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A28173 The sinners sanctuary, or, A discovery made of those glorious priviledges offered unto the penitent and faithful under the Gospel unfolding their freedom from death, condemnation, and the law, in fourty sermons upon Romans, Chap. 8 / by that eminent preacher of the Gospel, Mr. Hugh Binning ... Binning, Hugh, 1627-1653. 1670 (1670) Wing B2933; ESTC R6153 246,575 304

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and by his power obtain this supream autho●y of life and death Now having his authority established in hi● person the next work is to apply this purchase act●ally to con●er this li●e and therefore he hath almighty power to raise up dead sinners to creat us again to good works to redeem us from the ty●anny o● sin and satan whose slaves we are He hath a spirit of li●e which he communicats to his seed he breaths it into these souls that he died for and dispossesseth that powerful corruption that dwells in us Hence it comes to passe that they walk after the Spirit though they be in the flesh because the powerful Spirit of Christ hath entered and taken possession of their spirits Isa. 59.20 21. Let us not be discouraged in our apprehensions of Christ when we look on our ruinous and desperat● estate let us not conclude it is past hope and past his help too We do proclaim in the name of Jesus Christ that there is no sinner howsoever justly under a sentence of death and damnation but they may in him find a relaxation from that sentence and that without the impairing of Gods justice and this is a marvelous ground of comfort that may establish our souls 1 Iohn 1.9 even this that law and justice is upon Christs side and nothing to accuse or plead against a sinner that imploys him for his Advocat But know this also that you are not delivered from death that you may live under sin nay you are redeemed from death that you may be freed from the law of sin but that must be done by his almighty Spirit and cannot be otherwayes done I know not whether of these is matter of greatest comfort that there is in Christ a redemption from the wrath of God and from hell and that there is a redemption too from sin and corruption which dwells within us but sure I am both of them will be most sweet and comfortable to a believer and without both Christ were not a compleat Redeemer nor we compleatly redeemed N●ithe● would a believing soul in which there is any measure of this new law and divine life be satisfied without both these Many are miserably deluded in their apprehensions of the Gospel they take it up thus as if it were nothing but a proclamation of freedom from misery from death and damnation and so the most part catch at nothing else in it and from thence takes liberty to walk after their former lusts and courses this is the woful practical u●e that the generality of hearers make of the free intimation of pardon and forgiveness of sin and delivery from wrath they admit some general notion of that and stops there and examines not what further is in the Gospel and so you will see the slaves of sin professing a kind of hope of freedom from death the servants and vassals of corruption who walk after the course of this world and fulfill the lusts and desires of their mind and flesh yet fancying a freedom and immunity from condemnation men living in sin yet thinking of escaping wrath which dreams could not be entertained in men if they did drink in all the truth and open both their ears to the Gospel if our spirits were not narrow and limited and so excluded the one half of the Gospel that is our redemption from sin There is too much of this even among the children of God a strange narrowness of spirit which admits not whole and intire truth it falls out often that when we think of delivery from death and wrath we forget in the mean time the end and purpose of that which is that we may be freed from sin and serve the living God without fear And if at any time we consider and busie our thoughts about freedom from the law of sin and victory over corruption such is the scantness of room and capacity in our spirits that we loss the remembrance of delivery from death and condemnation in Christ Jesus thus we are tossed between two extreams the quick-sands of presumption and wantonness and the rocks of unbelief and despair or discouragement both of which do kill the Christians life and make all to fade and wither But this were the way and only way to preserve the soul in good case even to keep these two continually in our ●ight that we are redeemed from death and misery in Christ and that not to serve our selves or to continue in our sins but that we may be redeemed from that sin that dwells in us and that both these are purchased by Jesus Christ and done by his power the one in his own person the other by his Spirit within us I would have you correcting your misapprehensions of the Gospel do not so much look on victory and freedom from sin as a duty and task though we be infinitly bound to it but rather as a priviledge and dignity conferred upon us by Christ Look not upon it I say only as your duty as many do and by this means are discouraged from the sight of their own infirmity and weakness as being too weak for such a strong party but look upon it as the one half and greater half of the benefite conferred by Christs death as the greater hall of the redempti●n which the Redeemer by his office is bound to accomplish He will redeem Israel from all his iniquities with him is plenteous red●mp●ion P●al 130.7 8. This is the plenty this is the sufficiency of i● that he redeems not only from misery but from iniquity and that all iniquities I would not desire a believers soul to be in a better posture here-away then this to be looking upon sin in●dwelling a● his bondage and redemption ●rom it as freedom to account ●im●elf in so far free as t●e free Spirit of Christ enters and w●ites that ●●ee Law of love and obedience in his heart and blots out these base characters of the law of sin It were a good temper to be groaning for the redemption of the soul and why doth a believer groan for the redemption of the body but because he shall then be freed wholly from the law o● sin and from the presence of sin I know not a greater argument to a gracious heart to subdue his corruption and strive for freedom from the law of sin then the freedom obtained from the law of death nor is there any clearer a●gument and evidence of a soul delivered from death then to strive for the freedom of the Spirit from the law of sin there jointly help one another freedom from death will raise up a Christians heart to aspire to a freedom and liberty from sin And again freedom from sin will wi●ness and evidence that such a one is delivered from death When freedom from death is an inducement to seek after freedom from sin and freedom from sin a declaration of freedom from death then all is well and indeed thus it will be in some mea●u●e with every soul
the Holy Ghost hath levelled us all in this point of duty as he hath equally exalted all in the most substantial dignities and priviledges of the Gospel this bond is upon the highest and upon the lowest greatnesse doth not exempt from it and meanness doth not exclude from it though commonly great persons fancy an ●●munity from the stricknesse of a holy conversation because of their greatnesse and often mean an● low persons pretend a freedom from such a high obligation because of their lownesse yet certainly all are debt-bound this way and must one day give accompt You that are poor and unlearned and have not received great things of that nature from God do not think your selves free do not absolve your selves for there is infinit debt besids that you will have no place for that excuse that you had not great parts were not learned and so forth for as the obligation reaches you all so there is as patent a way to the exercise of Religion in the poorest cottage as in the highest Palace you may serve God as acceptably in little as others may do in much there is no condition so low and abject that layeth any restraint on this noble service and imployment this jewel loses not its beauty and vertue when it lyeth in a dung-hill more then when it is set in gold But let us inquire further into this debt we are debters saith he and he instanceth what is not the creditor by which he giveth us to understand Who is the true creditor not the flesh and therefore to make out the just opposition it must be the Spirit we are debters then to the Spirit And what is the debt we owe to Him we may know it that same way we owe not to the flesh so much as to make us live after its guidance and direction and fulfill its lusts then by due consequence we owe so much to the Spirit as that we should live after the Spirit and resign our selves wholly to Him his guidance and direction There is a twofold kind of debt upon the creature one remissible and pardonable another irremissible and unpardonable so to speak the debt of sin and that is the guilt of it which is nothing else then the obligation of the sinner over to eternal condemnation by vertue of the curse of God every sinner cometh under this debt to Divine Iustice the desert of eternal wrath and the actual ordination by a divine sentence to that wrath Now indeed this debt was insoluble to us and utterly unpayable untill God sent His Son to be our Cautioner and he hath payed the debt in his own person by bearing our curse and so made it pardonable to sinners obtained a relaxation from that woful obligation to death and this debt you see is wholly discharged to them that are in Christ by another sentence repealing the former curse vers 1. there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ. But there is another debt which I may call a debt of duty and obedience which as it was antecedent to sin even binding innocent Adam so the obligation of the debt of sin hath been so ●●r from taking it away that it is rather increased exceedingly and this debt is unpardonable and indispensible the more of the debt of sin be pa●doned and the more the curse be dispensed with the more the sinner owes of love and obedience to God she loved much because much was forgiven and the more was forgiven of ●in the more she owed of love and the more debt was discharged the more she was indebted to Him and therefore after this general acquitance of all believers vers 1. he presseth this obligation the more strongly therefore brethren we are debters It is like that debt spoken of Rom. 12. Owe no man any thing but to love one another which is not meant that it is unlawful to be debters to men but rather what ye owe or all things else pay it and ye are free your debt ceases and your bond is cancelled but as for the debt of love and benevolence you must so owe that to all men as never to be discharged of it never to be freed from of it when you have done all this hath no limitation of time or action Even so it is here other debts when payed men cease to be debters then they are free but here the more he pay the more he is bound to pay he oweth and he oweth eternally his bond is never cancelled as long as he continues a creature subsisting in God and abides a redeemed on in Christ for these continuing his obligation is eternally recent and fresh as the first day and this doth not at all obscure the infinit g●ace of God or diminish the happinesse of Saints that they are not freed from this debt of love and obedience but rather illustrats the one and increases the other for it cannot be supposed to consist with the wisdom and holinesse of God to loose his creature from that obligation of loving obedience and subjection which is essential to it and it is no lesse repugnant to the happinesse of the creature to be ●●ee from righteousnesse unto sin Now this debt of duty and obedience hath a threefold bond which because they stand in vigor un●ancelled for all eternity therefore the obligation arising from them is eternal too The bond of Creation the bond of Redemption and the bond of Sanctification these are distinguished according to the Persons of the Trinity who appear most eminently in them We owe our beeing to the Father in whom we live and move and have our being for He made us and not we our selves and we are all the works of his hands Now the debt accruing from this is infinit if men conceive themselves so much oblidged to others for ● petty courtesie as to be their Servants if they owe more to their Parents the instruments of their bringing forth into the world O how infinitly more owe we to God of whom we are and have all Doth the Clay owe so much to the Potter who doth not make it but fashion it only and what owe we to Him that made us of nothing and fashioned us while we were yet without form Truly all relations all obligations evanish when this cometh forth because all that a man hath it lesse then Himself then his immortal spirit and that he oweth alone to God and besides whatsoever debt there is to other fellow-creatures in any thing God is the principal creditor in that bond all the creatures are but the Servants of this King which at his sole appointment bring alongs his gifts unto us and therefore we owe no more to them then to the hands of the messenger that is sent Now by this accompt nothing is our own not our selves not our members not our goods but all are His and to be used and bestowed not at the will and arbitrement of creatures but to be absolutly and solely at his
disposal who hath the sole soveraign right to them and therefore you may take up the hainousnesse of sin how monstruous and misshappen a thing it is that breaks this inviolable Law of creation and withdraws the creature from subjection to Him in whom alone it can subsist O how disordered are the courses and lives of men men living to themselves their own lusts after their own will as if they had made themselves men using their members as weapons of unrighteousnesse against God as if their tongues and hands and feet were there own or the devils and not Gods Call to mind this obligation Remember thy Creator that memento would be a strong engagement to another course then most take how absurd would you think it To please your selves in displeasing Him if you but minded the bond of creation But when there are other two superadded what we owe to the Son for coming down in the likenesse of sinfull flesh for us and what we owe to the Holy Ghost for quickening our spirits and afterward for the resurection of our bodies whose hearts would not these overcome and lead captive to his love and obedience SERMON XXXIII Rom. 8.12 Therefore brethren we are debters not to the flesh to live after the flesh Vers. 13. For if ye live after the flesh ye shall die c. WAS it not enough to contain men in obedience to God the very essential bond of dependence upon God as the original and fountain of his beeing and yet man hath cast away this cord from him and withdrew from that alledgiance he did owe to his Maker by transgressing his holy commandments But God not willing that all should pe●ish he hath confirmed and st●engthned that primitive obligation by two other as strong if not more if the Father did most eminently appear in the first the Son is manifested in the second and that is the work of the redemption of man no lesse glorious then his first creation He made him first and then He sent his own Son in the likenesse of sinfull fle●h to make him again by his Spirit and now a threefold cord is not easily broken It seems this should bind invincibly and constrain us not to be our own but the Lords and now truly they who are in Jesus Christ a●e thrice indebted wholly to God But the two last obligations are the most special and most wonderful that God sent His Son for us to redeem us from sin and misery and to restore man to happinesse took on a miserable and accursed habit that so glorious a person gave Himself for so base that so excellent a Lord became a servant for the rebell that He whose the earth is and the ●ulness thereof did ●mpty Himself of all to sup●ly Vs and in a word the most wonderful exchange ●e made that ever the Sun saw God for men His life a ransome for their life all the rare inventions and ●ancied stories of men come infinitly short of this The light never saw Majestty so abased and love so expressed as in this matter and all to