renewed and this is beleiving there is assent to things revealed as true and acceptance of things offered as good receiving Joh 1.12 embracing with suitable affections to the Revealer and things revealed 3. The heart of a man a sinner for man upright is not capable of this Faith which is in God through a Mediator Believing the word of another concerning restoral and reparation speaketh loss and decay acceptance of alms poverty Indeed Adam might and must thus far exercise Faith in beleiving and trusting God it belongeth to the first commandment that he continuing upright there would be a continuation of Gods love and his happiness but Faith apprehending the promise of God of acceptation through the righteousness of another necessarily speaketh man a sinner Rom. 4.5 as Justification which is by Faith is of the ungodly Rom. 11.7 4. The heart of man a sinner elected the election obtained it the rest were hardned Tit. 1.1 and therefore is it called the Faith of Gods elect Remarkable is that expression As many as were ordained unto life beleived Act. 13.48 and our Lord saith all that the Father giveth him come unto him Joh 6.37 and the Jews not believing was because they were not his sheep and therefore heard not his voyce 5. The heart of man a sinner elected and called is the Subject of Faith Rom. 10.17 Faith is by hearing it is the souls answer to and compliance with Gods call God vailing his omnipotency under and putting it forth with words of command Uncalled and unbelievers are the same and therefore calling is one of the links of the golden chain of Salvation Rom. 8.28 30. and goeth before Justification by Faith in which Call the Terminus â quo is Satan sin misery death we are called from and the Terminus àd quem we are called to Christ God Holiness and Life Subjectum Occupans Materiale The Subject about which Faith is employed or Object that which and in which we believe is not God immediately though primarily Heb. 6.1 but Christ immediately and the Promises which are in him yea and amen 2 Cor. 1.20 and God through Christ 1 Pet. 1.21 he that believeth not in the Son believeth not in the Father and he that hath not the Son hath not the Father Act. 20.21 Repentance is peculiarly referred to God and Faith to the Lord Jesus Christ Faith also and the Promises Heb. 10.23 or God through Christ promising are Correlates and of all Promises those that concern righteousness and life through the blood of a Mediator are the peculiar object Act. 10.43 1 Joh. 5.10 11. Believing the witness of remission and the recrod of giving eternal li e is mentioned it is called beleeving the Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 glad tidings in the Gospel promises of remission and salvation Mark 1.16 It is true that Faith doth believe and apply every word of God Some things reductively and secondarily are the object of Faith in a sequacious Spirit credulous to whatever is contained in Scripture as that Abimelech had a wife c. Gen 20. Some things are more directly the Word of God expressed and asserted in the History of the Bible yet being believed have not an immediate connexion with Justification and Salvation thereby But the grand testimony of and through Christ Faith as saving principally respecteth and as assenting in the mind looks upon the Promise as accepting in the Will and Affections respecteth Christ The ground on which we believe Formale called the Formal Object of Faith shall be referred to the Externally moving Cause to believe of which afterwards Of all Four Causes I shall speak in order 3. Causes Efficient Principal and first of the Efficient which is either Principal or less Principal The Principal Cause may be considered as that from which the beginning acting continuance growth and perfection of Faith do proceed and this is the Blessed Trinity or God the Father through the Son by the Spirit 1. The beginning root and habit of Faith is from God if of every a Phil 1.6 good work and b Jam 1.17 gift then this and therefore it is called the c Ephes 2.8 gift of God and to you it is d Phil 1.29 given to believe e Heb 12.2 Jesus also is called the Author this is wrought by the Spirit it is
called one of the f Gal 5.22 2 Cor 4.13 fruits thereof and he called the g Spirit of Faith for indeed the word and letter is dead the Spirit quickneth and this powerfully and certainly yet sweetly making willing to beleive in the day of his power Psal 110.3 2 Cor 6.7 10.4 for it is not the Word of truth only but the power of God that made the Apostles warfare so victorious in subduing souls to the obedience of the Faith It is so great a thing to bring blind proud self-destroying man to own Gods way of Salvation by the righteousness of another to accept all from another and him a crucified Saviour that it is a great part of the great mystery of godliness 1 Tim 3.16 that Christ should be believed on in the world so that it needs an exceeding greatness of Divine Power Ephes 1.19 the working of a mighty power in them that beleive even such as raised Christ from the dead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est facultas ipsa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsius sese exerentis virtus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsisius effectus sive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bez in loc though other sence is put upon that place yet by many judicious Expositors is this sence followed which we find in the Gr. Schol. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. None can come to the Son except the Father draw them Joh. 6.44 in which the Author and powerful manner of operation in causing Faith are contained And all this in effectual calling and regeneration before which is no part and degree no act and demonstration of spiritual life Ephes 2.1 Joh. 1.12 13. Act. 14.27 for we are dead which is not of him that willeth not of flesh and blood and the will of man but of God and this is spoken of the Believer to whom God opens the door of Faith 2. The actings and operations of Faith are from God as in him we live Joh. 15.5 so we move and without him can do nothing he worketh to will and to do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Velle bonum aeque ac voluntatem bonam he worketh habit and principle and by supervening Grace exciteth to and assisteth in acting it 3. The continuance and perseverance of Faith are from above Christ causeth our Faith not to fail Luk. 22.32 1 Pet. 1.5 and we are kept by Gods mighty power through Faith unto Salvation and Faith is by the same preserved The a 1 Thess 5.23 24. faithful God that effectually calls will safely keep in b Jude 8. Jesus Christ c 1 Cor. 1.8 and confirm to the end for this is the d Joh. 17.11 12 24. desire of the Son unto the Father and e Joh. 6.39 Mar. 9.24 Luk. 17.5 will of the Father concerning the Son 4. The growth and increase of Faith are from God who giveth all increase and therefore it was well prayed for unto the Lord to help unbelief and to increase Faith 5. The perfection of Faith is from God and Christ Jesus is as the author Heb. 12.2 so the finisher of our Faith and this either by bringing it to its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and highest degree it can reach or is necessary for the Saints it should reach to in the world fulfilling all the good pleasure of his goodness and the work of Faith with power Phil. 1.6 and because he hath begun perfecting it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Or by perfecting it in vision 1 Pet. 1.9 for it's God that gives the end of our Faith Salvation Less Principal The Less Principal Efficient Causes are either Impulsive or Instrumental Impulsive The Impulsive or Moving Cause is either External or Internal The Inwardly moving Cause Proegumena is 1. On Gods part his free grace and love self-moving goodness in which sence it is called the a Ephes 2.8 gift of God and the b Rom. 11.7 election obtain it even those that are ordained to life believe Act. 13.48 Not improvement of Reason not use of means appointed for the attainment of Faith that merit this gift but God worketh all of his own good pleasure Phil. 2.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which appears in that not many noble and wise but poor receive the Gospel 2. On the sinners part who doth believe and being quickned moveth acted acteth and that freely the moving Cause is sence of misery and undonness without Christ and interest in the promise through Faith there being no other name Act. 4.12 Joh. 3.18 and he that believeth not being condemned So that here is the necessary condition and causa sine qua non of Faith sense of misery and inability in self and all creatures to recover a man out of his lost estate whence ariseth renouncing and throwing away all our own righteousnesses those filthy rags Isa 64.6 Phil. 3.9 not having or not depending upon our own righteousness or any thing short of Christ The outwardly Moving Cause Procatarctica 1. On Gods part to give Faith is Christ and his merit for every good gift is through Christ Omne donum gratiae Dei in Christo est Ambr. in Ephes 1. As from the father of lights so through the the Sun of righteousness none come to the Father nothing cometh from the Father but by him whom by this means the Father will make to be honored as himself Joh. 5.23 As salvation was purchased by Christ upon terms of believing so Faith also whereby we lay hold upon Christ for Salvation and therefore that Spirit which is called the Spirit of Faith is by Christ promised upon his purchase making and ascending to be sent to convince the world of that great sin of unbelief Joh. 16.9 2. The externally moving Cause to believe on the sinners part which may be called the Formal Object is twofold 1. As to God and his Word Gods Veracity and infallible truth Heb. 4.13 6.18 Titus 1.2 1 Thess 2.13 Joh. 3.33 Heb. 10.23 he can neither be deceived nor deceive God which cannot lye hath promised is joyned to Hope and therefore Faith He that believeth receiveth the Word of God as the word of God and seteth to his seal that God is true accounting him faithful that hath promised the ground of Faith being Gods faithfulness and the object the Promise God's having spoken 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was enough to Abraham Rom. 4.17 18. in a difficult case Here is the Resolutio fidei into its stable foundadation Gods unquestionable Truth who is Prima veritas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Joh 5.10 so that the believer hath the witness in himself and his evidence is better and assent stronger as to his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 than any ones as to things apprehended by sence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or by reason 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Therefore sometimes divine testimony is added to rational discovery
in Faith without wavering is required and he that wavereth is bid not to think he shall receive any thing Yea Jam. 5.15 the efficacy of the prayer of Faith is by him asserted and throughout Scripture by remarkable expressions and instances abundantly confirmed and proved Fidelem si putaveris facies is true as to God Sen. as well as man And that of the Roman Historian Liv. Vult sibi quisque credi habita fides ipsam plerumque obligat fidem But it doth not produce this eminent effect as to Prayer only rendring it acceptable but also 5. Acceptance to the person in all services together with the distinction of and denomination of Good given to habits and actions flowes from Faith Heb. 11.6 vers 4. vers 5. Without Faith it is universally and utterly impossible to please God By Faith our Sacrifices become excellent and we with them we and they please God and therefore it is not without good reason usually accounted that Wedding garment which renders our presence welcome to the Lord in any Ordinance or service Mat. 22.11 Faith taketh away the savor of the flesh which whatsoever is born of the flesh hath and gives a divine tincture and relish it is like a vein of gold running through all duties which makes them precious though still they be somewhat earthly That it is Characteristically denominative of other Graces and distinctive of them f●om moral vertues those splendida vitia may appear if it be considered That even that eminent Grace of Love is nothing without Faith 1 Cor. 13.2 Gal. 5.6 as no Faith without it could be any thing and doth nothing without it Faith worketh by Love not Love but Faith by it Faith being first and chief in being and working Humility was eminent in the woman and Centurion Mat. 15.27 28 Mat. 8.8 10. yet not Humility but Faith was taken notice of this being the main tree that a sprig from its root receiving its excellency from it and by faith accompanying and overtopping it becoming true humility and not a degenerate meanness and abject lowness of Spirit Sorrow for sin would not deserve the name of Repentance nor Confession be ingenuous but for the hand of Faith laid on the head of the Scape-goat Faith believing Gods promise concerning the Moderation Sanctification removal of Affliction worketh in a way of Patience Jam. 1.3 and this Faith accompanying ennobles Christian Patience and makes it not to be Obstinacy or Insensibility So it makes a Christians contempt of the World not to be a Vain-glorious pretence or a sullen morose reservedness Thus might we run through many more 6. Conquest over Adversaries and hinderances in the way to heaven Isa 9.6 Heb. 2.10 Ephes 6.16 Faith in the mighty God the Captain of our salvation who hath led captivity captive disarmed the powers of darkness and triumphed over them and we in him our head makes couragious and that victorious for if we resist the General of the adverse party will flee Jam. 4.7 1. Pet. 5.9 only we must resist him stedfast in the Faith holding up that shield that will repel and quench all his darts For the life of sence in the lusts of the flesh and of the eye 2 Cor. 5.7 and the pride of life the life of Faith is diametrically opposite thereto by Faith not sight c. doth necessarily weaken it as we find in those Worthies Heb. 11. that by Faith denied themselves in so many things pleasing to flesh and blood and did and suffered so many things contrary thereto For the World as that same eleventh of the Hebrews giveth remarkable instance so St. John beareth testimony in most significant phrase to the power of Faith herein 1 Joh. 5.4 calling it the Victory whereby we overcome the world because certain victory attends and shall crown all that fight the good fight of faith against the World as the God and Prince of this world so the pleasures of the world the honors the profits the friendship of the World with their contrary troubles and the snares and temptations of both 7. Confession and profession of the Faith This is an inseparable adjunct and consequent of true Faith though I call it not a property because this may be where true faith is not but where Faith is this will be also all is not gold that glisters but that is not gold that doth not glister Can a man carry fire in his bosom and not discover it Can a man have the Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 5.13 and believe yet not speak The Apostolical command is not only that we stand fast in the Faith 1 Cor. 16.13 Heb. 10.23 Rom. 10.10 but also that we hold fast the profession of our Faith for as with the heart man believeth to justification so with the mouth confession is made to salvation Let our unchristianly and irrational deriders of Professors and Profession consider this 8. It giveth the soul a sight of things invisible Heb. 11.27 Joh. 1.18 Exod. 33.20 2 Cor. 4.18 and an enjoyment of things to come By Faith Moses saw him that is invisible Jehovah whom otherwise no man hath seen nor can see and live Yea by the same St. Paul and others of the faithful looked at those eternal good things which are not seen 5.7 for they walked by Faith and not by sight By this the Saints can look within the vail By Faith the soul takes a prospect of the promised Canaan this being the Pisgah of its highest elevation Joh. 8.56 By this Abraham saw Christs day and rejoyced It gives a present subsistence to certain futures and is the evidence of things hoped for Heb. 11.1 and not seen for which cause the believers conversation will be in heaven where he seeth his treasure is and where therefore his heart is 9. Joy and Peace in some degree is an immediate effect of true Faith and no true Joy is without Faith though higher degrees flow through Assurance Rom. 15.13 There is joy and peace in believing and a joy of Faith especially when conjoyned with growth Phil. 1.25 It is expressed by leaning and staying upon the Lord which speaks support fixation quietation of mind For which cause a childe of God under desertions prefers his life of Dependance before the Worldlings life of enjoyment and findes some satisfaction in present unsatisfiedness hath some glimmerings of light in the dark night of unassuredness God hath promised to keep him in peace in peace translated perfect peace whose mind is staid on him 2 Isa 26 3. Ch ron 20.20 because he trusteth in him Believing in the Lord brings establishment not only as to the condition and state of the person but also as to the disposition and frame of the mind We finde it in other cases believing the promise and relying on the power and love of another affords a great calm and some secret joy to a mind
Gods part upon supposition of his institution 1. His Justice having received a valuable price for Salvation and this price being made the sinners own in the way of Gods own appointment so that believing sinners may humbly plead with God as a righteous Judge for their Crown 2 Tim. 4.8 Rom. 3.26 Gods justice being not only secured but obliged in a sense by Faith 2. His faithfulness having in his Word promised Salvation to Faith as hath been shown Secondly On Faiths part the reason why God hath conjoyned certain Salvation with it is because it giveth most glory to God of any thing Rom. 4.20 1 Sam. 2.30 therefore God entailes glory on it peculiarly it honoureth God and God will honour them that have it He that believeth sets to his seal that God is true John 3.33 and every way justifieth and advanceth him Properties and notes of Trial convertible with true Faith 5. Properties and reciprocal where Faith is there is this and that where this and that are there is Faith where Faith is not there these are not c. and farther differencing it from other Faith 2 Cor. 13.5 which is a needful work for there is true and false feigned and unfeigned alive and dead Of these some indeed belong to the former Head of Effects and some of them seem not altogether unsuitable to be referred to this Head The First shall be a more general Note True and saving faith receiveth a whole Christ upon judgement and choice on Gods term●s Lord to rule as well as Jesus to save the object of Faith in the Text no separating what God hath joyned and to have a divided Christ not a whole Christ salvation but not self-denial c. True Faith is a considerate thing that which hath least depth Mat. 13 5. springs up most suddenly the soul sits down and weigheth and casteth up all accompts and compareth all things together misery by sin undonnesse in self termes of salvation self-denial a fundamental one taking up the Crosse following Christ universally sincere obedience and what the world lust or Satan can say to the contrary and saith CONTENT to Gods terms and here the bargain is made the soul trusts God contentedly for his part even priviledge and resolvedly sets about its own part even duty Hence true faith proceeding deliberately upon Gods termes is willing to be tryed by the Word declaring those terms which farther tryal according to the Word follows Secondly True and saving Faith is ush●r'd in by godly sorrow and humility in a good degree though they are farther compleated afterward upon the sense of Gods pardoning and accepting love Ezek. 16.63 Mark 1.15 Acts 20.21 Then shalt thou be ashamed c. Repent and believe Repentance towards God and Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ this is Gospel order The inconsistency between Faith and Pride Hab. 2.4 is evident in that opposition of the souls lifting up and living by Faith and the hinderance of the Jews believing John 5.44 The Centurions and womans Faith were attended with eminent humility Did not humility and godly sorrow accompany and bring in faith the Law could not be our School-master to bring us to Christ This shutteth out that easie merry proud faith that springs up without the dunging of humility or watering of sorrow according to God Thirdly True and saving Faith is abiding and perseverant and this upon supposition of temptations and assaults for otherwise a mock-faith may have a continuance and men dye in a pleasing dream of ungrounded presumptuous confidence Now it must be such or cannot be saving for as it is said He that believeth shall be saved Mark 16.16 Mat. 24.13 so he that endureth to the end shall be saved They that have true Faith have the seed of God abiding in them the prayer of Christ for them are kept by the power of God for he that hath begun a good work will finish it his gifts being without repentance Believing and sealing for security are conjoyned Eph. 1.13 The true believer is the wise man that built on the Rock Mat. 7.24 25. his house therefore stood the good ground that hath de●th of earth Mat. 13. Heb. 10.38 39. that what springs may not wither The just shall live by his faith continue therein and so believe to the saving his soul being rooted and established therein through Christ Col. 2.7 See more of this before under the efficient cause principal and instrumental Fourthly True and saving Faith is growing though this growth be not alway discernable or alike That prayer for encrease of Faith flowed from the very nature of Faith Luk. 17.5 it is the good fight which must be carryed on to a compleat conquest running a race 1 Tim. 6.12 2 Tim. 4.7 Prov. 4.18 speaking progresse to the finishing our course for the way of the just is as light that shineth more and more to a perfect day Whatever hath life hath growth till it reach a state of consistency 1 John 5.13 Saint John wrote to those that did believe that they might believe Vt credatis credere pergatis which belongs to the last Head fide crescatis Beza in loc i. e. grow in faith according to the general Apostolical precept of growing in all grace The same Author accounts this the most plain and natural interpretation of that of Paul from Faith to Faith Fide Rom. 1.17 quae quotidiè incrementum accipiat confirming it by that of Clement of Alexandria The Apostle speaks not of a double Faith but of one and that receiving growth and perfecting The Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 furtherance of faith Col. 2.7 Phil. 1.25 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 establishing and abounding in the Faith speak encrease and growth in root and branches more fixed habit more frequent acts They therefore that have believed ever since they were born and alway alike never believed at all truly Fifthly True and saving Faith is Purging Act 1 Rom 8.1 4 purifying their hearts by Faith Believing and walking not after the flesh are joyned where there is Faith and much more assurance of Faith there will be heart and body cleansed and washed Heb. 10.22 23 2 Cor. 7.1 1 Pet. 1.4 1 John 3.3 pollutions of flesh and spirit taken away by faith receiving the promise of the undefiled inheritance the believer will purifie himself as he is pure in whom he trusteth and hopeth Living flesh will purge out the Sanies and corruption in it a living Fountain the mud that 's stirred up so living faith And indeeed hereby it is permanent for purity preserveth pure Faith cannot be kept but in a good even a cleane conscience 1 Tim. 1.19 Sixthly True and saving faith hath other graces accompanying it in a good measure with a proportionable encrease strength and activity I know some are more eminent for this others for that grace as Moses for meekness Job patience Abraham
requir●ng sometimes the one sometimes the other when Repentance is the duty to be discharged calling sometimes for fasting weeping and walking in sackcloth and ashes nay the rending of the heart and not the garmen●s Joel 2.11 12. and sometimes and that very commonly for turning to the Lord nay the whole work of Repentance is in Scripture expressed by Humiliation in the promise of pardon to the penitent their Repentance is described to be an humbling of the uncircumcised heart and acceptance of the punishment of their sin Lev. 26.41 So when Rehoboam and Manasseh Repented they are only said to humble themselves 2 Chron. 12.6 33.2 And under the Gospel we read of Repentance for sin as well as from sin and 't is denominated godly sorrow which worketh Repentance 2 Cor. 7.10 Working not only as a cause but complement perfecting finishing and compleating Repentance and therefore the Apostle James requires them that draw nigh to God and clean their h art and purifie their hands that they be afflicted mourn and weep and humble themselves under the hand of God James 2.8 9 10. And the Covenant of Grace promising Repentance doth expresse it self by these two acts you shall see the evil of yo r wayes and loa h y●ur selves because of your iniquities and ab●minations And I w●ll put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my ways Ezek. 36.27 31. So that according to the expressions of Scripture as well as the experiences of the Saints Humi●iation of the s●ul is an essential act and eminent part of Repentance and this is that which I in the description do denominate sense of and sorrow for sin as committed against God thereby intending to note unto you that the soul must be humbled that will be lifted up by the Lord and his humiliation doth and must consist of these two parts Conviction and Contrition sight of and sorrow for sin The first part of humiliation is A Spirit of Conviction First part of humiliation or sight of sin in every penitent soul which is no other than the operation of the Holy Ghost opening the blinde eye to see the deviations of the soul and the destruction inevitably attending the persistance in it this act of Repentance and Humiliation is no other but the Prodigals return to himself in sense of his own starving condition whil'st his fathers servants have bread enough Luke 15.17 Rom. 7.9 the arrival of the Law unto the reviving of sin in Pauls sense and feeling the communing with our hearts that we may tremble Psal 4.5 and not sin a searching and trying our ways that we may return unto the Lord a smiting on the thigh with a What have we done Lam. 3.39 the smiting of Davids heart 2 Sam 24.10 with an I have sinned against the Lord the judging of our selves that we may not be judged of the Lord the Spirit of bondage which goeth before the Spirit of Adoption In a word it is the souls serious erection of a Court in its own breast and setting conscience in the Throne and making a judicial processe to descry and determine its eternal condition in order to which 1. It spreads before it self the Law of God as that wh●ch must be the Rule of life and reason of death and condemnation the will of God dictating duty and disswading iniquity awarding recompence according to obedience or disobedience In a word determining of men Thus do and live or thus do and dye thus I will be worshipped and you shall be rewarded in this if you transgresse you shall be thus punished the soul seeth clearly that the Law is in nature and necessity a Schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ whil'st by serious consideration of its genuine sense and due extent the soul standeth convinced this is du y enjoyned this is sin inhibited herein if I offend not only in deed and word but thought or imagination I am a Transgressor bound under guilt and the expectation of judgment thus the coming of the Law into Pauls minde becomes the revival of sin and Josiah his reading in the Law of Moses led him to the tremblings of heart and renting his garment before the Lord 2 Chron. 34.18 19. For as indeed wi●hout the Law there is no transgression so without the knowledge of the Law there can be no conviction ignorance of Divine pleasure is the great obstruction of Repentance and therefore the Prince of this world doth daily endeavour to blow out the light of the Word or to blinde the eyes of the sons of men that they may not see and be converted but God sends his Prophets rising up early and sending them to read the Law in the ears of men that Israel may see his sinne and Judah her transgression The first act of Repentance is the falling of the scales from off the sinners eyes the first language of a turning soul is Lord what wouldest thou have me to do So that the soul humbling self-examinant seeing the Law to be holy just and good that which must be the rule and reason of its condition it being to arraign and condemn it self becomes studious of the Law in its full sense and due extent in commands prohibitions promises and threats and sets before its eye every particular precept and pondereth the righteousnesse of that God who hath declared a curse against every one that continueth not in the Law to do it and so by the justification of and insight to the Law of God exciteth the soul to self-reflexion and is constrained to cry out What have I done whereupon it 2. Surveigheth the past course of his own life summoneth together all faculties powers and members of both soul and body to make rehearsal of his past conversation in word thought and deed and to give an exact account of their conformity or disagreement with the Law of God established and rule by which it must be judged and now he communeth with his hear● considereth his ways examineth him ●l● makes an exact comparison of his life with Gods Law layeth the li●e close to h s carriage and so convinceth himself of his deviations and ●rregularities insomuch that sin reviveth and he dyeth guilt appeareth and grief and shame aboundeth his own heart condemns him as disobedient and a Transgressor of the Law that he is constrained to c●y out What I sh●uld do I have not done and I have left undone what I ought to have done Rom. 7.19 I have sinned against the Lord if God be severe to mark what is amisse I cannot abide in his presence for I have not only offended in part of his holy Law and broken the least of his Commandments but I have violated the whole Law and am a Transgressor against every Command nay he cometh on this consideration to be convinced of his anomy and ataxy the pravity of his nature that enmity to the Law which is implanted in his very being and that irregularity whereby