this purpose that we who had undone ourselves might be made up again and the righteou●nesse of the Law fulfilled in us At first He made us but it cost Him nothing but a word but now to buy that whic● was taken captive by sin and a● so dear a rate ye are bought with a price and this price more precious than the sum of Heaven and Earth could amount to suppose by some ra●e Al●bymie the earth were all converted into Gold and the Heavens into Precious Stones ye● these corruptible and material things come as far short of this ●ansome as an heap of dung is unproportioned to a masse of Gold or heap of Jewels Now you that are thus bought may ye not conclude therefore we are debtters and whereof of our selves for we our persons estates and all were sold and all are bought with this price therefo●● we are not our own but the Lords and therefore we ought to glorifie God in our bodies and spirits which are his 1 Cor 6.20 Should we henceforth claim an interest and propriety in our selves Should we have a will of our own Should we serve our selves with our members O how monstruous and absurd were that Ce●tainly a believing heart cannot but look upon that as the greatest indignity and vilest impiety that ever the Sun shined upon Ingratitu●e hath a note of ignominy even among Heathens put upon it they e●●eemed the reproach of it the compend of all reproaches Ingr●tum si dixeris omnia dixeris And truly it hath the most abominable visage of any vice yea it is all s●ns drawn through other in one Table Certainly a godly heart cannot but account this execrable and detestable henceforth to have any proper and peculiar will and pleasure and cannot but devout it self wholly to His will and pleasu●e for whose pleasure all were first created and who then redeemed us by the blood of His Son I wish we could have this image of ingratitude alwayes observant to our eyes and minds when we are inticed with our lusts to study our own satisfaction But the●e is another bond superadded to this which mightily aggravats the debt He ●ath given us his Spirit to dwell within as well as his Son for us And O the marvellous and strange effects that this Spirit hath in the ●avou●s of men He truly repairs that image of God which sin broke down He furnisheth the soul and supplies it in all its necessities He is a light and life to it a spring of everlasting life and consol●tion so that to the Spirit we owe that we are made ag●in after his Image and the precious purchase of Christ applyed unto our souls For Him hath our Saviour left to execute his latter-will in behalf of his children And these things are but the first fruits of the Spirit any peace or joy or love or obedience are but an earnest of that which is coming we shall be yet more beholden to Him when the walls of flesh are taken down he will carry forth the soul into that glorious liberty of the sons of God and not long after he shall quicken our very dust and raise it up in glory to the fellowship of that happinesse Now my beloved consider what all this tends to mark the inference you should make from it Therefore we are debters debters indeed under infinit obligations for infinit me●cies But what is the debt we owe truly it might be conceived to be some rare thing equivalent to such unconceivable benefits But mark what it is to live after the spirit and not after the flesh to conform our affections and actions and the tenor of our way and course to the direction of the Spirit to have our spirits led and enlightned by the Holy Spirit and not to follow the indictment of our flesh and carnal minds Now truly it is a wonder that it is no● other thing then this for this
is no other thing then what we owe to our selves and to our own natures so to speak for truly there is a con●ormity and suitablenesse of some things to the very nature of man that is beautiful some things are decent and becomes it other things are undecent and uncomely unsuitable to the very reasonable beeing of man so that they put a stain and blot upon it Now indeed there is nothing can be conceived more agreeable to the very constitution of mans nature then this that the far better and more excellent part should lead and command and the baser and earthly part should obey and follow that the flesh should minister and serve the spirit Doth not even Nature it self teach it and yet no heavier yoke is put upon us then what our own nature hath put upon 〈◊〉 already which indeed is wonderful and certainly this wonderful attempering of his Laws unto the very natural exigence of the spirit of man make the transgression of them so much the more hainous Now all these three forementioned bonds do joyntly bind on this Law upon man in general they oblidge strongly to subjection and obedience to the will of God but particularly they have a constraining influence upon this living after the spirit not after the flesh our very creation speaks this forth when God made man after his own Image when he beautified the spirit of man with that divine similitude and likenesse in that he breathed a spirit from Heaven and took a body out of the dust and then exalted that heavenly piece to some participation of his own nature Doth not all this cry aloud upon u● that the order of creation is now dissolved that the beauty of it is ma●●ed that all is turned up ●ide-down when mens passions and senses are their only gui●s and the principles of light in their conscience are choakt and ●●i●●led Doth not all this teach us plainly that we should not live after the flesh that we owe not so much to this bruitish part as to enthrone it and impower it over us that it were the vilest Anarchy and most intole●able confusion and usurpation to give it the power over u● as most men do that there can be no order or beauty in man till the spirit be unfettered from the chains of fleshly lust● and restored to the native dignity and preheminency and so keep the body in subjection And indeed Paul was so 1 Cor. 9.27 I keep my body in subjection and beat it down because it is an imperious slave an usurping slave and will command if not beaten and kept under Again Christ hath put a bond upon us to this very same he hath strengthned this obligation with a ne● cord in that he gave his precious life a ransome for the souls of men this was the principal thing he payed for the body only being an accessory and appendix to the soul for it is said The redemption of the soul is precious and ceaseth for ever Ps●l 49.8 and What can a man give in exchange for his soul Mark 8.37 For what material thing can equalize a spirit Many things may be had more preciou● and fine than the body but all of them have no proportion to a spiritual being Now then in that so dear a ransome and so infinit a p●ice must be given for the spirit of man it declares the infinit worth and excellency of it above the body and above all visible things and here indeed the greatest confirmation that can be imagined God hath valued it he hath put the soul of man in the ballance to find something equal in weight of dignity and worth and when all that is in Heaven and Earth is put in the other scale the soul is down-weight by far there is such distance that there is no proportion only the life and blood of his own Son weighs it down and is an overvalue and thus in our redemption we have a visible demonstration as it were of the infinit obligation of this Law not to live after that contemptible part our flesh but to follow after the motions and directions of an enlightned spirit not to spend our thoughts care and time upon the body and making provision for the lusts thereof as most men do and all by nature a●e now inclined to do but to be taken up wi●h the immortal preciou● Jewel that is within how to have it 〈◊〉 and cleansed from all the filth that sin and the flesh hath cast 〈◊〉 and restored to that native beauty the image of God in righteousness and holiness If you in your practice and affecti●n 〈◊〉 the scales otherwise and make the body and things of the body ●uppose the whole world down-weight in your affection and imagination you have p●ainly cont●adicted the just measu●e of the Sanctuary and in effect you declare that Christ died in vain and gave his life out of an errour and mistake of the worth of the soul you say he needed not have given such a price for it seing every day you weigh it down with every triffle o● momentany fleshly satisfaction Lastly the Spirit binds this fast upon us for the soul of man he hath chosen for his habitation and there he delights to dwell in the hea●t o● the contrite and humble and this he intends to beautifie and garnish and to restore it to that primitive excellency it once had The Spirit of man is nea●er his nature and more capable of being con●o●med unto it and therefore his peculiar and special work is about our spirits first to enlighten and convince them then to reform and direct them and lead them and this binds as fo●cibly and constraineth a believer certainly to ●esign himself to the Spirit to study how to order his walk a●ter that di●ection and to be more and more abstracted from the satisfaction of his body else he cannot choose but g●ieve the Spirit his b●st friend which alone is the fountain o● joy and peace to him and being grieved cannot but grieve himself next Now my beloved con●●der if you owe so much to the flesh whether or not it be so steadable and profitable unto you and if you think it can give you a sufficient reward to compense all your pains in satisfying it go on But I believe you can ●eckon no good office that ever it did you and your expectation is lesse what fruit have you of all but shame and vexation of conscience and what can you expect but death the last fruits of it wha● then do you owe unto it are you debters to its pleasure and satis●●cti●n which hath never done you good and will do you eternal hurt consider whether you are so much bound and oblidged to it as to lose your souls for it one of them must be and whether or not you be not more oblidged to God the Father and his Son Iesus Christ to live after the Spirit though for the present it should be painful to beat down your body You
are debters indeed but you owe nothing to the flesh but stripes and mortification SERMON XXXIV Rom. 8.13 For if ye live after the flesh ye shall die but if ye through the Spirit c. THough the Lord out of his absolute Soveraignty might deal with man in such a way as nothing should appear but his supream Will and Almighty Power he might simply command obedience and without any more perswasions either leave men to the frowardnesse of their own natures or else powerfully constrain them to their duty yet he hath chosen that way that is most suitable to his own wisdom and most connatural to mans nature To lay out before him the advantages and disadvantages and to use these as motives and perswasives of his Spirit for since He hath by his first creation implanted in mans soul such a principle as moveth it self upon the presentation of good or evil that this might not be in vain he administers all the dispensation of the Law and Gospel in a way suitable to that by propounding such powerful motives as may incline and perswade the heart of man It is true there is a secret drawing withall necessary the pull of the Fathers arm and power of the Holy Ghost yet that which is visible or sensible to the soul is the framing of all things so as to engage it upon rational terms it is set between two contraries death and life death which it naturally abho●reth and life which it naturally loveth an even ballance is holden up before the light of the conscience in which obedience and sin are weighed and it is found even to the convincing of the spirit of man that there are as many disadvantages in the one as advantages in the other This was the way that God used fi●st with man in Paradise you remember the terms ●un to what day thou eats thou shalt die he hedged him in on the one side by a promis● of life on the other by a threatning of death and these two are very rational restraint● ●uited to ●he ●oul of man and in the inward principles of it which are a kind of instinct to that which is app●ehen●ed good or gainfull Now this vers ●uns even so in the form of words If ye live after the flesh ye shall die you see thi● method is not changed under the Gospel for indeed it is natu●al to the spi●it of man and he hath now much more need of all such pe●swasions because there is a great change of mans inclination to the wo●st side all within is so disordered and perverse that a thousand hedges of perswasive grounds cannot do that which one might have done at fi●st then they were added out of superabundance but now out of necessity then they were set about man to preserve him in his natural ●●ame and in●linations but now they are needfull to change and alter them quite which is a kind of creation therefore sayeth David creat in me a new spirit and therefore the Gospel abounds in va●ie●y of motives and inducement● in greater variety o● far mo●e power●ul inducements then the Law He●e is that gr●a● pe●swasi●n t●k●n f●om the infinit gain or l●sse of ●●e ●●ul of man which is any thing be able to prevail this must do seing it is seconded wi●h some natural inclination in the soul of man to seek its own gain Yet there is a di●●erence between the nature of such like promises and threatning● in the fi●st covenant and in the second In the fi●st covenant though life was freely promised ●et it was immediatly annexed to per●ect obedience as a consequent ●eward o● it it was fi●stly p●omised unto compleat ●ighteousnesse of mens persons But in the second covenant firstly and principally li●e ete●nal grace and glory is promised to Jesus Christ and his ●eed antecedent to any condition or qualification upon their part and then again all the promises that run in way of condition as he that believeth sh●ll not perish c. If ye walk after the Spirit ye shall live these a●e all the consequent fruits of that absolute gracious disposition and resignation of grace and life to them whom Christ hath chosen and so their believing and walking and obeying cometh in principally as parts of the grace promised and as witnesses and evidences and confirmations of that life which is already begun and will not see an end Besides that by vertue of these absolute promises made to the seed of Christ and Christs compleat performance of all conditions in their name the promises of life are made to faith principally which hath this peculiar vertue To cary forth the soul to anothers righteousnesse and sufficiency and to bottom it upon another and in the next place to holy walking though mixed with many infirmities which promise in the first covenant was only annexed to perfect and absolute obedience You heard in the preceeding vers a strong inducement taken from the bond debt and duty we owe to the Spirit to walk after it and the want of all obligation to the flesh Now if honesty and duty will not suffi●e to perswade you as you know in other things it would do with any honest man plain equity is a sufficient bond to him yet consider what the Apostle subjoynes from the dammage and from the advantage which may of it self be the Topickes of perswasion and serves to drive in the nail of debt and duty to the head if ye will not take with this debt ye owe to the Spirit but still conceive there is some greater obligation lying on you to care for your bodies and satisfie them then I say behold the end of it what fruit you must one day reap of the flesh and service of sin If ye live after the flesh ye shall die but then consider the fruit you ●hall reap of the Spirit and holy walking ye shall live It is true the flesh may flatter you more for the present but the end of it will be bitter as death ampl●ctitur ut strangulet the flesh imbraces you that it may strangle you and so if you knew all well you would not think you owed it any thing but enmity and hatred and mortification If your duty will not move you let the love of your selves and your souls perswade you for it is an irrepealable statute The wages of sin is death Every way you choose to fulfill the lusts of your flesh and to make provision for it neglecting the eternal welfare of your souls certainly it shall prove to you the tree of the knowledge of good and evil it shall be as the forbidden fruit which in stead of performing that was promised will bring forth death the eternal separation of the soul from God Adam's sin was an Breviary or Epitome of the multiplied and en●arged sins of mankind you may see in this tragedy all your fortuns so to speak you may behold in it the flattering insinuations and deceitful promises of sin and Satan who is a liar