returne from sin will afford you no comfort sin is an aversion from God and repentance a conversion to God the common call of sinners unto repentance is to turn and return to G d Isa 44.22 55 7. Jer. 4.1 18 11. and many other places whenever repentance is promised or predicated and spoken of in Scripture it is ordinary by this terme of turning and returning to the Lord Isa 19.22 Isa 59.20 and that not only in the Old but also in the New Testament 1 Pet. 2.25 We were like sheep that were going astray but are now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of our soules Every sinner is towards God like Hagar resisting the Will and then running from the presence of her Mistresse untill by the Angel of the Covenant called to repentance and caused to return by weeping-crosse and submit under his hand Like Travellers we are out of the way and running upon our ruine and had need to call one on another Come and let us return to our God Hos 6.1 Like the Prodigal we are out of our wits untill by a spirit of repentance we recover our sound mind and return to our Father from whom we have madly run away so that the very formality of repentance is returning All Judas conviction and confession nay contrition and condemnation will not constitute a Gospel-penitent for want of conversion Repentance when it is true and saving makes the sinner sadly smite on his thigh and say What have I done and speedily to face about and say I will do so no more the Gospel-penitent is a positive Changeling no more the same he was Old things are done away all things are become new he is really and throughly changed not in his substance as the Familists fondly fancy nor in quantity measure and degree as common Christians too commonly dreame but in quality nature frame and disposition the soul and body in regard of their essence powers faculties proper and natural actions remaine the same after that they were before repentance sorrow fear joy love desire natural passions and affections are indeed altered not annihilated restrained nay regulated not ruined but the whole man is in respect of property bent and disposition no more the same but a very Changeling that it may be said of them as of Onesimus in time past unprofitable but now profitable Philem. 11. Or as of the Corinthians they were Thieves Fornicators Idolaters Adulterers Effeminate Covetous Drunkards Revilers Extortioners What not but they are washed they are cleansed they are sanctified the very best of men before the grace of God their Saviour appear by the working of Repentance and renewing of the Holy Ghost are as the Apostles themselves were Foolish Disobedient Deceived serving divers lusts and pleasures rebellious to Gods holy will running from his gracious presence and continually going astray but when by the grace of Repentance they see and are sadned for their aberrations and sinful course they speedily return from all sin to God so that turning is their general act and businesse and it consists of two parts answerable to the terms about which it is conversant and they are Recession from sin Reversion to God Or as the Prophet in the Name of the Lord phraseth it a ceasing to do evil and learning to do well Isa 1.16 Or the wicked mans forsaking his evil way and the unright●ous man his thoughts and returning to the Lord Isa 55.7 Or as the Apostle James a cleansing your hands you sinners and purging your hearts you double-minded and drawing nigh unto the Lord James 4.8 The work of Regeneration doth consist in putting off the Old and putting on the New man It is not being conformed to the World or fashioned ac●ording to the lust of ignorance but being transformed by the renewing of our minde to be holy as God is holy Rom. 12.2 1 Pet. 1.14 15. First part of conversion So that the first part of Conversion is a Recession from all sin which the Psalmist calleth a departing from iniquity Psal 34.14 37.27 as the original word will bear it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a substracting from sin that the number and increase of it may be small and at the length amount to just nothing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and as the Prophet Isaiah a ceasing from evil as the Septuagint rendreth it a resting and being quiet from the practice of iniquity so in Isa 1.16 and at after a forsaking of his evil ways utterly deserting and relinquishing sin Isa 55.7 this is that which the Apostle calleth a casting off flinging from us with detestation and anger the works of darkness Rom. 13.12 so as never more to have f●llowship with the unfruitful works of darknesse but rather reprove them Ephes 5.8 Nay it is an Apostasie from sin to break League with and violate all those bonds in which we stand bound to profanesse and with rage and resolution rebel against the Soveraignty of sin which it hath exercised over us if we will call on the Name of the Lord and become his Subjects we must recede rebel against sin bid open defiance and proclaime open war against it notwithstanding all those engagements that lie upon us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let him depart saith our Translation in the Original Apostatize from unrighteousnesse 2 Tim. 2.19 Sin hath an interest in and engagement upon men by nature they are obliged to follow it and the whole man is too much devoted to pursue and obey the dictates of lust but Repentance dischargeth all and turneth the whole man into an estrangednesse to nay enmity against sin so that both soul and body in faculties and members do withdraw from sin the thoughts are now no more engaged to contrive and devise iniquity nor the heart to embrace it or hands to act it the members of the body are no longer yielded to be the instruments of unrighteousnesse but the contrary is now effected by Repentance In a word the penitent soul recedes and turns from all sin First By the apprehension of his minde seeing sin and its sinfulnesse he discerns the contrariety of it to the Image of God by the Law which is by the Spirit of Repentance engraven on his heart he now knows sin which he never knew before he discovereth abundance of evil in what he deemed exceeding good he now seeth he sinned to the damnation of his soul in what he thought to have been good service to God he is now freed from error and readily disowns and damneth as desperately wicked what he sometimes allowed and argued for as eminently good with Jobs proud friends when penitent seeth he hath need of Gods pardon and Jobs prayer for the very things he spake for God and like pharisaical Paul seeth horrid unrighteousnesse in all his self-righteousnesse of which he had vaunted so that sin shall no more impose on his judgment but he will try all its dictates and discover the falsehood that is therein Secondly By the
unto the Lord and when provoked by others it is to return to the Lord their God Hosea 14.1 and when God calleth and chargeth their Repentance with hypocrisie it is with this complaint They cryed but nat unto me and they returned but not unto the most High Hosea 7.14 16. The Gospel penitent turneth not from sin to sin as do the profane nor from sinful rudenesse to common civility or only moral honesty as do the civil honest man but unto piety acts of Religion unto God God is the sole object of his affection and adoration the true penitent is prostrate at the feet of God as him only that pardoneth iniquity transgression and sin And pliable to the pleasure of God as him only that hath prerogative over him the whole man soul and body is bent for God and pursueth communion with and conformity to God not only doth Repentance turn us from what is grievous and contrary to God but unto that which is agreeable and acceptable God the minde returneth from the devising of evil to the review of the minde and will of God Psal 1. v. 1 2. from sitting in the seat of the scorneful unto meditating on the Law of God night and day his earnest out-cry is Lord Acts 9.6 what wouldest thou have me to do for he is transformed in the spirit of his minde to prove what is the good and acceptable will of the Lord Rom. 12.3 and full well knoweth it is life eternal to know God 1 Pet. 2.2 and Jesus Christ and therefore having once tasted that the Lord is gracious he as a new-born babe desireth the sincere milk of the Word Gods Word is his great delight and beautiful in his eyes are their feet that bring glad tydings from Zion Rom. 10.15 The will and affections return from all evil unto a resolution and ready acceptance of the good and acceptable will of God not only doth the Gospel penitent pray Wherein I have done amiss do thou shew it me I will do so no more but also speak Lord for thy servant heareth for it is wholly resolved into the will of God approving what is good prizing every act of worship and purposing an exact observance of it sincerely praying Let thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven and accounting it his meat and drink to do the will of God his desires and affections run out to God and God alone there is nothing in all the earth to be compared with God nor any in heaven acceptable to the soul besides God Psal 73.25 The Lord becomes his very dread and delight he rejoyceth in the Lord and continually feareth before him such are his affections now towards God that he can leave all to follow him father mother sisters brethren wife children lands houses nay life it self becomes nothing in respect of God A Gospel penitent stands convinced that if any man love the world the love of the Father is not in him 1 Joh. 2.15 And if any man love any thing better than Christ he is not worthy of him Matth. 10.37 and so he accounteth all things drosse and dung in comparison of Christ Phil. 3.7 The Lord is his chiefest among ten thousand his all in all and so his outward man is ready in the utmost of endeavours to do the will of God he is wholly resigned to Divine pleasure to do or suffer any thing God shall not enjoyne what his attempts and utmost industry shall not be to performe or inflict what he shall not in patience and silent submission endure Repentance is no other than the obedience of faith 1 Pet. 1.2 the penitent Romans do obey from the heart the forme of sound words unto them delivered or as the Greek bears it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into which they are delivered as in a mold which leaves its shape and impression on that which passed through it Rom. 6.17 For the stony heart removed the Law of God is imprinted in the soul the Spirit of Repentance maketh us walk in Gods way Ezek. 3.26 and to do his Statutes The command of God carrieth the truly penitent contrary to the commands of men nay corrupt dictates of their own soul J seph dare not sin against God for all Potiphars possession nor Daniel slack his devotion for fear of a Lyons Den nay it is irksome to a penitent Peter to be once and again provoked to obedience as half angry he cannot but cry out John 21.17 Why Lord thou knowest I love thee he is ready to execute Divine prescription against the utmost of opposition he never desireth other Apology than whether we obey God or man judge ye for Christ is exalted to be Lord and King to give Repentance c. Not only doth he believe but is also ready to suffer for the sake of Christ he is contented to be at Gods carving as unworthy any thing under sharpest sorrows he is dumb Psal 39.9 and openeth not his mouth because God did it in saddest disasters he complains not because he hath sinned against the Lord 2 Sam. 16.10 let Shimey curse him he is quiet nay grieved at the instigations of revenge for that God hath bid Shimey curse in all his actions and enjoyments he is awed by and argueth not against God However he may with Hezekiah slip and fall in his life time yet the support of his soul at death is Lord Remember I have walked before thee with an upright and perfect heart and have done that which was right in thine eyes Isa 38.3 And with Paul he may finde a Law in his members rebelling against the Law of his minde yet can thank God that with his minde he serves the Law of God Rom. 7.25 So that true Gospel Repentance doth not only convince and cast down but change and convert a sinner sense of and sorrow for sin as committed against God are necessary and essential parts but not the whole or formality of Repentance no that is a turning from sin all sin unto God only unt● a God it indulgeth not the least iniquity nor taketh up short of the Lord it stayeth not with Jehu at the extirpation of Baal but with Hezekiah and Josiah Rest reth the Passeover the worship of the Lord and that is the fourth thing considerable in the nature of Repentance Conclusion 5 The fifth and last conclusion is Confession of sin and prayer for its pardon are constant concomitants of true Repentance The true penitent is not only the sinner of sense but of hope and therefore a supp●iant at the Throne of Grace prostrate at the foot-stool of mercy confessing sin and suing for pardon freely accusing and fully condemning it self before God every penitent soul comes to God like Benhadad to the King of Israel wi●h an Halter about his Neck praying Forgive us our trespasses David is no sooner brought to Repentance by Nathan but he is brought on his knees before the Lord with an I hav●
our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and perfect holinesse in the fear of God 2 Cor. 7.1 The whole work of the Gospel is to carry on and compleat Repentance this is the profit to be reaped by every Ordinance the Word preached perswades Repentance th● Sacraments received stir up and seal Repentance the communion of the Saints carrieth on the work of Repentance Exhorting one another daily lest any be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin Hebr. 3.13 The Gospel is the great Charter of our priviledges purchased by Jesus Christ and they all run into this Repentance this is the benefit by Christs death Resurrection and Ascension this is the fruit of the Spirit of Adoption Zech. 12.10 it is a Spirit of prayer and mourning over him whom we have pierced in brief Repentance is the contract of the Covenant of Grace the Law cannot give it and the light of nature cannot give it only the Gospel can effect it the Covenant of Grace confers on us an accesse to and communion with God as our God not as we are innocent for we are guilty of the breach of the first Covenant but as we are penitent sorrowful for and turned from the evil of our ways so that in this respect we must needs conclude Repentance is a grace of great necessity we reap no benefit enjoy no priviledge of the Gospel but by Repentance the mystery of Redemption Christs Incarnation Death Resurrection Ascension and Exaltation and all the Ministrations of the Gospel are in vain to the impenitent 3. Most pregnant Arguments perswading to Repentance are proposed in and by the Gospel this is light so powerfully convincing that all others which past before it is but darknesse in comparison of it whether it be the light of nature making known sin as it is specifical and particular contrary to certain standing dictates not in its contrariety to the image and holinesse of God and that without any clear and certain way of escape and Repentance or the light of the Law which layeth men under full plain and clear conviction even unto self-condemnation but coucheth the pardon and possiibility of Redemption under such dark figures and expressions that with much difficulty it may direct and provoke Repentance but in the Gospel the Sun of r ghteousnesse shines brightly unto conviction and self-condemnation nay unto speedy and chearful conversion There is no Argument in Nature or in the Law to enforce Repentance but it is urged in the Gospel I and much more doth Nature stir up Repentance by sins inconveniency to mans state or the Law by sins incongruity to the holy just and good command of God the Gospel doth the same nay and further addeth its inconsistency with that estate int● which we are resolved by the Redemption of Jesus Christ and so it presenteth us with two most pregnant Powerfully Convinc ng and Perswasive Arguments unto Repentance such which no Professed Religion in the World it self excepted doth propound and they are these 1. The death of Jesus Christ. 2. The day of Judgment The first Argument propounded in the Gospel to perswade Repentance is The death of the Lord Jesus Christ This is an Argument potent in operation to every true believer faith doth no sooner touch the hem of its garment but it cureth like the bones of Elisha quickens the dead man that is but let down into this Grave and pregnant in perswasion to every rational soul that is but candid and ingenuous It is storied of Antonius the Senator of Rome that he intending to provoke the people to r●venge the death of Caesar slain at the Senate by Brutus and Cassius brought out his bloody Robe and cryed out Here is the bloody Robe of your Quondam Emperour Thus the Gospel presents to our faith a crucified Christ and slain Saviour slain for and by our sins that we may look on him whom we have pi●rced and mourn over him that we may see him whom our lusts have slain and be revenged on them by Repentance The contemplations of a crucified Christ cannot but constrain Repentance Mount Calvary is a place of heart-melting to every ingenuous soul that makes it his walk for that it presents unto his observation a man nay more than a man a God under the most grievous sufferings not for his own but the sins of others exposed unto that sad estate not by any constraint or necessity but his own choice pity and compassion in whom we reads these three heart-moving Repentance-provoking considerations viz. 1. The great severity of offended justice and fury provoked by his iniquity Here he seeth the vilenesse of his sin and fiercenesse of Gods anger who would not nay in justice could not spare man without satisfaction he had said it and now seeth it executed In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye the death Here is furious justice which falls fearfully on a Surety a Mediator and fierce fury that favours not a Son an only begott n Son Surely sin is hainous greatly provoking to God that his displeasure thus rageth It is sure a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God who makes the Son of his love thus roare out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Oh Impiety horrid Impiety that cannot be expiated by any thing but the very heart-blood of God! O fury fearful fury that forsakes a Son only become a Surety for sinners what pensive thoughts must needs arise in the serious observer of this sad spectacle especially when he proceeds to the next consideration which is this 2. Great love and pity of a Saviour who willingly endureth these sad sufferings out of choice not constraint for the sins of others not of himself Oh unconceivable love ineffable pity that we sinned and he thus suffered he left glory to be exposed to shame he undertakes an Atonement and Reconciliation between God and man and endure h infinite fury to effect it no guile was ever found in his mouth whose soul undergoeth this grief the debt was ours and he payeth the utmost Mite for us All we went astray and on him was laid the punishment of us all Isa 53.3 4. he is wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our sins and that whil'st we were sinners that slighted and rejected him Greater love can no man shew than to dye for his friend but behold here is matchlesse love whil'st we were yet enemies Christ gave himself for us These Torments we must have endured to Eternity if they had not been inflicted on him 3. We here see the gracious acceptance we have with God the great liberty of accesse to God which is to us afforded the wrath of God thus poured forth on his Son is pacified towards sinners and the Covenant of Works being thus accomplished is abolished and man that was at distance from God draweth nigh unto him for this crucified Christ was thus lifted up that he might draw all men unto himself
and is exalted to give remissi●n of sin and Repentance and to consecrate us unto himself a peculiar people These Lessons and every of them are written in such legible Characters in the death of Jesus Christ that he that runs may read them and each of them are pathetical perswasions to Repentance whil'st they are read by any seriously observant soul they reflect these serious and pensive thoughts How vile is mine iniquity that hath provoked so great severity and exp sed my Surety to so much misery how great peril was my soul in which is r●deem d by so great a price how dangerous those wounds which are only cured by the death of the Chyrurgion how dissonant to holinesse and daring to justice is that sin which but imputed exposed the only begotten Son of God to be deserted by his Father how fierce that fury which could not be appeased without suffering it must needs be fearful to fall into the hands of an angry God for how will he fume at the servant that thus frets at his Son how will he tear the Principal that thus tormenteth the Surety how shall God punish us for our own sins who is so wrathfully displeased with his Son for other mens sins Oh what shall be the sufferings of the Reprobate if these be the sufferings of his dearly beloved needs must fraile man sink under the burden of Divine fury when the God of Angels needed the support of an Angel If my Repentance will avenge the quarrel of my suffering Saviour shall I not do it if Repentance will rescue me from wrath to come shall I not performe it had I not better weep a few days here then in hell for ever and the rather for that I weep not without cause nor mourn without hope The sin was mine the sorrow my Saviours the transgression mine the satisfaction my Sureties Oh the depth of his pity that endured this for mine iniquity What he endured for a time I must have endured for ever if in him the Father had not been well-pleased Shall that be my delight which cost my Surety so dear Shall I call on the Lords Name or be called by the Name of Christ and not depart from iniquity was Jesus Christ thus broken for me and shall not my heart be broken for and from sin hath he R deemed me from this wrath to come and shall he not Redeem me from my vain conversation shall I expect Remission and not accept repentance through his blood Oh what reason have I to return to God and glorifie him with my soul and body which are his for he bought them at a price and a deare price his own blood he hath consecrated a way of access unto the Father through the vaile of his own flesh but shall I dare to approach not having my heart sprinkled from an evil conscience and my body washed with pure water he is reconciled but shall I againe rebell I am healed shall I againe sin a pardon is to me extended shall I not receive it with a pensive and prostrate soul Thus then we find that there is much of strength in this Argument even above a thousand Arguments to enforce Repentance if but right reason keep the Throne what reply can be made or reason rendred why the call of the Gospel should not be obeyed whilst it pleadeth with so much clearnesse for our repentance from the consideration of the death of Christ But the second Argument urged by the Gospel to induce us to repent is the day of judgement 2. Argument to enforce repentance The former Argument doth assault our affections this our passions that the soul may be surrounded with suggestions unto repentance and if either the one or the other are under the command of right reason the design of the Gospel may not miscarry the dread of the day of judgement drives the Ministers of God to Preach and perswade repentance Knowing the terrours of ●he Lord we perswade men saith the Apostle for that we must all appear before the judgement seat of Christ that every one may receive according to the things done in the body according to that he hath done in the body whether it be good or bad 2 Cor. 5.10 11. This is sure a profitable proper Argument to perswade repentance which provokes unto the Preaching of it and therefore the same Apostle doth in Acts 7.30 31. urge it but now he commandeth all men everywhere to repent for that he ha h appointed a day wherein to judge the world in righteousnesse c. And this Argument is so pregnant and profitable to perswade repentance that it is urged by John the Baptist The Kingdome of God is at hand therefore repent nay the axe is laid to the root of the tree and every tree which bringeth not forth good fruit must be hewen down and thrown into the fire therefore bring forth fruits meet for repentance Matthew 3. and very often by the Lord Jesus himself This is so proper an Argument to enforce repentance that it is noted to be set at a distance to the thoughts of the impenitent they live as having made a Covenant with death and an agreement with hell Isa 28.15 put farre away this evil day it is noted that the Doctrine which increaseth ungodlinesse denieth the resurrection 2 Tim. 2.16 17 18. And such as walk after their own lusts are scoffers at the day of judgement 2 Pet. 3.3 4 5. And it is to be observed that those in Athens who repented not at Pauls Preaching mocked when he made mention of the resurrection and last judgement But certainly there is much in the day of judgement to move the hardest heart and most stubborn sinner to repentance the same Spirit which is to convince the world of sin and of righteousnesse convinceth also of judgement for the day of judgement answereth all the sinners pleas whereby he defendeth and encourageth himself in sin for it assureth of certaine detection and conviction of sin It is a day which alloweth not the least encouragement from secresie for therein every mans deeds must be made manifest whether they be good or evil nay the very secrets of all hearts shall be laid open and sinful thoughts themselves must then be judged the day of judgement determineth a period to all impiety and denieth the duration of its props and Pillars profits and pleasures in the world determining all the advantages of sin to be at the best but pleasures of sin for a season calling on rich men to howle and weep though they live in pleasure on earth in James 5.1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8. The day of judgement assureth of the punishment of the wicked however they scape scot-free in this life and by their present power Gods patience and humane strength they evade and escape many evils which befall the godly yet they are but reserved to this day of vengeance and this is the day in which the wicked must appeare Cursed and manifesteth