and murderer from the beginning and murdered man at first by lying to him you find the hook covered over with the varnished b●it of an imaginary life and happinesse satisfaction promised to the eye to the taste and to the mind and upon these inticements man bewitched and withdrawn from his God after these vain and empty shadows which when he catched hold upon he himself was caught and laid hold upon by the wrath of God by death and all the miseries before it or alter it Now here is the Mapp of the World for all that is in the world is but a larger volume of that same kind the lust of the eyes the lust of the flesh and the pride of life Albeit they have been known and found to be the notablest and grossest deceivers and every man after he hath spent his dayes in pursuit and labour for them he is constrained to acknowledge at length though too late that all that is in the world is but an imposture a delusion a dream and worse yet eve●y man hearkens after these same flatteries and lies that hath cast down so many wounded and made so many strong ones to fall by them every man trusts the world and his own flesh as if they were of good report and of known integrity and this is mens misery that no man will learn wisdom upon others expences upon the wo●ul and tragical example of so many others but go on as confidently now after the discoverie of these deceivers as if this were the first time they had made such promises and used such fair words to men Have they not been these six thousand years almost deluding the world And have we not as many testimonies of their falshood as there hath been persons in all ages before us After Adam hath tasted of this tree of pleasure and found another fruit growing on it that is death should the posterity be so mad as to be medling still with the forbidden tree and therefore forbidden because destructive to our selves Know then and consider beloved in the Lord that you shall reap no other thing of all your labours and endeavours after the flesh all your toyling and perplexing cares all your excessive pains in the making provision for your lusts and caring for the body only you shall reap no other harvest of all but death and corruption Death you think that is a common lot and you cannot eschew it however nay but the death here meant is of another sort in respect of which you may call death life it is the everlasting destruction of the soul from the presence of God and the glory of his power● it is the falling of that infinit weight of the wrath of the Lamb upon you in respect of which mountains and hills will be thought light and men would rather wish to be covered with them Rev. 6.16 Suppose now you could swim in a River of delights and pleasures which yet is given to none for truly upon a j●st reckoning it will be found that the anxiety and grief and bitte●n●sse that is inte●mingled with all earthly delights ●wallows up the sweetnesse of them yet it will but carry you down ere you be aware into the Se● o● de●th and destruction as the fish that swim and sport for a while in Iordan are carried down into the dead Sea of Sodom where they a●e presently suffocated and extinguished or as a Malefactor is carried through a pleasant Palace to the Gallows so men walk th●ough the delights of their flesh to their own endlesse torment and destruction Seing then my beloved that your sins and lusts which you are inclined and accustomed to will certainly kill you if you inte●tain them then nature it self would teach you the Law of self-defence To kill ere you be killed to kill sin e●e it kill you to mortifie the deeds and lusts of the body which abo●nd among you or they will certainly mortifie you that is make you die Now if self love could teach you this which the love of God cannot perswade you to yet it is well for being once led unto God and moved to change your course upon the fear and apprehension of the infinit danger that will ensue ce●tainly if you we●e but a little a●quainted with the sweetnesse of this life and goodnesse of your God you would find the power of the former a●gumen● à debito from debt and duty upon your spirit let this once lead you in to God and you will not want that which will constrain you to abide and never to depart from Him If you mortifie the deeds of the body you shall live as sin decayes you increase and grow as sins die your soul● live an● it shall be a sure pledge to you of that eternal life and though this be painful and laborious yet consider that it is but the cutting off of a rotten member that would corrupt the whole body and the want of it will never m●im or m●tilat the body for you shall live per●ectly when sin is perfectly expired and out of life and according a● sin is nearer expiring and nearer the grave your souls are nea●●● that endlesse life If this do not move us what can be said n●xt What shall he do more to his Vineyard SERMON XXXV Rom. 8.13 14. But if ye through the Spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live Vers. 14. For as many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the sons of God THE life and being of many things consists in union separat them and they remain not the same or they losse their vertue It is much more thus in Christianity the power and life of it consists in the union of these things that God h●th conjoyned so that if any man pretend to one thing of it and neglect the other he hath really none of them and to hold to the subject in hand there are three things which joyned together in the hearts of Christians have a great deal of force the duty of a Christian and his reward and his dignity his worke and labour seems hard and unpleasant when considered alone but the reward sweetens it when it is joyntly believed his duty seems too high and his labour great yet the consideration of the real dignity he is advanced unto and priviledge he hath received will raise up the spirit to great and high attempts and to sustain great labours Mortification is the work and labour life eternal life is the reward following the Spirit is the Christians duty but to be the son of God that is his dignity Mortification sounds very harsh at first the hearts of men say It is a hard saying who can bear it And indeed I cannot deny but it is so to our corrupt nature and therefore so holden out in Scripture the words chosen to press it express much pain and pains much torment and labour it is not so easie and trivial a business to forsake sin or subdue it as many think
Christ. Here is a blessed message to condemned lost sinners who have that sentence within their breasts vers 1. This was the end of Christs coming and dying that he might deliver us from sin as well as death and the righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in us and therefore he hath given the holy Spirit and dwels in us by the Spirit to quicken us who are dead in sins and trespasses O! what consolation will this be to souls that look upon the body o● death within them as the greatest misery and do groan with Paul O miserable man that I am c. Rom. 7.24 This is held forth to vers 17. But because there are many grounds of heavinesse and sadnesse in this world therefore the Gospel opposes unto all these both our expectation which we have of that blessed hope to come whereof we are so sure that nothing can frust●at us of it And also the help we get in the mean time of the Spirit to bear our infirmities and to bring all things about for good to us vers 28. And from all this the believer in Jesus Christ hath ground of triumph and boasting before the perfect victory Even as Paul doth in the name of believers from vers 31. to the end Upon these considerations he that cryed out not long ago O miserable man who shall deliver me doth now cry out Who shall condemn me The distressed wrestler becomes a victorious triumpher the beaten Souldiour becomes more than a Conquerour Oh that your hearts could be perswaded to hearken to this joyful sound to embrace Jesus Christ for grace and salvation how quickly would a song of triumph in him swallow up all your present complaints and lamentations All the complaints amongst men may be reduced to one of these three I hear the most part bemoaning the●selves thus Alace for the miseries of this life this evil world Alace for poverty for contempt for sickness Oh miserable man that I am who will take this disease away who will shew me any good thing Psal. 4. any temporal good But if ye knew and considered your latter end ye would cry out more ye would refuse to be comforted though these miseries were removed But I hear some bemoaning themselves more sadly they have heard the Law and the sentence of condemnation is within them the Law hath entred and killed them Oh! what shall I do to be saved Who will deliver me from the wrath to come What is al● present afflictions and miseries in respect of eternity Yet there is one moan and lamentation beyond all these when the soul finds the sentence of absolution in Jesus Christ and gets its eyes opened to see that body of death and sin within that perfect man of sin diffused throughout all the members then it bemoans it self with Paul Oh miserable man who shall deliver me from this body of death Rom. 7.24 I am delivered from the condemnation of the Law but what com●ort is it as long as sin is so powerful in me Nay this makes me often suspect my delivery from wrath and the curse seing sin it self is not taken away Now if ye could be perswaded to hearken to Jesus Christ and embrace this Gospel O! what abundant consolation should ye have what a perfect answer to all your complaints they would be swallowed up in such a triumph as Pauls are here This would discover unto you a perfect remedy of sin and misery that ye should complain no more or at least no more as these without hope You shall never have a remedy of your temporal miseries unlesse ye begin at eternal to prevent them Seek first the kingdom of God and all other things shall be added unto you seek fi●st to flee from the wrath to come and ye shall escape it and beside the evil of time-afflictions shall be removed first remove the greatest complaints of sin and condemnation and how easie is it to answer all the lamentations of this life and make you rejoice in the midst of them You have in this verse three things of great importance to consider The great and precious priviledge the true nature and the special property of a Christian. The priviledge is one of the greatest in the world because it s of eternal consequence and soul concernment the nature is most divine he is one that is in Jesus Christ and implanted in him by faith his distinguishing property is noble sureable to his nature and priviledges he walkes not as the world according to his base flesh but according to the spirit All these three are of one latitude none of them reaches further than another that rich priviledge and sweet property concenters and meets together in one man even in the man who is in Jesus Christ whoever enters into Jesus Christ and abideth in him he meets with these two Justification and Sanctification these are no where else and they are there together If ye knew the nature and properties of a Christian ye would fall in love with these for themselves but if the●e for your own sakes will not allure you consider this incomparable priviledge that he hath beyond all others that ye may ●all in love with the nature of a Christian. Let this love of your selves and your own wel-being pu●sue you in to Jesus Christ that ye may walk even as he walked and I assure you if ye were once in Christ Jesus ye would love the very nature and walking of a Christian no more for the absolution and salvation that accompanies it but ●or its o●n sweetnesse and excellency beyond all other Ye would as the people of Samaria no mo●e believe for the report of your own nece●●●ty and misery but ye would believe in Jesus Christ and walk according to the Spirit for their own testimony they have in your consciences Ye would no more be allured only with the priviledges o● it to embrace Ch●istianity but ye would think Christianity the greatest priviledge a reward ●nto it self Pietas ipsa sibi merces e●t Godlinesse is great gain in it self though it had not such sweet consequents or companions That you may know this priviledge con●●der the estate all men are into by nature Paul expresses it in sho●t Rom. 5. By the offence of ōne judgemnt came upon all unto condemnation and the reason of this is by one man sin came upon all and so death by sin for death passed upon all because all have sinned vers 18.12 Lo then all men are under a sentence of condemnation once This sentence is the curse of the Law Cursed is every one that abideth not in all things commanded to do them If ye knew what this curse were ye would indeed think it a priviledge to be delivered from it Sin is of an infinite deserving because against an infinite God it s an offence of an infinite Majesty and therefore the curse upon the sinner involves eternal punishment O! what weight is in that word 2 Thes. 1.9 Ye
grounds he comes not right If the most holy man come not in among ungodly sinners if he do not walk upon the grounds of his own extream necessity and Christs sufficiency he cannot come to Jesus Christ. There is a conceit among people which if it were not so common as it is I would not mention it it is so ridiculous How can I come to Christ so unclean and so guilty nothing but condemnation in me if I were such and such I would come to him Alace there can nothing be imagined more absurd or contrary even to sense and reason If thou wert such and such as thou fancies a desire to be thou would not come to Christ thou needed him not that which thou pretends as a reason why thou should not come is the great reason pressed in the Gospel why thou should come What madness is this I am so unclean I will not come to the fountain to wash Wherefore was the fountain opened but for sin and uncleanness and the more uncleanness the more need and the more need the more reason to come Necessity is a great errand and our e●rand is a sufficient warrand I am pursued by the Law I have condemnation within me and nothing but condemnation well then come to Christ Jesus the City of Refuge where no condemnation is Wherefore was this City appointed but for this end I beseech you every one who useth those debates and taketh a kind of delight in them know what they mean how they wrong your own souls how they dishonour Christ and so God the Father nay how foolish and ridiculous they are that if it were not your perplexity indeed they deserved no answer but a rebuke or silence I have seen people take delight in moving objections against the truth yea and studying earnestly how to object against any answers given from the truth Alace thou medles to thine own hurt thou art upon a way which shall never yeeld thee any comfort but keep thy soul from establishment as a wave tossed up and down If ye believe not but dispute ye shall not be established But I would speak a word to these that have believed that have fled for refuge to Christ Oh! it concerns you most of al● men to study to know this condemnation that ye are delivered from that ye may be thankful and may keep closs within this City I say there is no man within the world should have moe thoughts more deep and earnest meditations on the curse and wrath of God then these who are delivered from them through Christ and my reason is that ye may know how great a salvation ye have received how great a condemnation ye have escaped and may henceforth walk as these who are bought with a price Your Creation makes you not your own but his because he gave that being but your Redemption should make you twice more his and not your own because when that being was worse than if it had not been at all he made it over again so ye are twice his first he made you with a word but now he hath bought you with a price and that a dear price his blood Again the keeping this curse alwayes in your view and sight and application of it unto your sins will make much imployment