that it shall not go well with the wicked this day of judgement is the day of recompence to the righteous wherein it shall be made manifest it is not in vaine to serve God or walk mournfully before him the iniquities of the penitent shall not be found when sought for but appear blotted out of Gods remembrance for that if there be in the soul any sence of sin and fear of judgment this is one eminently forcible argument to perswade repentance shall men continue in sin which shall erelong be laid open to their shame or pursue the pleasures which shall shortly end in perplexities and not rather judge themselves that they may not be judged by the Lord Thus then the Gospel doth by plain and powerful arguments call unto repentance and witnesse its necessity But yet again The most powerful helps conducing to Repentance are afforded by the Gospel and thereby it calls most loudly to Repentance leaving us altogether without excuse and sealing us under inevitable condemnation in case we do not repent the Gospel affords the fulnesse of knowledge for the enforcement of Repentance ignorance and unbelief those bars and locks of impenitency are broken open the Gospel opens the blinde eyes and turnes us from darkness to light makes all men from the least to the greatest to know the God that is offended to be a God of jealousie that will not endure iniquity he is a consuming fire to the hypocrite in Zion The Law that is violated is just holy and good the guilt contracted is so contrary and provoking to justice that in it there is no possibility of approach to God that therefore Christ is exalted a Prince and a Saviour to give Repentance before Remission of sin Repentance is a free gift conferred by the Covenant of grace signified and sealed in Baptism Christ Jesus the Donor we need but ask and have the death of Jesus the efficient cause of Repentance it is wrought by union with the same so that the Gospel makes us to see the necessity nature next way method and order of repentance we cannot now plead we knew not what it was to repent where or how to gain repentance or that there was so great a need of it The Gospel helps us to the Spirit that worketh Repentance The Ministry of the Gospel is the Ministry of the Spirit this awakeneth the most sleepy conscience and shaketh the most rocky heart this makes Herod heare John gladly and the Jews to rejoyce in his light this makes Foelix himself to tremble and Simon Magus to fall down like ligh●ening none can continue impenitent under the Gospel but by quenching the Spirit grieving the Spirit nay with rage resisting the Spirit and counting themselves unworthy of salvation The great work of the Gospel is to send forth the Spirit to convince the world of sin Act. 13.46 7 51. righteousnesse and judgement and the Spirit by the Gospel works conviction unto very opposition with rage and violence and malicious attempts to extinguish its light and destroy the Ministers that publish it if it do not convince unto conversion and repentance hence the sin unpardonable constituted say some but I am sure compleated by impenitency is called blasphemy against the Spirit for and by reason of its spite and rage against the Gospel We see then that the Gospel teacheth repentance as its maine doctrine offereth repentance as its prime priviledge urgeth repentance as its chief duty and enforceth repentance as its only end and so loudly calleth unto repentance that we are bound to the obedience of the Gospel as the last of Divine instructions and after which we must expect no direction to our happinesse but this must stand as the high aggravation of impenitency as a sin against the humiliation and exaltation of Jesus Christ the death sufferings resurrection of the Son of God the Covenant and Spirit of grace Repentance is absoultely and indispensably necessary So that in order to the anti●ipation of divine fury and answer of the call of the Gospel we see the necessity of repentance And this is the second general Head propounded which give me leave to dismisse with a brief but plaine rebuke and blame unto the sinful demeanour and carriage of men in the world demonstrating an insensibility of this indispensable necessity of Repentance and it consists in two things viz. the Contempt Of Repentance Neglect Of Repentance 1. Note of insensibility of repentance The sinful carriage of men evidencing their insensibility of its necessity is the contempt of Repentance whereby men scoffe at repentance despising all calls thereunto scorning it as a base and contemptible melancholy humour below the spirit of men they live like men in Covenant with hell and at an agreement with the grave who need no repentance and therefore make their hearts hard and necks stiffe become obdurate and rebellions to all calls to repentance approve themselves a scornful people nay scoffers at the Doctrine of the Gospel and day of judgement which calls them to Repentance In the haughtinesse of their spirits they 1. Disesteem the mercies and common providences of God which should lead them to repentance They say not in their hearts Let us feare the Lord our God that giveth rain both the former and latter in its season and that reserveth to us the appointed weeks of the Harvest Jer. 5.24 but despise the patience and long-sufferance of God which should lead them to repentance 2. Decline nay despise the Word of God when preaching repentance they will not hearken to the sound of the Trumpet Jer. 6.17 have line upon line yet will not heare Isa 28.13 Nay pull away the shoulder and stop their eare lest they should hear Zech. 7.11 3. Disregard the judgements of God denounced or inflicted upon others for their warning all that God doth to treacherous Israel never affects or frightens treacherous Judah to make her return Jer. 3.10 The falling of the Tower of Siloa and Pilates mingling the blood of men with Sacrifices may occasion censorious thoughts Luk. 13.1 2 3 4 5. these were worse sinners than others but never any serious reflections that unlesse we repent we must all likewise perish Obdurate children never relent at their Brethrens correction nay when threatened themselves they blesse themselves in their heart and say We shall see no evil though we go on to adde drunkennesse to thirst Deut. 29.19 By their stubbornnesse they tire and stay Gods correcting hand with a Why should you be smitten any more you revolt still more and more Isa 1.5 4. Are desperate and daring in their impiety sinning with an high hand and brazen face with utmost resolution Come say they we will fetch wine and fill our selves with strong drink and to morrow shall be as this day and more abundant Isa 56.12 are not ashamed when they commit abomination nor can they blush Jer. 6.15 they sin as Sodome not so much as seeking to hide their iniquity Isa
the whole man and shutteth out all list or leasure to repent 7. They are in danger dolefully to outdate the day of grace God doth manifest graces beauty and magnifie the necessity of Repentance by limiting its time to day if ye will hear his voice well and good if not he will sweare in his wrath you shall not enter into his rest if the day of grace be once expired Repentance may be sought with tears but not obtained and then the pleasures of sin will be shortning conscience will grow clamorous and torment with an expectation of fiery indignat●on to be revealed from heaven lamenting too late Oh that I had known in that my day Luke 19.42 the things which Concerne my Peace which are now hid from mine eyes Such as in time will not when it is too late shall see that repentance is the One Thing Necessary of mans life is even of absolute Necessity I have laid before you the two first general things considerable viz. the Nature and Necessity of Repentance wherein I have been longer than intention but shall be more brief in the two remaining I passe then to the third thing propounded viz. The Notes and Characters of true Repentance And concerning this I might return back to the description of Repentance and make that an examination of the truth of your Repentance but I will leave that to your own private meditations and only examine your Rep●ntance by the Characters propounded by the Apostle Paul to the Corinthians For behold this self-same thing that you have sorrowed after a godly sort what carefulnesse it hath wrought in you yea what clearing of your selves yea what indigna●ion yea what feare yea what vehement desire yea what zeale yea what revenge 2 Cor. 7.11 in which we have two remarkable Notes and Characters of true Rpentance First The general nature of it godly sorrow Secondly The Concomitants thereof care fear c. 1. Mark of Repentance The first Note or Mark of Repentance is godly sorrow I have before Noted sorrow to be essential to Repentance God never calls to Repentance but he calls to weeping or promiseth Repentance Mr. Calamies Sermon before the house of Commons Octob. 22. 1644. but he promiseth a spirit of mourning excellently well saith an eminent Minister of this CITY God hath tyed sin and sorrow together with Adamantine chains A woman may as soon look to be delivered of a Childe in a dream as a man to repent without sorrow Sorrow is indeed the daughter of sin but God hath made the daughter a means to destroy the mother you must not look to dance with the Divel all day and sup with Christ at night to lie in Dalilah's Lap all your lives and go to Abrahams bosome when you dye To the merry Greeks and Boon Companions of the world Repentance seems madnesse because it calls for mourning for wheresoever there is true Repentance there must there will be sorrow for sinne This sorrow must be godly sorrow after a godly sort it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sorrow according to God Godly in its Author Occasion Object End and Effects it must be godly sorrow in its Author springing from God and God alone the working of natural passions by a supernatural power and principle a spirit of mourning even the Spirit of God melting and making the hard heart to mourn a rock relenting on the stroak of Gods rod the stony heart is taken away and an heart of flesh given by the Lord this sorrow is Gods gift from Golgotha the death of the Son of the Son of God depresseth in us all joy and comfort Nature is no Author though an Actor in this grief It is godly in its Occasion Divine offence rather than Humane losse sinne not smart is the ground reason occasion of it it is most in their hearts who in respect of the world have least cause to mourn it is not for losse of wife children goods or credit but breach of Divine Law its complaint is not I am undone but God is offended the Law violated Christ is dishonoured it is more for deformity than deserved misery for extinguished holinesse than miseries to be endured a mourning for sin as sin as it is offensivum Dei aversivum à Deo an act of disobedience an act of unkindnesse It is dolor to God Against thee thee only have I sinned The souls unlikenesse to God unlocks its passion the utmost of perplexities cannot abate its joys if God appear well-pleased nor the highest of enjoyments silence its sorrow whil'st God stands offended It is godly in its object it is s rrow towards God Acts 20.21 A lamenting after the Lord 1 Sam. 7.2 A looking unto Christ and mourning ove● him whom we have pierced Zech. 12.10 As a man runs with bleared eyes to the party offended Oh Sir I have offended wronged you will you forgive me So penitent David runs to God and with remorse crieth Against thee thee only have I sinned And the Prodigal crieth to his father I have sinned against thee In days of affliction and atonement Israel assembled and mourned before the Lord penitent Ephraim crieth Thou hast chastised me and I was chastised This sorrow speaks not in the ears of men but God it is not open and seen to the world but secret serious towards God It is godly in its end and effects it is expressed to God that God may be enjoyed this sorrow speaks unto God the vindication of his justice That thou mayst be justified when thou judgest and righteous when thou speakest It is not a mourning of murmuration but of justification Why should a man complain a man for the punishment of his sin it is a sorrow that sets a lustre on the least mercy it is of the Lords mercy we are not consumed We are lesse than the least of his mercies is its language this sorrow is of submission I have sinned let the Lord do what seems him good it lies prostrate at the feet of God for mercy and resigned into the will of God Wherein I have done amiss shew it me I will do so no more and so devotes it self unto God to suffer or do his will its out-cry is Lord what wouldest thou have me to do it is every way godly sorrow This is the first Mark of Repentance The second Note or Character followeth upon it 2. Mark of Repentance and is the Concomitants some call them adjuncts properties effects but I shall only say inseparable Concomitants of this godly sorrow and these are seven in number First Care by some rendred study in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Concomitant of godly sorrow which as Cicero rendreth is a very earnest application of a man unto something with great delight And as Interpreters render it signifieth serious intention of minde and speedy sedulous execution of hand so that it stands opposite to security and slothfulness and intends to Note the diligence and dexterity of
the soul in a shunning and avoiding sin and setting against all occasions and temptations thereunto and studying the will of God making it his meditation night and day and having in all things respect unto it as the rule of his life and conversation so that the very anxiety of his spirit is to shake off and avoid his sin to subdue and weaken his lusts Qui paenitet sollicitus est ne peccet Ambr. in Text. to stand against temptations unto evil for whoever repenteth saith Ambrose is careful not to sin again He is made whole he would sin no more but with all care caution circumspection and vigilancy strive against corruption and study to know and to do the will of God with the Church at Ephesus To remember from whence we are fallen and do our first works Revel 2.5.3.1 or the Church of Sardis to awake and watch not to be slothful in businesse and secure against sin untill surprised therewithall 2. Concomitant of godly sorrow Secondly Clearing of our selves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Apology or answer by way of defence unto the calumnies of an Accuser which is not done by denial of guilt and excuse of sin but by confession Paenitentia non habet excusationem nisi confessionem Amb. in Text. for saith Saint Ambrose Repentance hath no excuse but confession This is an humble deprecation of Divine judgement and silencing of the Accuser of the Brethren by self-condemnation the true penitent doth judge himself with shame and sorrow that he may not be judged by the Lord he is ready to aggravate all not extenuate any his sins only findes an acquittance from them in the blood of Christ and concludes not against the charge of the Accuser and clamour of his own conscience I was an Extortione● a Drunkard an Adulterer a Blasphemer but I am washed I am sanctified I am justified Repentance rendreth guilt as if it had never been and so becomes the souls Apology 3. Concomitant of godly sorrow Thirdly Indignation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wrath unto grief the rising of the very stomack with rage and a being angry unto very sicknesse again it is only used in this one Text of Scripture as it hath sin for its object but in reference to other things it expresseth the very heighth of anger fretting unto fuming thus the rage of the Ruler of the Synagogue on a conceived breach of the Sabbath is expressed Luke 13.14 Religious wrath is the hottest it will make a meek Moses break the very Tables of the Lord Thus the discontent of envy is expressed in Mark 10.41 The Disciples stomack rose against Jam●s and John so that it here imports the turning of the unquiet passions of the soul wholly against sin a fretting and fuming at our selves for sin an hating and being ashamed of our selves for sin this wrath breaks out in a penitent David into disgraceful speeches against himself so foolish was I and ignorant when distrust prevailed on him Psal 73.22 And I have done very foolishly when he sinned in numbring the people 2 Sam. 24.10 Nay breaks into disgraceful demeanour towards sin as impenitent Israel to the defiling the graven images of silver and the ornaments of their golden Idols and casting them out with contempt as a menstruous garment and an angry rejection of them with a Get you hence Isa 30.22 So that sin is the object of hatred scorn rage reproach and contumelie and ground of grief and shame to the peni ent the soul cannot think of sin without stomachization heart-rising and redning of face he is indeed angry and sins not the whole of whole anger runs out against sinne Fourthly Fear a rare companion of wrath 4. Concomitant of godly sorrow but alwayes of care the truly penitent are of a trembling and timerous spirit and no marvel for the burnt childe dreads the fire they have paid dear for past guilt and may well beware to fall again the whole work of Repentance is expressed to be a fear of the Lord and his goodnesse Hos 3.5 The fear of the Lord is the only fence against temptations unto sin here note that this fear is a fear of sense affecting us with the evil sin procureth and dreadful judgments of God by it deserved trembling at the Word of threatning a fear of reverence awefully apprehending the holinesse and Majesty of God and that vast disproportion and disparity between God and us sorrowfully crying How shall dust and ashes polluted man come nigh to an holy and glorious Majesty and a fear of diligence and vigilancie watching and warring against sin that it may not surprise us by the difficulty of our state and distempers of our soul and thus the penitent worketh out his own salvation with fear and trembling but it is not a fear of diffidence and despondencie of distrust and despaire which deadning all hope of prevalency dulleth all diligence discourageth vigilancy and industry and at length driveth to self-destruction the fear of Repentance springs from sense of mercy and is spurred with the confidence of successe being assured it is God that worketh in the soul to will and to do Phil. 2.13.1.6 and will perfect what he hath begun 5. Concomitant of godly sorrow Fifthly Vehement desire 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a desire of fervency that can admit of no delay saith Dr. Slater Of dil●gence and activity say the Greek Criticks which puts on with industry and violence the soure sauce of godly sorrow doth ever sharpen the appetite of holy desire the hu●ted Hart thirsteth for the water the sin-wearied soul for Christ it is a desire to be wholly rid of sin and therefore breaks out into complaints against the remainders of sin in the soul as Paul Oh wretched man th●t I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death Rom. 7.24 the death of nature and day of judgement is desired and delightful because the destruction and discharge of sin it is also a desire of all sin-subduing and grace-strengthning administrations they that by Repentance have once tasted that the Lord is good do as new born babes desire the sincere milk of the Word 2 Pet. 2.2 This desire is vehement against all difficulties and discouragements running out with all fervent dil●gence for obtainment and bitter complaints for want finding no satiety without its very object 6. Concomitant of godly sorrow Sixthly Zeal an affection compounded of love and anger and is the edge of our desire enforcing all means and encountering all difficulties and opposition to our end this is that whereby the penitent persists in his godly sorrow under all checks and diversions and persevereth in his course of mortification against all opposition of the world or his corrupt self fighting against what hinders and flinging off all incumbrances and following heaven with force and violence that if it were possible it would draw all men with it but however it beareth down all before it
conceive what God hath prepared even for the bodies of those who love him and wait for his appearing Aug. de Civitate Dei lib. 22. cap. 21. Quae sit quam magna spiritualis corporis gloria quoniam nondum venit in experimentum vereor ne temerarium sit omne quod de illa profertur eloquium The Schoolmen reduce them to four heads Impassibility sibility Impassibilitas Subtilitas Agilitas Claritas Subtilty Agility Clarity The Apostle also comprizeth them under four particulars It is sown in weakness it is rai●ed in power It is sown in corruption and raised in incorruption It is sown in dishonour and raised in glory It is sown a natural body and raised a spiritual body Objection If it be a spiritual body how is it the same body Answer It is called a spiritual body not in regard of the substance of it but of the qualities of it and that in two respects 1. Because it shall have no need of meat or drink but shall be as the Angels of Heaven Mat. 20.30 not that we shall have Angelicam essentiam but Angelicas proprietates not the essence but the properties of Angels We shall neither eat nor drink but shall be as the Angels We shall have as Tertullian saith corpora reformata Angelificata Even as a Goldsmith saith Chrysostome puts his silver and gold into a pot and then melts it and forms of it a gold or silver b wl or cup fit to be set before Kings so the Lord melts the bodies of his Saints by death and out of the dead ashes and cinders of the bodies of his servants he frameth and will make goodly vessels of honour to stand before him and to praise him for ever in heaven 2. It is said to be a Spiritual body because it shall be absolutely subject to the soul In the state of glory the soul shall not depend upon the body but the body upon the soul In this life the soul is See this more fully handled in the Sermon preached at Dr. Bollons Funeral as it were carnal because serviceable to the flesh but at the Resurrection the body shall be as it were spiritual because perfectly serviceable to the Spirit But the time will not give me leave to insist largely upon this point So much in answer to the six particulars propounded for the explication of this Doctrine Now for the Application Use 1. LEt us believe this great truth and believe it firmly and undoubtedly That there shall be a Resurrection of the body and that the same numerical body shall rise again the same for substance though not the same for qualities The great God can do this for he is Almighty and to an Almighty power nothing is impossible God can do it because he is Omnipctent and he cannot but do it because he hath promised to do it He cannot be true of his word if the body do not rise again nor can he be a just God as I have shewed for it is just with God that as the body hath been partakers with the soul in good or evil actions so it should be partakers with the soul in everlasting rewards and everlasting punishments And it is just with God that the same body that serves him should be rewarded and the same body that sins against him should be punished And the truth is if the same body doth not rise it cannot be called a Resurrection but rather a new creation as I have shewed Let us I say firmly believe this truth for it is a fundamental truth and the foundation of many other fundamental truths For if the dead rise not then is not Christ risen and then is our faith vain and our preaching in vain Remember Job in the Old Testament believed this Use 2. IF there be a Resurrection of the dead Resurrectio mortuorum est consolatio fiducia Christianorum here is great consolation to all the real members of Jesus Christ For the Resurrection of the dead is the comfort and the hope and confidence of all good Christians This was Jobs comfort upon the dunghil Job 19.26 27. and Davids comfort Psal 16.7 and Christs comfort Mat. 20.19 But the third day he shall rise again It was Christs comfort and it is the comfort of every good Christian 1. Here is comfort against the fear of death As God said to Jacob Gen. 46.3 4. Fear not to go down to Egypt for I will go with thee and I will bring thee out again So give me leave to say to you Fear not to go down to the house of Rottenness to the Den of Death for God will raise you up gain Your Friends and Acquaintance leave you at the grave but God will not leave you The grave is but a dormitory a resting-place a storehouse to keep you safe till the Resurrection Christ hath perfumed the grave 1 Sam. 26. As David when he found Saul asleep took away his spear and cruse of water but when he awoke he restored them again So will death do with us Though it take away out strength and our beauty yet when we awake at the Resurrection they shall be restored again unto us God will keep our dead ashes and preserve them safe as a Druggist keeps every whit of the drug he hath beaten to powder A Saint while he is in the grave is united to Christ he sleeps in Jesus and Jesus will raise him up unto life everlasting John 11.24 2. Comfort against the death of our friends Though they be dead yet they shall rise gain as Martha told Christ I know that he shall rise again at the Resurrection 1 Thess 14. The Saints who dye in the faith of Christ are dead in Christ and such he will raise and bring with him to judgement If a man be to take a long journey his wife and children will not weep and mourn because they hope that ere long he will return again A man that dyes in Christ and sleeps in Christ doth but take a journey from Earth to Heaven but he will come again shortly and therefore let us not mourn as men without hope for our godly relations for we shall meet again and in all probability shall know one another when we meets though not after a carnal manner for we shall rise with the same bodies And if Lazarus was known when raised and the Widows Son known by his Mother if Adam in Innocency knew Eve when he awoke and Peter knew Moses and Elias in the Transfiguration which was but a dark representation of Heaven it is very probable that we also when we awake at the great Resurrection shall know one another which will be no little addition to our Happiness 3. Comfort to those who have maimed and deformed bodies At the great Resurrection all these deformities shall be taken away therefore it is called A Day of Restitution Acts 3.21 wherein God will set all things in joynt If there were
2 Thess 1.8 9. is Annihilation by reason 't is said The wicked shall be destroyed But to remove this remember 1. The same infinite power of God which preserves Angels and men vessels of mercy to the glorifying of his grace Rom. 9.22 23. can preserve Devils and wicked men vessels of wrath to the glorifying of his justice and God will do so by reason his mercy annot contradict his justice and truth Christ who at the last day will judge others for unmercifulness best knows what it is to be merciful and it concernes us to credit the verity of his sentence in my Text though upon harkening to the shallow reasonings of flesh and blood we may be apt to apprehend severity in it but as Gregory sayes truly He that cannot find out a reason of Gods doings may easily finde in himself a reason why he cannot finde it out 2. The destruction mention'd is rather in a continual fieri than in facto esse in a perpetual doing never finally done the living of the w●cked in hell is a dying life and their dying is a living death one arme of Gods power is alwayes bearing up what the other is alwayes beating down 3. They shall be destroyed in a moral not in a natural sense a man that is dead in Law may live a natural life but is deprived of that wh●ch before was due to him the wicked have their b ings in hell but are deprived of all that which makes to their well-beings sequestred from the fruition of God and all comfort with him who is the Fountain of life instead of which they cannot be freed from all that tends to their ill-beings Christ sayes expresly they must depart into everlasting fire and everlasting punishment therefore certainly not to be annihilated but to abide and remain in torment For 1. He that shall be everlastingly punished must needs remain in being everlastingly his punishment cannot continue when he is not Non entis nulla sunt praedicata Ejus quod falsum est nulla potest esse scientia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ut Philopon in Arist he that hath an end cannot be punished without end after he ceaseth t be so that if the wicked should be annihilated or absolutely destroyed and deprived of being then nothing should be tormented with the never-dying worm if the worm dye not it must live in some subject and nothing should dwell in unquenchable fire as the Scripture affirms there shall Again 2. Men as well as Devils may have their essence and being eternally preserved and yet not inherit eternal life but remain in a moral condition of eternal death for eternal life promis'd and purchas'd in Scripture does not only note our physical or natural being in life but chiefly our moral well-being in bliss and happiness and therefore eternal death does not deny wicked men being naturally alive but their being morally alive they live indeed but miserably in a condition absent from all comfortable good present with all evil there shall be weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth for ever Mat. 8.12 therefore there sha●l some be who shall so weep c. and they are the wicked that shall still remain in these remaining torments beyond expression which are called the Second death not that this death is a consumption of their persons an absolute wasting of their substances as to the continuance of their beings for though they seek to have their beings destroyed yet they shall not finde their desire accomplished yet as 't is said of Roger Bishop of Salisbury Revel 9.6 Vivere noluerit mori nescierit Nulla major aut pejor mors quam ubi non moritur mors Aug. in King Stephens time he would not have lived that life in Prison yet could not dye they would be annihilated and cannot but this which is