for Christ O how will ye often ●●ee into that City I think they are the greatest enemies of Jesus Christ and his grace who would have a believer have no more use of the Law I know not who can use the Law if he do it not I know not who can apply it unto Christ the end of it but he Certainly he hath not only use of the commands as a rule of obedience but the curse also not to make him fear again unto bondage no no but to make him see alwayes the more necessity of Jesus Christ that he may take up house in him and dwell in him SERMON III. Vers. 1. That walk not after the flesh but c. IT is difficult to determine which of these is the greatest priviledge of a Christian that he is delivered from condemnation or that he is made to walk according to the Spirit and made a new creature whether we owe more to Christ for our Justification or Sanctification for he is made both to us But it is more necessary to conjoyn them together than to compare them with other the one is not more necessary to be delivered from wrath than the other to walk according to the Spirit I think it were an argument of a soul escaped condemnation to have the great stream and current of its affections and endeavours towards Sanctification not that they may be accepted of God but because they are accepted of God It is not said there is nothing condemnable in those that are in Christ but there is no condemnation to them There is indeed a body of death and law of sin within them a nature defiled with O●iginal pollution and many streams flowing from it which the sprinkling o● the blood of Christ in Justification doth not take away If any man say there is no sin in him he is a liar and the truth is not in him But he●e is the grace and me●cy of God in Jesus Christ that removes the curse where the sin is that takes away the condemnation where all worthy of condemnation is And thus the souls Justification is parallel to Christs condemnation there was in him nothing condemnable no sin no guile in his mouth yet there was condemnation to him because he was in stead and place of sinners our iniquities was laid on him not in him he who knew no sin was made a curse for us that we might be made the righteousness of God in him So then the soul that flyeth in to Jesus Christ his righteousness though it have in it all that deserveth condemnation yet there is no condemnation to it because his righteousness is laid upon it and Christ hath taken away the curse The innocent Son of God was condemned therefore are guilty sinners absolved The curse was applied unto him who had no sin but only was made sin or sin laid on him and therefore the sentence of absolution from the curse is applyed unto them who have no righteousness but are made the righteousness of God by free and gracious imputation This I speak because of many unsavoury and unsound expressions in this loose generation that there is no sin in the justified that Justification removes it closs as if it had never been at all I say as the condemnation of Jesus Christ did not blot out his innocency and holiness within him but only Justice considered him in that account as a transgressour who yet was the holy and spotless Lamb of God in himself so likewise the justification of a sinner before God doth not remove or blot out the very corruption and defilement of our natures but only scrapes out our names out of the roll of his debtors as having
satisfied in our Cautioner and considers us as righteous in that account before God And this likewise I speak for your use that ye may loath and abhor your selves as much in your selves who are made clean by the blood of Jesus Christ as if ye were not washen Nay so much the more ye ought to remember your own sins which he doth not remember as debt any more and to be ashamed and confounded because they are pardoned It is ordinary for souls to look on themselves with an eye of more complacency in themselves when they apprehend that God lookes favourably on them I do not think that any soul can duely consider the gracious aspect of God in Jesus Christ to them but they will the more loath themselves but I find it ordinary that slight and inconsiderate thoughts of pardon begets jolly conceits in mens hearts of themselves and this is even the sin of Gods children something is abated of our self abhorring when we have peace and favour spoken in to us but I beseech every one that believes there is no condemnation for them to consider there is all things worthy of it in them yea nothing but what deserves it and therefore let that aspect of God beget self-loathing and self-detestation in you the more you apprehend he is pleased with you be ye the more displeased with your selves because it is not your selves he is pleased with but his own well-beloved Son The day of redemption is coming when there shall be no condemnation and nothing condemnable either In Heaven you shall be so but while ye are here this is the most important duty ye are called to to loath your selves because of all your abominations and because he is pacified towards you Ezek. 16. at the close and Chap. 36.31 and 20 43 44. There is a new and strange mortification now pleadde ●or by many whose highest advancement consisteth in not feeling or knowing or confessing sin but in being dead to the sense and convict●●n of the same Alace whither are these reforming time● gone Is not this the spirit of Antichrist I confess it is a mortification of Godliness a crucifying of Repentance and Holiness a crucifying of the new man but it is a quickning of the old man in the lusts thereof a living to sin this is a part of that new but ●a●sly so called Gospel that is preached by some which if an Angel would b●ing from Heaven we ought not to believe it Other foundation can no man lay then which is laid already upon which the Prophets and Apostles are builded even Christ Jesus Lord give the spirit to understand these mysteries already revealed but save us from these new discoveries and lights That which we have received is able to make us peref●ct to salvation Every one pretends a claim and right to this priviledge of Christians to be pardoned and absolved from condemnation who doth not put it out of question though in the mean time their iniquities testifie against them and their transgressions say in the heart of a godly man that there is no fear of God before their eyes Therefore the Apostle describes the man that is in Jesus Christ to be such an one That walks not after the flesh but after the Spirit Not only to guard against the presumptuous fancy of those that live in their sins that pretend to hope for Heaven but to stir up every justified soul to a new manner of conversation since they are in Jesus Christ. We would speak a word of two things from this First that the Scripture gives marks and characters of justified and reconciled persons that they may be known by both to themselves and others Next that the Christian escaped condemnation hath a new manner of walking and is a new creature in Christ. It might seem a strange thing that this fi●st were questioned in this generation if any the most clear and important truth could pass without scanning the very tenor of the whole Scripture holds out so much of it I wonder that any man that reads this Chapter or the Epistles of Iames and Iohn should have any more doubt of it Hereby we know that we know him if we keep his commands Is not this a conclusion of our state and condition from the conformity of our walking to the will of God What divine truth can we be sure of if this be uncertain When the beloved Disciple who knew how to preach Christ asserts it in express terms 1 Ioh. 5.13 These things have I written to you that believe that ye may know ye have eternal life and that ye may believe on the Name of the Son of God this very thing was the great scope and purpose of that Evangelick and Divine Epistle I find that Antinomians confound this question that they may have the more advantage in their darkness The question is not concerning the grounds of a mans believing in Christ but concerning our assurance or knowledge of our believing There is a great mistake in Christians practice in confounding these two it makes Christians very unreasonable in their doubtings and exercises therefore let us have this before our eyes Faith in its first and pure acting is rather an adherence and cleaving of a lost soul to Christ than an evidence of its interest in him or of his everlasting love You know all that it is one thing to know a thing or love a thing and another thing to reflect upon it and know that I know and love Iohn did write to believers that they might know they did believe and believe yet more These things then are both separable and the one is posterior to the other After ye believed ye were sealed The perswasion of Gods love and our interest in Christ is the Spirits seal set upon the soul there is a mutual sealing here the soul by believing and trusting in Jesus Christ sets to its seal that God is true as Iohn speaks 3.33 When God speaks in his Law the soul receives that testimony of his Justice and Holiness subscribes to the equity and righteousness of the sentence by condemning it self And when Christ speaks in the Gospel the soul seals that doctrine of free Salvation by approving and consenting with all its heart to the offer subscribes to the way of Salvation in Christ and truth of his promises and thus is the truth of God and Christ sealed by the souls believing Then the Spirit of Jesus Christ afterward when he pleaseth irradiats and shines upon the soul and discovers these things that are freely given and witnesseth to the conscience of the believer that he is a son of God thus the Spirit seals the believer and gives his testimony to his truth Now if we speak of the ground of the first viz. Of believing in Christ to salvation I know none but that which is common to sinners and holden out in the Gospel generally to all Our sin and misery and absolute necessity and Christs invitation of all to
How shall any venture to look in to these secrets of the Lambs book of life and read their name there undoubtedly they belong not to us they are a light inaccessible that will but con●ound an● darken us more Therefore whoever would know their election according to the Scriptures must read the transcript and copy of the Book of Life which is written in the hearts and souls of the elect the thoughts of God are written in his works upon the spirits of men his election hath a seal upon it The Lord knoweth who are his and who can break up this seal Who hath understood the mind of the Lord None can untill the Lord write over his thoughts in some characters of his Spirit and of the new creature in some lineaments and draughts of his own Image that it may be known they are the Epistle of Christ not written with ink and paper but with the Spirit of the living God not in tables of stone but in the fleshly tables of the heart 2 Cor. 3.3 Christ writes his everlasting thoughts o● love and good-will to us in this Epistle and that we may not think this doth extol the creature and abase Christ it is added vers 5. Not that we are sufficient of our selves but our suffi●iency is of Go● The seeing of grace in our selves doth not prejudge the g●ace o● God unless we see it independent of the fountain and behold not the true rise of it that we may have no matter to glory of It is not a safe way of beholding the Sun to look straight on it it is too dazling to our weak eyes you shall not well take it up so but the best way is to look on it in water then we shall more stedfastly behold it Gods everlasting love and the redemption of Jesus Christ is too glorious an object to behold with the eyes of flesh such objects certainly must astonish and strike the spirits of men with their transcendent brightness therefore we must look on the beams of this Sun as they are reflected in our hearts and so behold the conformity of our souls wrought by his Spirit unto his will and then we shall know the thoughts of his soul to us If men shall at the first ●●ight climb so high as to be perswaded of Gods eternal love and Christs purchase for them in particular they can do no more but scorch their wings and melt the wax off them till they fall down from that heaven of their ungrounded perswasion into a pit of desperation The Scripture-way is to go downward once that ye may go up first go down in your selves and make your calling sure and then you may rise up to God and make your election sure You must come by this circle there is no passing by a direct line and straight thorow unless by the immediat revelation of the Spirit which is not ordinary and constant and so not to pretended unto I confess that sometimes the Spirit may intimate to the Soul Gods thoughts towards it and its own state and condition by an immediat overpowering testimony that puts to silence all doubts and obejctions that needs no other work or mark to evidence the sincerity and reality of it that light of the Spirit shall be seen in its own light and needs not that any witness of it The Spirit of God sometimes may speak to a Soul Son be of good comfort thy sins are forgiven thee This may break into the Soul as a beam darted from heaven without reference to any work of the Spirit upon the heart or word of Scripture as a mids and mean to apply it But this is more extraordinary the ordinary testimony of the Spirit is certainly conjoined with the testimony of our own consciences Rom. 8.16 and our consciences beares witness of the work of the S●irit in us which the Spirit discovers to be according to the Wo●d The spirit makes known to us things that are freely given but by comparing things Spiritual with Spiritual 1 Cor. 2.10.13 The fruit and special work of the Holy Ghost in us is the medium and the Spirits light irradiats and shines upon it and makes the heart see the same clearly For though we be the children of light yet our light hath so much darkness as there must be a supervenient and accessory light of the Spirit to discover that light unto us Now what is all this to us I fear that there be many ungrounded perswasions amongst us that many build on a sandy foundation even a strong opinion that it is well with them without any examination of their Souls and conversations according to the Word and this certainly when the tempest blows cannot stand Some teach that no man should question whether he believe or not but presently believe I think none can believe too suddenly it s alwise in season nunquam sera est fides nec paenitentia its never late in respect of the promise and its never too early in respect of a mans case But I cannot think any man can ●elieve till the Spirit have convinced him of his unbelief And t●erefore I would think the most part of men nearer faith in Jesus Christ if they knew they wanted faith Nay it s a part of faith and believing God in his word and setting to our Seal that God is true for a man to ●ake with his unbelief and his natural inability yea ave●sness to it I would think that these who could not believe in Christ because they ●ought honou● one of another and went about to kill him they had done well to have taken with that challenge of Christs and if men ought to take with their sin they ought to search and try their sin that they may find it out to take with it I wonder since Antinomians make unbebelief the only sin in the world that they cannot endure the discovery and confession of it it seems they do not think it so heinous a sin I confesse no man should of purpose abstain from believing in Christ till he find out whether he hath believed or not but what ever have been he is bound presently to act saith in Jesus Christ to flee unto him as a lost sinner to a saving Mediator But that every man is bound to perswade himself at the first that God hath loved him and Christ redeemed him is the hope of the Hypocrite like a spiders web which when leaned to it shall not stand that mans expectation shall perish he hath kindled sparks of his own a wilde fire and walketh not in the true light of the Word and so must ly down in sorrow Many of you deceive your selves and none can perswade you that ye do deceive your selves such is the strength of that delusion and dream It s the great part of the hearts deceitfulness to flatter it self in its own eyes to make a man conceive well of himself and his heart I beseech you do not venture your souls salvation to such