the worst death is a deprivation of all the comfortable good of life natural spiritual and eternal with an infliction of the greatest evil the wicked are then su●ported and capacitated to lie groaning under for ever Thus for the Confirmation of the Point wherein we have had likewise imply'd a confutation of the most considerable Adversaries to this infallible Doctrine of Hell there remains III. A short Application to be enlarged in your meditations learn hence III. Application 1. To feare sin and its sad consequent Hell the clear evidence of an eternity and extremity of hell-tortures should stir up in us an holy affection of fearing God and being affraid by reason we are guilty of eternal vengeance the truth is we should be so afraid of sin and hell as to be afraid of nothing else if we would copy out in our practice the Lesson Christ commands Mat 10.28 viz. Fear not them which can kill the body but are not able to kill the soul but rather feare him who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell yea I say unto you Fear him Christ repeats his precept Luke 12.5 that it may not be forgotten an urgent necessity lies upon us to pass the time of our sojourning here in feare 1 Pet. 1.17 Phil. 2.12 we must work out our own salvation in feare and trembling we may we ought to feare the pain of losing the sight of Jehovahs blessed face and favour for this is a filial affection consistent with the greatest love he that truly loves God Res est soliciti plena timoris Amor. Jeanes Schol. Practic Divin will solicitously fear nothing so much as to displease and lose him Yea and though we may not with an irrationl or selvish uneffectual slavish fear which dishonour-God feare the pain of sense yet because hell-torments are such extream and eternal violations of the Primitive integrity of our nature we may and ought also w●th a rational fear to be afraid of the pain of sense but not immoderately and immeasureably more than we are afraid of sin which is a worse evil in its own nature than hell it self for all the evil that is in hell doth arise from sin as the mother of it Oh! if we should but hear the bitter complaints of those suffering in Hell for their sin● I need not then I might hope perswade the stoutest to be afraid of sin and hell for our eares would even tingle our hearts tremble our blood curdle and our spirits as it were congeal to yee at the noise of their most horrible lamentations Learn 2. To flee speedily from sin by real Repentance having this warning to fl e from the wrath to come which will inevitably seize upon impenitent sinners Oh! let 's all learn of our Saviour and Judge from this consideration to bring forth fruits meet for Repentance Mat. 3.7 8 12. his reason is in effect the same with this Doctrine viz. Every fruitless Tree is cast into the fire unquenchable fire yet of our selves we can bring forth no acceptable fruit till we be ingraffed into Christ the true Vine
shall * be joyned to the Lord and become one Spirit his mind and will perfectly taking place in us * Isa 48.18 our peace will be as a River when our righteousness shall be as the waves of the Sea No reflections upon sins or sorrows pass'd with bitterness of spirit as now we have in our greatest Triumphs and festivities as the Jews in their Feasts of Tabernacles Lev. 23.40 had their willow boughs among their Palmes while they remembred the dangers they passed in the Wilderness on their Festival Revolutions but every review if actual felicity can possibly give way to it will only widen and dilate the soul for a more ample fruition of the present state even * Si quaeris de visione Dei qualis est actio aut quies potius ut rerum di cam vescio Deciv 22.29 that peace of God which passeth all understanding So that as Augustine sayes if you ask what this enjoyment is of God what kind of action or rather rest to speak truth I know not and no wonder when that which is enjoyed here * Phil. 4.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 containes more than any understanding can comprehend 3. To make up the Kingdom there must be a Crown and so there is but this Crown is the King himself here the King of glory enters in at our everlasting gates but there we shall enter in to the King of glory * Gen. 15.1 I am thy exceeding great Reward But there are three wreaths in this Crown 1. God as considered the object of Vision the Chrystal Ocean of all Truth and there we shall be able to read every truth in the Original and see it in him as our faces in a glass not only those truths that are so mainly conducing to our happiness but those more speculative to * Etiam curiositas satietur Anselm the satisfaction of curiosity it self Luther discoursing at Supper the night before he died said That as Adam after his sleep knew his Wife to be bone of his bone and call'd all the Creatures by their names so after * Psal 17.15 we shall awake we shall not only be satisfied with Gods image but shall know one another yea all things to be known Philosophy will then be not a dead contemplation but a meditation of life and every idiot now shall then have the collection and pure extract of all the notions in the world while the book of life lies open and legible before his face the idea's and Representations of all beings in God the Father the mirrors of all grace and truth in Jesus Christ the beauty of all delights and sweetnesses imaginable in the holy Spirit and all these in all and all in one with infinite variety in unity transcendent to all imaginable reflections of glory But who of us * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Aris dark creatures can bear this inaccessible light and therefore he * 1 King 8.10 11. appeared in the Temple in Divine darkness all the purest light in the world being but a shadow of God If an idolatrous Temple of Diana's was so bright that the door-keepers cryed always to them that entred in Take heed to your eyes 't is difficult to imagine how even an immortal * Exod. 33.20 eye should see him and live Therefore * Rev. 2.28 to him that overcomes he will give the morning starre a * Lumen confort ans uti Scholastici loquuntur light to strengthen the eye to behold this glory as all the Starres can look upon the Sun we shall then not only have all the Riddles of providence unfolded seeing how one Politician was used to crack anothers Crown and one Serpent broke the head of another but the glorious Majesty of God shall be reflected to us in the all-glorious body of Jesus Christ as the rain-bow about the Throne Rev. 4.3 nay some think the very Angels shall assume aery bodies to feed the eyes of the Saints with all and to be in a nearer capacity of conversing with them Yea Saint Augustine sayes De civit Dei lib. 22. c. 29. we shall see God in his Saints and their glorious actings as well and as manifestly as we now see mens bodies in the vital actions of the bodies 2. The next wreath in this Crown is the perception of Divine goodness to the satisfaction of our love as all other desires this is the great Sabbath of loves and the soul like a Phaenix shall lie down in a bed of Spices and live like a Salamander in those * Cant. 8.6 Coals of Juniper desiring exstatically to be in its best self and archetypon God himself Isa 33.14 But who of us can dwell with devouring flames who of us can lie down with everlasting burnings even the love wherewith God loveth himself and loveth his Saints but then we shall find his love strengthening of us to love him with his own love and these dull earthly hearts of ours by beholding of that Sun shall be converted into fixed Stars reflecting back his own glory we shall then feel the sweetness of Gods Electing love from all eternity the love of our blessed Jesus which was * Cant. 8.6 stronger than death yea we shall then enjoy the Spirit of love who is 1 John 4.8 love it self and whose * Psal 63.3 Sicut ferrum immissum in ignem totum fit lignis sic Paulus accensus charitate totus fit charitas loving-kindness is better than life And as one sayes of Paul that as Iron put into the fire becomes all fire so Paul enflamed with charity and love becomes altogether love If The Philosophers say the reason of the Irons cleaving to the Loadstone so constantly is because the pores of both bodies are alike and so there are effluxes and emanations that slide through them and unite them together now this will be the magnetism of heaven that our wills shall perfectly fall in with the Divine Will and nothing seem good to us but what is good in Gods esteem so that we shall then need no threatnings to drive us nor promises to lead us but Divine goodness will so perfectly attract us that we shall be naturalized to God and goodness and be no more able to turn off from that ineffable sweetness than the Loadstone is to convert it self to the West 3. The last wreath is the result of both the former from vision and fruition of infinite truth and goodness reflected in the Center of the soul springs up delight to all eternity Heaven is nothing but * Gaudium de veritate Aug. Alicubi the joy of truth After a tedious Racking of our braines on a knotty probleme if we discover any satisfaction with what an exultancy do we break out into the Mathematicians phrase * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Archimed I have found I have found what I a long time studied for What joy will it be then
steps 312 313 314. F Faith commended p. 455 456. Faith distinguished into its kinds 456 457. Faith defined 449. By its genus and subject 460. causes 461 462 463 464 465 466 467. Effects 468 469 470 471 472 473 474. properties 475 476 477 478. and opposites 479. 480 481. Faith if saving receiveth whole Christ on judgement and choice 475. Faith groweth and persevereth and purifieth 477 478 479. Faith and salvation how connexed 473 474. Faith strengthned by the Covenant of Redemption 228. Faith how it justifieth 421. Faith greatly opposed 480. Faith goeth before Repentance in order of nature as its cause 490. Faith in its essential acts without its reflexions is the cause of Repentance 491. Faith of Scriptures authorities to be strengthened 103 104. False Repentance seven kinds viz. Popish 515. Pagan 516. Profane ibid. Legal 517. Slaves ibid. Sullen p. 518. Quakers Repentance ibid. 519. Fall of man was from his own mutable self-determining will 111. Federal transaction did pass between God the Father and Son and that from all eternity 219 226. Fear of God the duty of such who believe God is 58 59. Fear accompanieth true Repentance 542. Filiation to God is by Adoption and Regeneration 447. Filial priviledges Believers comforts 451 452 453. Flesh an enemy to Faith 480. Flesh crucified by union with Christ 391 392. Forme of sound words to be held fast 670. By Magistrates how 674 675 676 677. By Ministers how 678 679. By the People how 680 681. Freedome of God Father and Son in transacting the Covenant for mans Redemption 224. Free-grace the ground of Adoption and Regeneration 477. Fruitfulnesse a note of union with Christ 392 393. G God is p. 30 31. Gods being is evident in nature 31. 48. and Scripture 48 49. Gods being consistent with the adversity of the just and prosperity of the wicked and evidenced by them 45 50 51. God is the only efficient of Faith 461 462. God could not be the original of sin 111. Gods glory the ground of Adoption and Regeneration 447. God as Judge justifieth how and when 122. God the object of beatifical vision 654 655. Gospel a good cause 3. Gospel-means to work Faith 465. and call loudly to Repentance 525. Gospel how it justifieth 421. Gospel-Covenant better than the Legal 245 246 247 248. Gosepl-Manner of propounding Repentance is by way of duty and priviledge 426 Gospel-Arguments perswading Repentance most pregnant and moving 527 528. Gospel-Helps to Repentance most powerful and operative p. 533. Grace of God magnified by mans fall 213 214. First cause impulsive of justification 420. Graces are the fruits of the Spirit 390. Grudge not the prosperity of the wicked 645. H Of Hell 621. the wicked turned into it 623. its name explained ibid. nature described 624. its pain ibid. The Properties of its punishment Extremity 628 629. Eternity 628 629. Hell discerned by the Heathen 635. Hell proved by Equity 636 637 638 639 640 641. Merit 636 637 638 639 640 641. No Bar or hinderance 636 637 638 639 640 641. Heresie an hindrance to Faith 480. Heresies and Errors disbanded when we come to heaven 649. Hearing must be fixt and constant 22. So it will help Repentance p. 545. Heart the subject of Faith 459. and seat of Holinesse 558. Heaven 647. it is a Kidgdome how 649. Hindrances to the understanding Scripture what they are and how removed 100 101. Holding fast what it meaneth 5. Holinesse 554. a state trade habit and disposition 555. Holinesse defined 556. Holinesse the designe of God in all his acts 559 560. Holinesse constitutes a Christian or Saint 561 562. Holinesse spreads over the whole man 558. Holinesse changeth a man 557. Holinesse necessary unto communion with God 563. Holinesse its properties 567. Companions peace righteousnesse unblameablenesse 268. its opposites filthinesse of flesh of spirit over-reaching and hypocrisie 569 570. Holinesse of the Publisher proveth the Scripture to be the Word of God 94. And so doth the holy matter pressed in it 91 92. and its holy Arguments 93. Humility the effect of sensible impotency p. 214. Humiliation of Christ 278. three steps of it 280 281. the manner of it 287. Humanity of Christ a miracle of humiliation 280. Humility must go before honour 333. I Ignorance inconsistent to Faith 479. dangerous 483. Impotency of man since the fall very great 202 203. Impossible to recover of himself 204. Impotent in respect of the Law 205. Of the Gospel 206. 207. Impotency determined in Scripture ibid. Impotency no bar to the demand of duty direction of means or infliction of punishment 210 211 212 213. Impotency is to be seen and known 214. Infants distempers and death an effect and evidence of original sin 143. So is their aptitude to evil and backwardness to good 144. Inheritance of Saints hath no corruption succession or division p. 441. Inheritance why heaven so called 661. Inherited by Adoption 662 663. Donation 662 663. Redemption 662 663. Inspiration what it imports 87. Inventions and many inventions what they signifie 106. Indignation accompanieth Repentance 442. Judgements of God prevented 521 522. and removed by Repentance 523 524. Last Judgement provokes holiness 563. and perswades to Repentance 531 532 533 Judge whom 608. Manner of his coming 610. Last Judgement its day 605. It is particular and general 606. why it must be and when 607. its method and order 609. Justice of God satisfied by the death of Christ 301. Justification its nature opened 402 c. Differeth from Sanctification ib. Justified implies guilt plea and acquittance p. 403. Justified persons are acquitted on their plea. 419. Justification its causes Gods free grace 421 422. Christs satisfaction 421 422. The Gospel 421 422. Faith 421 422. God Law-giver 421 422. God Judge 421 422. Works 421 422. Spirit 421 422. Justification by what plea procured 406. Justification not from Eternity 423. Justification procured by Christs death 341. is evident by the Possibility 342 343 344. Necessity 342 343 344. Nature 342 343 344. Cause 342 343 344. Vicegerency 342 343 344. Peculiarity to this end 342 343 344. Justification doth manifest the wisdome holinesse and mercy of God 428. Justification the priviledge of the Gospel-Covenant 140. Justification the ground of comfort p. 429. to be sought by sinners 430. prized by Saints 432. K Kingly Office of Christ what it is and how executed 255 256. Kingly Office the Saints priviledge by Adoption 441. L Law Regulans 110. Law Regulata 110. Law of God the rule of rectitude ib. Law given Adam in Creation was partly natural partly positive 108. Law requireth duty exacts penalty terrifieth and stupifieth 204 205. Law general and special obeyed by Jesus Christ 223 224. Law fulfilled in Christ his death 301. Law given in Paradise was not executed or abrogated but released and dispensed with p. 413 414 415. Light burning and shining 1. Likenesse of sinful flesh what it means and how Christ was found in it 281 282. Likenesse to God