groundless opinions never to question the matter is to leave it alwise uncertain If ye would judge your selves according to the Scriptures many of you have the marks and characters of these who are kept without the City and are to have their part in the lake of fire Is there no condemnation for you who have never condemned your selves Certainly the more you are averse to condemn your selves this sticks the closser to you You are not all in Christ all are not Israel who are of Israel many nay the most part are but said Christians have no real union with Christ or principle of life from him your love you carry to your selves makes you easily believe well of your selves know that self-love can blind the eyes and make you apprehend that God loves you also Nay every one readily fancies that to be which he desires to be I beseech you consider if you have any ground for your hopes and confidences but such as these that will not bear out alwayes It would be no disadvantage to you to have your hope shaken that in stead of a vain presumption you may have the Anchor of hope which shall be fixed within the vail I think one thing keeps men far from the Kingdom of God because they know not that they believe not in him we had gained much ground on you by the Word if we could perswade you that ye believe not and have not believed from the Womb. We might then say to you as Christ to his Disciples ye believe in God believe also in me Ye have given credit to God the Judge and Law-giver pronouncing a curse on ●ou and a sentence that ye have hearts desperatly wicked now believe also in me the Redeemer Ye have believed God in the Law in as far as ye have judged your selves under sin and wrath now believe Me in the Gospel that brings a ransome from wrath and a remedy for sin It s this very unbelief that is the original of the wo●lds perishing unbelief of the Law ye do not consider ye are under the condemnation of it ye do not believe that ye have not yet ●ed to Jesus Christ to escape and these two keeps souls in a deep sleep till judgement awake them But unto every one of you I would give this Direction Let not examination of what you are hinder you from that which is your chief duty and his chief commandment to believe in him I know many Christians are puzled in the matter of their interest and alwise wavering because they are more taken up with that which is but a matter of comfort and joy then that which is His greatest honour and glory I say to consider the precious promises to believe the excell●●cy and vertue of Jesus Christ and love him in your souls and delight in him is the weightiest matter of the Gospel to go out of your selves daily into his fulness to endeavour new discoveries of your own naughtiness and his grace this is the new and great commandment of the Gospel the obedience of it is the most essential part of a Christian-walk Now again to know that ye do believe and to discern your interest in Christ this is but a matter of comfort and of second concernment Therefore I say when ever ye cannot be clear in this ye should be alwise exercised in the first For its that we are first called to and if Souls were more exercised that way in the consideration and belief of the very general truths and promises of the Gospel I doubt not but the light of these would clear up their particular interest in due time these things ye ought to have done and not to leave the other undone It is still safest to wave such a question of interest when its plunging because it puts you off your special duty and its Satans intent in it It were better if ye do question presently to believe and abide in him till it were put out of question SERMON IV. Vers. 1. That walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit CHrist is made to us of God both righteousness and sanctification And therefore these who are in Christ do not only escape condemnation but they walk according to the spirit and not according to the flesh These two are the sum of the Gospel there is not a greater argument to holy walking then this there is no condemnation for you ●●●ther is there a greater evidence of a Soul escaped condemnation then walking ●ccording to the Spirit We have spoken something in general of the evidence that may be had of a mans state from his walking and the Spirits work in him we would now speak of the conjunction of these two and the influence that that priviledge hath on this duty and something of the nature of this description who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit In the creation of man man was composed of soul and body there was a right order and subordination of these suitable to their nature in his soul he reached Angels above in his body he was like the beasts below and this part his flesh was a servant to the Soul that was acted and affected according to the desires and motives of the Soul Now sin entring as it hath defaced all the beauty of the creation as it hath misplaced man and driven him out from that due line of subordination to God his Maker for he would have been equal to God so it hath perverted this beautiful order in men and turned it just contrary hath made the servant to ride on horses and the prince to walk on foot This is the just punishment of our first sin Adams soul was placed by creation under the sole command of its Creator above all the creatures and his own senses but in one sin he proudly exalted himself above God and lamentably subjected himself below his senses by hearkening to their perswasion he saw it was good and tasted it and it was sweet and so he ate of it What a strange way was this to be like God he made himself unlike himself liker the miserable beasts Now I say this is the deserved punishment of man his soul that was a free Prince is made a bond slave to the lusts of his flesh flesh hath gotten the Throne and keeps it and lords over the whole man Now therefore it is that the whole man unregenerat is called flesh as if he had no immortal spirit Iohn 3.6 That which is born of the flesh is flesh and this Chap. vers 8. here a description of natural men they that are in the flesh Because flesh is the predominant part that hath captivat a mans reason and will Nay not only the grosser corruptions in a man that have their use and seat in his flesh and body are under that name but take the whole nature of man that which is most excellent in him his Soul and Spirit his Light and Understanding the most refined principles of his
conversation all these are now but flesh Nay not only such natural gifts and illuminations but even the light of the Gospel and Law of God that someway enters his soul changeth the nature and name it s all but darkness and flesh in him because the flesh hath a dominion over all that the clouds and vapours that ariseth from the flesh bemists and obscures all these the corruptions of the soul is most strengthned in this fort and most vented here Sins become connatural to the flesh and so a man by the flesh is ensnared and subjected to sin Christ comprehends all our prerogatives and indowments under this Iohn 1.13 born not of flesh and blood And Matth. 16.17 flesh and blood hath not revealed these things to thee Even all the outwards of Religion and all the common priviledges of Christians may be called so What hath Abraham sound according to the flesh Rom. 4.1 Phil. 3.3 Which imports so much that all those outward priviledges many illuminations and reformations may so far consist with the corruption of mans nature may unite so with that as to have one name with it it s not all able to conquer our flesh but our flesh rather subdues all that and makes it serve it self till a stronger than it come even the Spirit to subdue it and cast it out of the house Thus the Image of God in man is defaced Nay the very image and nature of man as man spoyled the first creation sin hath marr'd and disordere'd it Now when this second creation or regeneration comes the creature is made new and formed again by the powerful Spirit of Jesus Christ this change is made flesh is put out of the Throne as an usurper the spirit and soul of a man is put in a Throne above it but is placed according to its due order under a holy and spiritual Law of God And thus Jesus Christ is the repairer of the breaches and restorer of the ancient paths and old wa●●s to dwell in Now the soul hath a new rule established to act according to and new principles to act from He whose course of walking was after the corrupt dictates and commands of his fleshly affections and was of no higher strain then his own sparks of nature and acquired light would lead him to now he hath a new rule established the Spirit speaking in the Word to him and pointing out the way to him and there is a new principle that Spirit leading him in all truth and quickning him to walk in it Now this is the souls perfect liberty to be from under the dominion of sin and lusts and thus the Son makes free indeed by the free Spirit the Son was made a servant that we might be made free no more servants of sin in the lusts thereof and the Spirit of the Lord where he comes there is liberty there the Spirit and reasonable soul of a man is elevated into its first native dignity there the base flesh is dethroned and made to serve the spirit and soul in a man Christ is indeed the greatest friend of men as they are men sin made us beasts Christ makes us men Unbelievers are unreasonable men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 brutish yea in a manner beasts this is an ordinary compellation in Scripture faith makes a man reasonable it gives the saving and sanctified use of reason it s a shame for any man to be a slave to his lusts and passions it s the character of a beast upon him he that is led by senses and affections is degenerated from humane nature and yet such are all out of Christ sin reigns in them and flesh reigns and the principles of light and reason within are captivated incarcerated within a corner of their minds We see the generally received truths among men that God is that he is holy and just and good that Heaven and hell is these are altogether ineffectual and have no influence on mens conversations no more then if they were not known even because the truth is detained in unrighteousness the corruptions of mens flesh are so rank that they overgrow all this seed of truth and choaks it as the thorns did the seed Matth. 15.7 Now for you who are called of Jesus Christ O know what ye are called unto It s a liberty indeed a priviledge indeed ye are no more debtors to the flesh Christ hath loosed that obligation of servitude to it O let it be a shame unto you who are Christians to walk so any more to be entangled any more in that yoke of bondage He that ruleth his spirit is greater then the mighty then he that taketh a city Thus we are called to be more then conquerours others when they conquer the world they are slaves to their own lusts but let it be far from you to be so ye ought to conquer your self which is more then to conquer the World it s not only unbeseeming a Christian to beled with passions and lusts but it s below a man if men were not now through sin below beasts I beseech you aspire unto and hold fast the liberty Christ hath obtained to you be not fashioned any more according to former lusts know ye are men that ye have reasonable and immortal spirits in you why will ye then walk as beasts Understand O brutish and ye fools when will ye be wise But I say more know ye are Christians and this is more then to be a man it s to be a divine man one partaker of the divine Nature and who is to walk accordingly Christians are called to a new manner of walking and this walking is a fruit that comes out of the root of faith whereby they are implanted in Christ You see these agree well together these who are in Christ walk not after the flesh c. Walking after the flesh is the common walk of the World who are without God and without Christ But Christ gives no latitude to such a walk this is a new nature to be in Christ and therefore it must have new operations to walk after the Spirit While we look upon the conversations of the most part of men they may be a commentary to expound this part of the words what it is to walk after the flesh The works of the flesh saith the Apostle to Gal 5.19 are manifest and indeed they are manifest because written in great letters on the out-side of many in the visible Church that who runs may read them do but read that Catalogue in Paul and then come and see them in Congregations It is not so doubtful and subtile a matter to know that many are yet without the verge of Christ Jesus without the City of refuge you may see their mark on their brow Is not drunkenness which is so frequent a palpable evidence of this your envyings revilings wrath strife seditions fornications and such like Oh do not deceive your selves there is no room in Jesus Christ for such impurities and impieties
There is no toleration of sin within this City and Kingdom sinners are indeed pardoned yea received and accepted drunkards unclean persons c. are not excluded from entering here but they must renounce these lusts if they would stay here Christ will not keep both he must either cast out the sin or the sinner with it if he will not part with it I beseech you know what ye walk after the flesh is your leader and whither will it lead you O! its sad to think on it to perdition vers 8. If ye live after the flesh ye shall die Ye think flesh your great friend ye do all ye can to satifie and please it and O how pleasant is the satisfaction of your flesh to you Ye think it liberty to follow it and counts it bonds and cords to be restrained But Oh! know and consider that flesh will lead you by the Kingdom that guide of your way to which ye committed your self will lead you by Heaven Gal. 5.21 It s a blind guide corruption and humour and will have no eyes no discerning of that pit of eternal misery they choose the way that is best pathed and troden that is easiest and most walk into and this certainly will lead you straight into this pit of darkness Be called off this way from following your blind lusts and rather suffer them to be crucified be avenged on them for your two eyes that they have put out and their treacherous dealing to you in leading you to destruction the high way Come in to Christ Jesus and ye shall get a new guide of the way the Spirit that shall lead you in all truth unto the blessed and eternal life Christ is the way ye must walk in and the life that we must go in to at the end of our way and the truth according to which we must walk now he hath given his Spirit the Comforter to be our leader in this way according to this rule and pattern unto that life In a word the Spirit shall lead you the straight way unto Christ you shall begin in him and end in him he shall lead you from grace to glory the Spirit that came down from Heaven shall lead you back to Heaven All your walk is within the compass of Christ out of him is no way to Heaven But we must not take this so grosly as if no other thing were a walking after the flesh but the gross abominations among men though even these will scrape a great number from being in Christ Jesus but it must be further enlarged to the motions affections of the unrenewed spirit and the common principles according to which men walk And therefore the Apostle Col. 3 and Gal. 5. nameth many things among the works of the flesh and members of the old man which I doubt many will account so of Some natural passions that we account nothing of because common as anger wrath covetousness what man is there amongst us in whom some of these mentioned stirs not Many of your hearts and eyes are given to covetousness your souls bow downward as your bodies do and many times before your bodies Is not the heart of men upon this world and cannot rise above to a treasure in Heaven and therefore your Callings otherwayes lawful and all your pains and endeavours in them hath this seal of the flesh stamped on them and passeth no otherwayes with God We see how rank the corruptions of men are anger domineering in them and leading them often captive and this is counted a light matter but it is not so in Scripture How often is it branded with folly by the wise man and this folly is even the natural fleshly corruption that men are born with and in how many doth it rise up to the elevation of malice and hatred of others and then it carries the image of the devil rather then of humane infirmity And if we suppose a man not much given to any of these yet what a spirt of pride and self-love is in every man even these that carry the lowest sail and the meanest port among men these that are affable and courteous and these that seem most condescending to inferiours and equals yet alas this evil is more deeply engraven on the spirt If a man could but watch over his heart and observe all the secret reflections of it all the comparisons it makes all the desires of applause and favour among men all the surmises and stirrings of spirit upon any affront O how would they discover diabolick pride This sin is the more natural inbred for that it is our mother-sin that brought us down from our excellency this weed grows upon a glass-window and upon a dunghill it lodges in Palaces and Cottages nay it will spring and grow out of a pretended humility and low carriage In a word the ambitious designs of men the large appetite of earthly things the over-weaning conceit of our selves love to our selves the flirring of our affections without observing a rule upon unlawful objects or in an unlawful manner all these are common to men and men walk after them Every man hath some predominant or idol that takes him most up some are finer and subtiler than others some their pleasures and gains without others their own gifts and parts within but both are alike odious before God and both gross flesh and corruption before him There are two errours among men concerning this spiritual walking the one is the Doctrine of some in these dayes the other is the practical error of many of us Many pretending to some near and high discoveries as to Christ and the Spirit have fallen upon the most refined and spiritualized flesh instead of the Spirit indeed they separate the Spirit from the Word and reckons the Word and Law of God which was a Lamp to Davids feet among the fleshly rudiments of the world But if they speak not according to the Law and Testimony saith Isaiah it is because there is no light in them Thus their new light is but an old darkness that could not endure even the darker light of the Prophets If they speak not according to the Word it is because there is no spirit in them It is not the Spirit the Comforter which Christ promised to send to the Apostles and all that should believe in his Name through their word for that Spirit was a Spirit of truth that should lead into all truth and lest men should father their own fancies and imaginations on the Spirit of God Christ adds he shall bring all things to your remembrance These things that Christ hath spoken and we have here written The holy Apostle to the Col. 3. when he reproves the works of the flesh and declares they had put them off he commends unto them in opposition to these Let the word of Christ dwell in your richly in all wisdom teaching one another in Psalms and spiritual songs with grace in your hearts to the Lord
ver 16. Here the Spirit not casting out the Word but bringing it in plentifully and sweetly agreeing with it The Spirit that Christ sent did not put men above Ordinances but above corruptions and the body of death in them It s a poor and easie victory to subdue Grace and Ordinances every slave of the Devil doth that I fear as men and Angels fell from their own dignity by aspiring higher so these that will not be content with the estate of Christ and his Apostles but soar up in a higher strain of spirit and trample on that ministration as fleshly and carnal I fear they fall from Jesus Christ and come into greater condemnation It s true indeed 2 Cor. 3.6 The Letter killeth that is the Covenant of Works preacheth now nothing but condemnation to men but the Spirit of the Gospel giveth life nay even the Gospel separated from the Spirit of life in Jesus is but a savour of death to souls Shall we therefore separate the Spirit from the Gospel and Word because the Word alone cannot quicken us David knew how to reconcile this Quicken me O Lord according to thy Word Psal. 119.25 Thy Spirit is good lead me into the land of uprightness and quicken me Psal. 143.10 11. The Word was his rule and the Spirit applyed his soul to the rule the Word holds out the present patte●n we should be conformed unto now if there be no more a man may look all his dayes on it and yet not be changed but the Spirit within transforms and changes a mans soul to more and more conformity to that pattern by beholding it If a man shall shut his eyes on the pattern he cannot know what he is and ought to be if he look only on the Spirits work within and make that his rule he takes an imperfect rule and an incompleat copy and yet this is the highest attainment of these aspirers to new light they have forsaken the Word as their rule and instead of it have another Law within them as much as is already written on their hearts which is in substance this as they suppose I am bound to do no more then I have already power to do I am not to endeavour more holiness then I have already These men are indeed perfect here in their own apprehension and do not know in part and believe in part and obey in part because they are advanced the length of their own Law and rule their rule being of no perfection Paul was not so but forgetting what he had attained he followed on to what was before him and was still reaching forward Let not us my brethren believe every spirit and every doctrine that comes out under that name Christ hath forwarned us Let us pray for more of that Spirit which may quicken the Word to us and quicken us to obey the Word there must be a mutual enlivening the Word must be made the ministration of life by the Spirit of Jesus which can use it as a sword to divide the soul and spirit and we must be quickned to the obedience of the truth in the Word The Word is the seed incorruptible but it cannot beget us or be a principle of a new life within us except a living spirit come alongs to our hearts Know that the Word is your pattern and rule the Spirit your leader and helper whose vertue and power must conform you that rule 1 Pet. 1.22 Peter joyns these two the purification and cleansing of the soul which Christ attributes to the Word ye are clean through the word I have spoken Joh. 15.3 Peter attributes it to the Spirit working according to the pattern of truth It s true the Spirit of God needs no pattern to look to nay but we must have it and eye it else we know not the Spirit of truth from a lie and delusion we cannot try the spirits but by this rule and it is by making us stedfastly look on this glorious pattern in the Word and the example of Christ Jesus his life that we are conformed unto Christ as by the Spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3.13 Certainly that must be fleshly walking which is rather conformed unto the imaginations of a mans own heart then the blessed will of God revealed in his Word Can such walking please God when a man will not so much as hearken to what is Gods will and pleasure As other heresies so especially this is a work of the flesh Now there is another principle amongst many of us we account it spiritual walking to be separated from the gross pollutions of the world to have a carriage blameless before men this is the notion that the multitude fancy of it Be not deceived you may pass the censure of all men and be unreproveable among them and yet be but walkers after the flesh It is not what ye are before the world can prove you spiritual men though it may prove many of your carnal Your out-side may demonstrate of many of you that ye walk after the flesh and if ye will not believe it I ask you if ye think drunkenness a walking in the Spirit Do ye think ye are following the Spirit of God in uncleanness Is it not that Holy Spirit that purgeth from all filthiness Look but what your walk is ye that are not so much as conformed to the Letter of the Word in any thing who cares not to read the Scriptures and meditate on them Is this walking after the Spirit of truth If drunkenness railing contention wrath envy covetousness and such like be the Spirits way then I confess many of you walks after the Spirit but if these be the manifest works of the flesh and manifestly your way and work then why dream ye that ye are Christians But I suppose that you could be charged with none of these outward things that you had a form of Religion and Godliness yet I say all that is visible before men cannot prove you to be spiritual walkers Remember it is a spirit ye must walk after now what shall be the chief agent here sure not the body what fellowship can your body have with him that is a Spirit the body indeed may worship that eternal Spirit being acted by the Spirit but I say that alone can never prove you to be Christians we must then layaside a number of Professors who have no other ground of confidence but such things as may be seen of men if they would enter their hearts how many vain thoughts lodge there how litle of God is there God is not almost in all our thoughts we give a morning and evening salutation but there is no more of God all the day throughout and is this walking after the Spirit which imports a constancy And what part can be spared most but the spirit of a man The body is distracted with other necessary things but we might alwayes spare our souls to God Now thus should a man obey that command Pray alwayes
its impossible that he should do nothing else but pray in an express formal way but the souls walking with God between times of Prayer should compense that and thus Prayer is continued though not in it self yet in meditation on God which hath in it the seed of all worship and is virtually Prayer and Thanksgiving and all duties Let us then consider If our bodies be not more exercised in Religion then our souls yea if they be not the chief agents how many impertinencies and roveries and wandrings are throughout the day the most part of our conversation if it be not profane yet it is vain that is unprofitable in the World it neither advantageth us spiritually nor glorifies God it is almost to no purpose and this is enough to make it all flesh And for our thoughts how do they go unlimited and unrestrained like a wilde Ass traversing her wayes and gadding about fixed on nothing at least not on God nay fixed on any thing but God If it be spiritual service should it not carry the seal of our spirit and affection on it We are as so many shadows walking as pictures and statues of Christians without the soul and life which consists in the temper and disposition of the spirit and soul towards God SERMON V. Vers. 1. That walk not after the flesh but after the spirit IT is no wonder that we cannot speak any thing to purpose of this Subject and that ye do not hear with fruit because it is indeed a mystery to our judgements and a great stranger to our practice There is so litle of the Spirit both in Teachers and those that come to be taught that we can but speak of it as an unknown thing and cannot make you to conceive it in the living notion of it as it is Only we may say in general It is certainly a divine thing and another thing then our common or religious walk is It is little experience so we can know the less of it but this much we should know it is another thing then we have attained it s above us and yet such a thing as we are called to aspire unto How should it stir up in our spirits a holy fire of ambition to be at such a thing when we hear it is a thing attainable nay when Christ calls us unto himself that we may thus walk with him I would have Christians men of great and big projects and resolutions of high and illimited desires not satisfied with their attainments but still aspiring unto more of God more conformity to his will more walking after the Spirit more separation from the course of the World and this is indeed to be of a divine spirit The divine Nature is here as it were in a state of violence out of its own element Now it s known by this i● it be still moving upwards taking no rest in this place and these measures and degrees but upon a continual motion towards the proper center of it God his holiness and Spirit We desire to speak a word of these three 1. The nature of this spiritual walking Next Its connexion and union with that blessed state of non-condemnation And then of the order of this how it flows from a mans being implanted in Christ Jesus Which three are considerable in the words This spiritual walking is according to a spiritual rule from spiritual principles for spiritual ends These three being established aright the walk is even the motion of a Christian within the compass of these it is according to the word as the holy rule it s from the faith love of Jesus Christ as the predominant principle● Nay from the Spirit of Jesus living in the heart by faith and dwelling in it by love as the first wheel of this motion the Primum Mobile and as it begins in the Spirit so it ends there in the glory of Jesus Christ and our heavenly Father Consider this then it is not a lawless walking and irregular walk it is according to the rule and the rule is perfect and it is a motion to perfection not a rest in what is now attained to The course of this world is the way and rule of the children of disobedience Eph. 2.2 There is a spirit indeed that works in them and a rule it works by the spirit is that evil spirit contrary to the holy Spirit of God you may know what spirit it is that works by the way it leads men unto a broad way path'd and troden in by many travellers it s the Kings high street the common way that most part walkes into according as their neighbours do as the most do But ●hat King is the Prince of this World satan who blinds the eyes of many that they may not see that pit of misery before them which their way leads them to A Christian must have a kind of singularity not in opinion but in practice rather to be more holy and walk more abstracted from the dregs of the worlds pollution this were a divine singularity Indeed men may suspect themselves that separats from the godly in opinion they have reason to be more jealous of themselves when they offend against the generation of the just but if this were the contention and design of men to be very unlike the multitude of men nay to be very unlike the multitude of Professors in the affection and practice of holiness humility and spiritual walking I think this were an allowed way though a singular way Men may aspire to as great a difference as may be from the conversations and practice of others if there be a tending to more conformity to the Word the rule of all practice The Law is spiritual and holy saith Paul but I am carnal this therefore were spiritual walking to set that excellent spiritual rule before our eyes that we who are carnal may be transformed and changed into more likeness to that holy and spiritual Law If a man had not an imperfect rule of his own fancy and imagination before his eyes he could not be satisfied with his attainments but with Paul would forget them in a manner not know them but reach forward still to what is before because so much length would be before us as would swallow up all our progress this would keep the motion on foot and make it constant A man should never say Master let us make tabernacles its good to be here no indeed the dwelling place and resting would be seen to be above As long as a man had so much of his journey to accomplish he would not sit down on in his advancement he would not compare with others and exalt himself above others Why because there is still a far greater distance between him and his rule then between the slowest walker and him This made Paul more sensible of a body of death Rom. 7 then readily lower Christians are Reflections on our attainments and comparisons with others which are so often the