and unsainteth all others Isa 65.5 Which say Stand by thy self come not near me for I am holier than thou these are a smoak in my nose and a fire that burneth all the day saith the Lord. This is the worst spot in the beauty of holiness a spice of that pride that was in Lucifer and his fellow-aspiring Angels that made the first Schisme and separation in the purest Church even in heaven it self among the Angels that were wholly perfect Take heed of this as of the very pest of the Church and the bane of all Religion which is best preserved in unity and humility I shall shut up all with a wish and that an hearty Prayer alluding to what I said at first Oh that all our garments our Profession might be adorned with these Bells and Pomgranates peace and holinesse That as we call on God who is called holy holy holy Rev. 4.6 and on Christ who is called King of Saints Rev. 15.6 and as we profess the Gospel which is a Rule of holiness and are members of the Church which is called a Kingdom of Saints an holy Nation 1 Pet. 2.9 and as we look to be partakers of that Kingdom wherein dwells righteousness and holiness that according to that promise Thy people shall be all righteous Isa 60.21 that holiness to the Lord may be engraven upon all our hearts as with the engraving of a Signet the Spirit of God and holiness to the Lord upon all our fore-heads as to our conversation that as we have had a year which we call Annum Restitutae Libertatis we might have a year Restitutae Sanctitatis this we might safely call Annum Salutis or Annum Domini the year of our Lord. That our Officers might be all peace our Governors holiness Isa 60.17 that our Ministers might be cloathed with righteousness and our Church-Members with holiness that all of different perswasions might not contend but labour for peace and holiness Herein let us agree and all is agreed that the bells of our Horses and Bridles of our Horsemen Commanders and common Souldiers might be holiness to the Lord Zach. 14.20 21. that there might not be a Canaanite or hypocrite in the house of the Lord then might our Land Church Parliament Army City Min●stry be called Jehovah Shammah the Lord is there Ezek. 48.35 yea then would this holiness settle us in peace here and bring us to see the Lord where peace and holiness shall never be separated Even so come Lord Jesus come quickly Amen OF THE Resurrection ACTS 26.8 Why should it be thought a thing unreasonable with you that God should raise the dead THese words are part of St. Pauls Apologie for himself before King Agrippa against the unjust accusations of his implacable enemies wherein 1. He demonstrates the innocency of his life 2. The truth of his Doctrine and sheweth That there was nothing either in his life or doctrine for which he could justly be accused The Doctrine he taught did consist of divers particulars enumerated in this Chapter one of which and that not the least was That there should a day come in which there would be a Resurrection of the dead both of the just and unjust Now that this Doctrine was not liable to any just exception he proves three manner of ways 1. Because it was no other Doctrine but such which God himself had taught It had a Divine stamp upon it as it is Verse 6. And now I stand and am judged for the hope of the promise made of God unto our fathers 2. Because it was that which all the godly Israelites instantly serving God day and night did hope for and wait and expect in due time to be fulfilled as it is Verse 7. Unto which promise our twelve tribes hope to come for which hope sake King Agrippa I am accused of the Jews and therefore it is called The hope of Israel Acts 28.20 for the hope of Israel I am bound with this chain 3. Because it was a Doctrine which God was able to bring to pass This is set down in the words of the Text Why should it be thought a thing incredible with you that God should raise the dead The emphasis lieth in the words with you Why should you O King Agrippa who art a Jew and believest in the God of Israel and that he made the world out of nothing think it incredible for this God to raise the dead indeed it may seem incredible and impossible to the Heathen Philosophers who are guided onely by Natures Light but as for you who believe all things which are written in the Law and Prophets why should you think it either impossible or incredible that God should raise the dead This interrogation is an Emphatical Negation and it is put down by way of Question Vt oratio sit penetrantior that so the Argument might take the deeper impression and the meaning is that it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is not a doctrine exceeding the bounds of faith or contrary to right reason that God should raise the dead The Observation which ariseth naturally out of the words is Doctrine That the Doctrine of the Resurrection of the dead both of the just and unjust is neither incredible nor impossible neither against right reason nor true faith Though it be above reason yet it is not against reason nor against the Jewish or the Christian Faith For the explication of this Doctrine I will briefly speak to six particulars 1. What is meant by the Resurrection of the dead 2. Who are the dead that shall be raised 3. The absolute necessity of believing this Doctrine and believing it firmly and undoubtedly 4. The possibility and credibility of it 5. The certainty and infallibility of it 6. The manner how the dead shall rise What is meant by the Resurrection of the dead The first Particular Answ For answer to this you must first know what there is of man that dyes when any man dyeth Man consisteth of soul and body and when he dyeth his soul doth not dye it is the body onely that dyeth Death is not an utter extinction and annihilation of the man as some wickedly teach but onely a separation of the Soul from the Body It is called a departure Luk. 2.25 2 Tim. 4.6 And an uncloathing 2 Cor. 5.4 and a Departure of the Soul out of the body either to Heaven or Hell When Stephen was stoned his soul was not stoned for while he was stoning he prayed Lord Jesus receive my spirit When Christ was crucified his soul was not crucified for while he was crucifying he said Fa●her into thy hands I commend my Spirit The Wiseman saith expresly That when a man dyeth His body returns to the earth from whence it came Eccles 12.7 but his spirit returns to God who gave it And our Lord Christ commands us Not to fear them that kill the body 1 Luk. 2.4 and after
that have no more that they can do The soul cannot be killed a man by sin may make his soul miserable and cursed but he cannot make it miserable and corruptible And therefore by the Resurrection of the dead is not meant as he who writes that dangerous Book of the Souls Mortality would have it the Resurrection both of body and soul but of the body onely For the body onely dyes and therefore it is the body onely which riseth again Thence it is that in the Creed commonly called the Apostles Creed it is put down in express terms John 5.28 29. I believe the Resurrection of the Body Not of the Soul for that never dyeth but of the Body The second particular The second particular propounded is to shew who are the dead that shall be raised at the last day The Answer to this is easie All that are in the grave whether godly or ungodly whether just or unjust Acts 24.15 shall be raised This Christ saith expresly The hour is coming Revel 2.13 Isa 26.19 in which all that are in the graves shall hear his voyce and shall come forth they that have done good unto the resurrection of life and they that have done evil unto the resurrection of damnation All shall come forth without exception of any Acts 24.15 and the Apostle likewise tells us That there shall be a Resurrection of the dead both of the just and un ust The Earth and the Sea are Gods Stewards with whom he hath betrusted the bodies of men and women And when God shall call them to give an account of their Stewardship they will faithfully discharge their trust Revel 20.13 and not keep back one dead body The sea shall give up her dead and so shall the earth also They are but the bodies withdrawing room or sleeping-place and the time will come Isa 26.19 when all that are asleep in the dust of the earth shall awake They shall all awake some to everlasting life and some to shame and everlasting contempt This is the second particular All the the dead great and small rich and poor from Adam to the coming of Christ both good and bad shall be raised at the last day The third thing proposed is The third particular To demonstrate the absolute necessity that lies upon all Christians firmly and undoubtedly to believe the Doctrine of the Resurrection of the dead This appears in an especial manner from the spiritual mischiefs and soul-ruinating consequences which necessarily flow from the denial of it For 1. The Doctrine of the Resurrection is an Article of our faith The Author to the Hebrews puts it amongst the principles of the Doctrines of Christ and therefore he that denieth it Heb. 6.2 erres fundamentally and is an Heretick one wh●m we must not receive into our houses or bid him God speed 2. It is not onely an Article of our faith Sine hoc Articulo tota fides tota religio vana est Streso in Act. but one of the chief Articles without which all the other Articles of Christian Relion are vain and unprofitable This the Apostle speaks in express tearms 1 Corinth 15.13 14 15 16 17 18 19 28 29 30 31 32. If there be no resurrection of the dead then is not Christ risen and if Christ be not risen then is our preaching vain and your faith is also vain c. If the dead rise not let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall dye This therefore is not only an Article of our faith but the foundation of all other for if there be no Resurrection there is no life everlasting Saint Austin saith That the Resurrection of the dead is propria fides Christianorum The proper faith of a Christian without the belief of which no man can be justly accounted a Christian A man may hold many errours and yet deserve to be esteemed a Christian but he that denieth the Doctrine of the Resurrection doth unchristianize himself For a Christian is one whose hope and happiness is in the other world For if we had hope onely in this world we were of all peopl most miserable and therefore he that renounceth his belief of the other world renounceth Christianity Adde That it is not onely the foundation of our faith but of all our comfort and consolation Resurrectio mortuorum est fiducia Christianorum The chiefest comfort the Saints of God have under all the distresses of this life is That there will a day come in which they shall be raised out of their graves to the Resurrection of Life and shall have their vile bodies made like to the glorious body of Christ Job 19.23 26 27. This comforted Job upon the dunghil and therefore it much concerns all those who tender either their consolation or salvation to be firmly and undoubtedly perswaded of this great truth That there shall be a Resurrection of the dead This leads me to the fourth particular The fourth Particular In the fourth place I am to shew you the credibility or possibility of this Doctrine I confess it is very hard and difficult to believe that the bodies of men when eaten up by worms or devoured by wilde beasts birds or men-eating men or when burnt and consumed to ashes and these ashes scattered in the ayre or thrown into the river should ever rise again It is easie to believe the Immortality of the soul for many Heathens have written in defence of it but as for the Resurrection of the body it is very difficult to believe it firmly and undoubtedly therefore there are Acts 17.18 32. and have been multitudes of persons in all ages who have denied it The Epicures and Scoi●ks laughed Paul to scorn when he preached to them of the Resurrection of the body The Sadduces in Christs time denied it 1 Cor. 15.12 Many in the Church of Corinth were infected with the same leprosie Hymenaeus and Philetus begangreen'd many Christians and overthrew their faith by preaching to them that the Resurrection was past already 2 Tim. 2.17 18. Danaeus tells us of nineteen Hereticks who opposed this truth The Familists also renounce it And the Socinians say That the same body shall not rise but an aerial and spiritual body which shall have no eyes nor ears nor head nor feet c. It must be acknowledged that this Doctrine is very hard and difficult but yet it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is not a thing impossible or incredible Sure I am that Job in the Old Testament did believe it for he knew that his Redeemer lived c. Job 19.25 26 27. And though after his skin worms destroyed his body yet in his flesh he should see God and then he addes Whom I shall see for my self and mine eyes shall behold and not another though my reins be consumed within me Job did not onely believe that his body when devoured