Covenant of Grace I will put my Spirit in you and cause you walk in my wayes there is first quickening and then walking You who were dead in sins hath he quickned together with Christ Eph. 2.1 5. and then it follows in due order I will cause you to walk in my wayes Ezek. 36 27. Christ comes into the heart to dwell and then he walks in it 2 Cor. 6.16 And what is that Christ to walk in believers it is nothing else but Christ by his Spirit making them to walk in his way there is so little in us to principle a spiritual action even when renewed and quickned that we should look on our selves not so much as workers with him but as being acted by him we should look on soul and body as pieces of organized clay that cannot move but as it is moved by him as the soul and life of it so that according to the Scriptures di●lect a Christian is nothing else but Christ living and wa●king in such a person This is it which Christ when he is to go out of the world instructs his Disciples into Iob. 15.1 He is the vine and we the branches the branch must first be united to the tree and implanted into the tree ere it bring forth fruit without the tree it withers So must a soul be fust ingrast in Jesus Christ implanted in him by ●aith in his death and sufferings before it can grow up into the similitude of his resurrection or walk in newness of life as Paul speaks Rom. 6.4 5. Without me ye can do nothing ye must first be one with him by believing in him and receiving him as a compleat Saviour and then the sap and vertue of the tree flows into the dead branch and it shoots forth and blossoms and bears Now if this Doctrine of Christ and his Apostles were duly pondered and believed O what a change would it make on the lives and spirits of Christians since this is the order established in the Gospel and an order suitable both to his grace and our necessity as all that is in it speaketh forth an excellent contriver when we go about to establish our souls in another method how is it possible that we should not weary and vex our souls in vain how can we choose but torment our selves and intricat our selves still more Our method and way is just contrary we perplex our souls how to find the fruits of the Spirit of Christ how to walk after the Spirit without fi●st closing intirely with Christ himself We trouble our selves to find the operations of a spiritual life before we lay hold on Christ who is the life of our souls It is made an argument by many to keep them from believing in Christ because they do not find that spiritual life stirring in them How cross is this to the declared mind of Christ in the Gospel It cannot choose but both darken the spirit more and dry up the influences of the Spirit of God because it keeps thee from the fountain of all consolation You may disquiet your souls by this means but you shall never make advantage this way without him ye can do nothing and yet ye will not come to him because you have done nothing It s strange how little reason is in it if your eyes were opened you refuse or delay to abide in the vine till you bring forth fruit and fruit you cannot bring forth till you be in the vine you would walk and you will not have the life from which you must walk Paul lived indeed but what a life the life that I live is by the faith of the Son of God faith in Christ transported him out of himself to Christ or received Christ into the soul and Christ in the soul was the life of his soul Gal. 2.20 your walking is as if a dead man essay to go Will one expect figs of thorns or grapes of thistles I beseech you know what wrong ye do to your selves and to Christ ye wrong your selves because ye stand in the way of your own mercy ye stand a back from your life him that is the way the truth and the life You would walk in the way but no man can walk in this way but by this way Christ must quicken you to walk in himself ye must get life in him and not bring it You are in a vain expectation of fruits from your selves they will never see the Sun and when you have wearied your self in such a vain pursuit you must at length come and begin here Ye wrong Christ his grace and mercy this order is suited of purpose for our desperat condition and yet ye presume to reject it and seek another You prescribe to your skilful tender Physician that which would undo you I beseech you know the original of your miseries doubts barrenness and darknesse Here it is you are still puzling your selves about grace and duties how to fill your eyes with these and ye neglect Christ as your righteousnesse as one dead and risen again and now sitting at Gods right hand for us you must first close with him as ungodly men though you were godly you must shut your eyes on any such thing and lay living Jesus upon your dead and benumb'd hearts answer all your challenges with his absolution and stand before God in his cloathing put his garment immediately on your nakednesse and vilenesse and we may perswade you it shall yield you abundant consolation and life because he lives ye shall live and walk If you were more frequent and serious in the consideration of his excellent Majesty of his beautiful and lovely qualifications as the Mediator for sinners and of the precious promises which are all Yea and Amen confirmed in him and lesse in the vain and unprofitable debates of self-interest and such like I am perswaded ye would be more fruitful Christians This is not as the business of a holy-day to be done at your first coming to Christ and no more no it must run alongst all your life the aged experienced Christian must come alongs as an ungodly sinner to a blessed and living Saviour and have no other ground of glory or confidence before God but Christ Jesus crucified SERMON VII Vers. 2. For the Law of the Spirit of life in Iesus Christ hath made me free c. YOU know there are two principal things in the preceeding verse the priviledge of a Christian and the property or character of a Christian he is one that never enters into condemnation he that believeth shall not perish Joh. 3.15 And then he is one that walks not after the flesh though he be in the flesh but in a more elevat way above men after the guiding and leading of the Holy Spirit of God Now it may be objected in many consciences how can these things be Have not all sinned and come ●●ort of the glory of God and so the whole world is become guilty before God Is not every
man lying under a sentence of death Cursed is he that abides not in all things c. How then can h● escape condemnation Again you speak of walking after the Spirit as proper to the Christian but whose walk is not carnal Who is it that doth not often step aside out of the way and follow the conduct and counsel of flesh and blood Is not sin dwelling here in our mortal bodies Who can say my heart or way is clean Therefore both that priviledge and this property of a Christian seems to be but big words no real thing And indeed I confess the multitude of men hath no other opinion of them but as fancied imaginary thing● few believes the report of the Gospel concerning the salvation of elect ones and few understands what this spiritual walking is many conceive it is not a thing that belongs to men who are led about with passions and affections but rather to Angels or Spirits perfected However we have in these words an answer to satisfie both objections He grants something implicitely and it is this it is true indeed Christians are under a two●old Law captives and bondmen to these A law of sin in their members bringing them in subjection to the lusts of the flesh Sin hath a powerful dominion and tyranny over every man by nature it hath a sort of right and power over him and likewise every one was under a law of death the Law of God cu●sing him and sentencing him to condemnation because of sin these two were joynt conquerours of all mankind But saith he there is a delivery from this bondage freedom is obtained to believers by Jesus Christ and so there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ and so they walk not after the leading and direction of that law of sin within them but after the guiding of our blessed Tutor the Spirit of God If you ask how this comes to pass by what authority or law or power is this releasement and freedom obtained Here it is by the Law of the Spirit of life which is in Christ. Christ is not an invader or unjust conquerour he hath fair Law for what he doth even against these Laws which detains unbelievers in bondage There is a higher and later Law on his side and he hath power and strength to accomplish his design He opposes Law unto Law and life unto death and spirit unto flesh a Law of Spirit unto a Law of sin and flesh a Law of life unto a Law of death In a word the Gospel or Covenant of Grace unto the Law or Covenant of Wo●ks the powerful and living Spirit of grace that wrought mightily in him is set ●●re-against the power of sin and Satan in us and against us the one gives him right and title to conquer the other accomplisheth him for the work and by these two are believers in Jesus Christ made free-men who were bond-men That then which we would speak from these words is the common lot of all men by nature viz. to be under the power of sin and sentence of death the special exemption of believers in Christ and immunity from this or delivery from it and then the true ground and cause of this delivery from that bondage which three are contained in the words It is a purpose indeed of a high nature and of high conce●nment to us all our life and death is wrapt up in this you may hear ma●y things more gladly but if ye knew it none so profitable Therefore let us gather our spirits to the consideration of these particulars As the first all men are under the bondage of a twofold Law the law of sin within them and the law of death without them Man was created righteous but saith the wise man he found out many inventions a sad invention indeed he found but misery and slavery to himself who was made free and happy His freedom and happiness was to be in subjection to his Maker under the just and holy commands of his Lord who had given him breath and being it was no captivity or restraint to be compassed about with the hedges of the Lords holy Law no more then it is a restraint on a mans liberty to have his way hedged in where he may safely walk that he may keep himself within it from pits and snares on every hand But alace if we may say alace when we have such a redemption in Jesus Christ. Adam was not content with that happiness but seeking after more liberty he sold himself into the hands of strange lords first sin and then death Other lords besides thee O Lord have dominion over us Isa. 26.13 This is too true in this sense Adam seeking to be as the Lord himself lost his own lordship and dominion over all the works of Gods hands and became a servant to the basest and most abominable of all even that which is most hateful to the Lord to sin and death And this is the condition we are now born into Consider it I pray you we are born captives and slaves the most noble the most ingenuous and the most free of us all Paul speaks of it as a priviledge to be born free to be free in mans Common-wealth It is counted a dignity to be a free Citizen or Burgess of a Town Liberty is the great claim of people now a dayes and indeed it is the great advantage of a people to enjoy that mother and womb-priviledge and right But alace what is all this to be free-born in a civil society it is but the state of a man among men it reaches no further then the outward man his life or estate But here is a matter of greater moment know ye what state your souls are in your souls are incomparably more worth than your bodies as much as eternity surpasseth this inch of time or immortality exceeds mortality your souls are your selves indeed your bodies are but your house or tabernacle ye lodge into for a season Now then I beseech you ask whether ye be born free or not if your souls be slaves ye are slaves indeed for so the Evangelist changeth these Matthew saith in ch 16. ●6 What hath a man gained if he lose his soul And Luke 9.25 saith What hath he gained if he lose himself Therefore you are not free indeed except your souls be f●ee What is it I pray you to enjoy freedom among men I a●k you what are ye before God whether bond or free this is the business in●eed The Phari●ees pleaded a claim to the liberty and priviledge of being Abrahams sons and children and thought they might hence conclude they were Gods children But our Lord Je●us discovers this mis●ake when he tells them of a freedom and libe●ty that he came to proclaim to men to purchase to them and bestow on them they stumbled at this Doctrine What say they talkest thou to us of making us free we were never in bondage for we be Abrahams chil●ren This is
even the language of our hearts when we tell you that ye are born heirs of wrath and slaves of sin and satan he●e is the secret whispering of hearts we be Abrahams seed we were never in bondage to any We be baptized Christians we have a Church State have the priviledges and liberties not only of Subject● in the State but of Members in the Church why sayest thou we are bond-men I would wish ye were all free indeed but that cannot be till ye know your bondage Consider then I beseech you that you may be free subjects in a State and free members in a Church and yet in bondage under the law of sin and death This was the mistake that was a ground of presumption in the Jews and occasioned their stumbling at this Stone of salvation laid in Sion you think you have Church-priviledges and what needs more Be not deceived you are servants of sin and therefore not free There are two sorts or rather two ranks of persons in Gods house Sons and slaves the son abides in the house for ever the slave but for a time when the time expires he must go out or be cast out The Church is Gods house but many are in it that will not dwell in it many have the outward liberties of this house that have no interest in the special mercies and loving kindnesse proper to children The time will come that the most part of the visible Church who are baptized and have eaten with him at his Table and had a kind of frien●ship to him here shall be cast out as bondmen and Isaac only shall be kept within the child of the promise The house that is here hath some inward Sanctuary and some utter Porches many have accesse to these that never enters within the secret of the Lord and so shall not dwell in the house above It is not so much the business who shall enter into the holy hill but who shall stand and dwell in it The day of Judgement w●ll be a great day of excommunication O how many thousands will be then cut off from the Church of the living God and delivered over ●o satan because they were ●eally ●nder his powe● while they were Church-mebers and Abrahams sons Let me tell you then that all of us were once in this state of bondage which Christ speaks of He that committeth sin is the servant of sin John 8.34 and the servant abids not in the house for ever So that I am a●raid many of us who are in the visible Church and stand in this Congregation shall not have liberty to stand in the assembly of the fi●st-born when all the Sons are gathered in one to the new Ierusalem sin hath a right over us and it hath a power over us and the●efore it is called a law of sin the●e is a kind of authority that it hath over u● by vertue of Gods Justice and our own voluntary consent The Lord in his righteou●nesse hath given over all the posterity of Adam for his sin which he sinned as ● common person representing us he hath given us all over to the power of a body of death within us Since man did choose to depa●t from his Lord he hath justly delivered him into the hands of a strange Lord to have dominion over him The transmitting of such an original pollution to all men is an act of glorious justice As he in jus●i●e gives men over to the lusts of their own hearts now for following of these lusts Contrary to his will so was it at first by one mans disobedience m●ny were m●de sinners and that in Gods holy righteousnesse sin entred into the World and had permission of God to subdue and conquer the World to it self because man would not be subject to God But as there is the justice of God in it so there is a voluntary choice and election which gives sin a power over us we choose a strange lord and he lords it over us We say to our lusts Come ye and rule over us we submit our reason our conscience and all to the guidance and leading of our blind affections and passions we choose our bondage for liberty and thus sin h●th a kind of law over us by our own consent it exerciseth a jurisdiction and when once it is installed in power and clothed with it it is not so easie again to put it out of that throne there is a conspiring so to speak of these two to make out the jurisdiction and authority of sin over us God gives us over to iniquity and unrighteousnesse and we yield our selves over to it Rom. 6.16.19 we yield our members servants to iniquitie a little pleasure or commodity is the bait that ensnares us to this we give up our selves and joyn to our idols and God ratifies it in a manner and passeth such a sentence Let them alone he sayes go ye every one and serve your idols Ezek. 23. since ye would not serve me be doing go serve your lusts look if they be better masters then I look what wages they will give you Now let us again consider what power sin hath being thus cloathed with a sort of authority O! but it is mighty and works mightily in men It reigns in our mortal bodies Rom. 6.12 here is the throne of sin established in the lusts and affections of the body and from hence it emits laws and statutes and sends out commands to the soul and whole man Man choose at first to hearken to the counsel of his senses that said it was pleasant and good to eat of the forbidden fruit but that counsel is now turned into a command sin hath gotten a scepter there to rule over the spirit which was born a free Prince sin hath conquered all our strength or we have given up unto it all our strength any truth that is in the conscience any knowledge of God or Religion all this is incarcerated detained in a prison of unrighteous affections sin hath many strong holds and bulwarks in our flesh and by these commands the whole spirit and soul in man and leads captive every thought to the obedience of the flesh You know how strong it was in holy Paul Rom. 7. what a mighty battel and wrestling he had and how near he was to fainting and giving over How then must it have an absolute and soveraign full dominion over men in nature there being no contrary principle within by nature to debate with it it rules without much controlment there may be many convictions of conscience and sparkles of light against sin but these are quickly extinguised and buried Nay all these principles of light and knowledge in the conscience do oftentimes strengthen sin as some things are confirmed not weakned by opposition unequal and saint opposition strengthens the adversary as cold compassing springs makes them hotter So it is here sin takes occasion by the command to work all manner of concupiscence Rom. 7.8 Without the Law sin is
God unbelief and disobedience Now what became of all this work you may know the generality of all ranks have rebelled against that Lord and Prince and withdrawn from his allegiance and revolted unto the same lusts and wayes these same courses against which we had both by our profession of Christianity and solemn oaths engaged our selves and so men have voluntarily and heartily subjected themselves unto the laws of sin and desires of the flesh Hence is the beginning of our ruine because we would not serve our own God and Lord in our own land therefore are so many led away captive to serve strangers in another land therefore we are like to be captives in our own land because we refused homage to our God and obeyed strange lords within therefore are we given up to the lust of strangers without I would have you thinking and that seriously that there are worse masters you serve then these you most hate and that there is a worse bondage whereof you are insensi●le then that you fear most you fear strangers but your greatest evil is within you you might retire within and behold wor●e masters and mo●e pernicious and mortal enemies to your well-being T●is is the case of all men by nature and of all men as far as in nature sin ruling commanding in them and lording it over them and they willingly following after the commandment and so oppressed and broken in judgement If you could but rightly look upon other men you might see that they who are servants o● diverse lusts are not their own men so to speak they have not the command of themselves Look upon a man given to drunkenness and what a slave is he whither doth not his lust drive him let him bind himself with resolutions with vows yet he cannot be holden by them shame before men losse of estate decay of health temporal punishment nay eternal all set together cannot keep him from fulfilling the desires of that lust when he hath opportunity A man given to covetousness how doth he serve that idol how doth he forget himself to be a man or to have a reasonable ●oul within him he is so devoted to it and thus it is with every man by nature there may be many petty little gods that he worships upon occasion but every unrenewed man hath some one thing predominant in him unto which he hath sworn obedience and devotion The man most civilized most abstract from the grosser outward pollutions yet certainly his heart within is but a temple full of idols to the love and service of which he is devoted There is some of the fundamental laws of satans kingdom that rules in every natural man either the lust of the eyes or the lust of the flesh or the pride of life every man sacrificeth to one of these his credit and honour or his pleasure or his profite Self whatever way refined and subtillized in some yet at best it is but an enemy to God and without that sphear of self cannot a man act upon natural principles till a higher spirit come in which is here spoken of Oh! that you would take this for bondage to be under this woful necessity of satisfying and fulfilling the desires of your flesh and mind Eph. 2.2 many account it only liberty and freedom therefore they look upon the laws of the spirit of life as cords and bonds and consult to cast them off and cut them asunder but consider what a wretched life you have with your imperious lusts The truth is sin is for the most part its own punishment I am sure you have more labour and toyl in fulfilling the lusts of sin then you might have in serving God mens lusts are never at quiet they are continually putting you on service they are still driving and dragging men headlong hurrying them to and fro and they cannot get rest what is the cause of all the disquiet disorder confusion trouble and wars in the world from whence do contentions arise come they not hence saith Iames 4.1 even of the lusts that war in our members It is these that trouble the world and these are the troublers of Israels peace these take away both inward peace domestick peace and national peace These lusts Covetousness Ambition Pride Passion Self-love and such like do set nation against nation men and men people and people by the ears These multiply businesses beyond necessity these multiply cares without profit and so bring forth vexation and torment If a man had his lusts subdued and his affections composed unto moderation and sobriety O what a multitude of noysom and hurtful cares should he then be freed from what a sweet calmness should possess that spirit Will you be perswaded of it Beloved in the Lord that it were easier to serve the Lord then to serve your lusts that they cost you more labour disquiet perplexity and sorrow than the Lords service will that so you may weary of such masters and groan to be from under such a law of sin But if that will not suffice to perswade you then consider in the next room if you will needs serve a law of sin you must needs be subject to a law of death if you will not be perswaded to quite the service of sin then tell me what think you of your wages The wages of sin is death that you may certainly expect and can you look and long for such wages God hath joyned these together by a perpetual ordinance they come in the world together sin entered and death by sin and they have gone hand in hand together since and think you to dissolve what God hath joyned Before you go further and obey sin more think I pray you what it can give you what doth it give you for the present but much pain and toyl and vexation in stead of promised pleasure and satisfaction Sin doth with all men as the devil doth with some of his sworn vassals and servants they have a poor wretched life with him they are wearied and troubled to satisfie all his unreasonable and imperious commands he loadens them with base service and they are still kept in expectation of some great reward but for the present they have nothing but misery and trouble and at length he becomes the executione● and perpetual tormenter of them whom he made to serve him such a master is sin and such wages you may expect Consider then what your expectation is before you go on or engage further death We are under a law of bodily death therefore we are mortal our house is like a ruinous lodge that drops through and one day or other it must fall sin hath brought in the seeds of corruption in mens nature which dissolves it else it had been immortal But there is a worse de●th after this a living death in respect of which simple death would be chosen rather men will rather live very miserably then die nature hath an aversation of it skin for skin
himself and fittest to declare himself But then there is yet a higher rise of the mystery or a lower descent of God for it s all one God descending is the wonder ascending he sent his Son mans admiration is already exhausted in that but if there were any thing behind this which follows would consume it in the flesh If he had sent his own Son might he not have sent him in an estate and condition suitable to his glory as it became the Prince and Heir of all things him by whom all were created and do subsist Nay but he is sent and that in a state of humiliation and condescendency infinitly below his own dignity That ever he was made a Creature that the Maker of all should be sent in the form of any thing he had made O! what a disparagement there is no such distance between the highest Prince on the throne and the basest beggar on the dung-hill as between the only begotten of the Father who is the brightness of his glory and the most glorious Angel that ever was made And yet it would be a wonder to the World if a King should send his son in the habit and state of a beggar to call in the poor and lame and blind to the fellowship of his Kingdom It had been a great mystery then if God had been manifested in the nature of Angels a great abasement of his Majesty But O! what must it be for God to be manifested in the flesh in the basest naughtiest and most corruptible of all the Creatures even the very d●eg● of the Creation that have sunk down to the bottom All flesh is gra●s and what more withering and fading even the flower and perfection of it I●a 40.6 Dust it is and what ba●er Gen. 18.27 and corruption it is and what vi●er 1 Cor. 15.44 and yet God sent his Son in the flesh Is this a manifestation nay rather it is a hiding and obscu●ation of his glory it s the putting on of a dark vail to eclipse his brightnesse yet manifested he is as the intendment of the work he was about required manifested to reproach and ignominy for our sin This is one and a great point of Christs humiliation that he took not on him the nature of Angels but the seed of Abraham Heb. 2.16 But yet to compleat this mystery more the Son descends a third step lower that the mystery may ascend so much the higher in the likeness of flesh not so but in the likeness of sinful flesh If he had appeared in the prime flower and perfection of flesh in the very goodliness of it yet it had been a disparagement if he had come down as glorious as he once went up and now sits at the right hand of the Majesty on high if he had been alwayes in that ●e●plendant habit he put on in his transfiguration that had been yet an abasement of his Majesty but to come in the likeness of sinful flesh though not a sinner yet in the likeness of a sinner so like as touching his outward appearance that no eye could discern any difference compassed about with all these infirmities and necessities which are the followers and attendants of sin in us a man of sorrows and acquainted with griefs a man who all his life time had intimat acquaintance and familiarity with grief grief and he were long acquaintance and never parted till death parted them nay not only was he in his outward estate subject to all these miseries and infirmities unto which sin subjects other men but was something beyond all his vi●age more marr'd then any mans and his form more then the sons of men Isa. 52.14 and therefore he was a hissing and astonishment to many he had no form of nor comeliness in him and no beauty to make him desirable and therefore his own friends were ashamed of him and hid their faces from him he was despised and rejected of men Isa. 53.2 3. Thus you see he comes in the most despicable and disgraceful form of flesh that can be and an abject among men and as himself speaks in Psal. 22.6 a worm and not a man a reproach of men and dispised among the people Now this I say is the crowning of the great mystery of Godliness which without all controversie is the mystery in all the world that hath in it most greatnesse and goodnesse combined together that is the subject of the highest admiration and the fountain of the sweetest consolation that either Reason or Religion can afford The mysteries of the Trinity are so high that if any dares to reach at them he doth but catch the lower fall it is as if a worm would attempt to touch the Sun in the Firmament But this mystery is God coming down to man to be handled and seen of men because man could not rise up to Gods highnesse it is God descending to our basenesse and so coming near us to save us It is not a con●ounding but a saving mystery there is the highest truth in it for the understanding to contemplat and admire there is the greatest good in it for the will to choose and rest upon It s contrived for wonder and delight to M●n and Angels these three which the Angelick song runs upon are the Jewels of it Glory to God peace on Earth and good will towards men SERMON XII Rom. 8.3 For what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his own Son c. OF all the works of God towards man certainly there is none hath so much wonder in it as the sending of his Son to become man and so it requires the exactest attention in us let us gather our spirits to consider of this mystery not to pry into the secrets of it curiously as if we had no more to do but to satisfie our understandings but rather that we may see what this concerns us and what instruction or advantage we may have by it that so it may ravish our affections I believe there is very palpable and grosse ignorance in thousands of the very thing it self many who professe Jesus Christ know not his Natures or his glorious Person do not apprehend either his highness as God or his lowness as man But truly the thing that I do most admire is that these who pretend to more knowledge of this mystery yet few of them do enter upon any serious consideration about it for what use and purpose it is though it be the foundation of our salvation the chief ground of our faith and the great spring of our consolation yet to improve the knowledge of it to any purpose of that kind is a thing so rare even among true Christians that it is little the subject of their meditation I think indeed the lively improvement of this mystery of godliness would be very effectual to make us really what we are said to be that is Christians There is somthing to this purpose 1
the very nature of God holiness and goodness As sin is the very nature and image of the Devil the great breach of the Creation was the breaking off of this Image of God that was the heaviest fall of man from that top of divine excellency into the bottom of devillish deformity Now it is this that is the great plot for which Christ came into the world to make up that breach to restore man to that dignity again so that redemption from wrath is but a step to ascend upon to that which is truly Gods design and mans dignity conformity with God in holinesse and righteousnesse O that you could be perswaded of this that Christs businesse in the world was not to bring a notion of an imaginary righteousnesse only by meer imputation but to bring forth a solid and real righteousnesse in our hearts by the operation of his Spirit I say imputation or accounting righteous is but a meer imagination if this lively operation do not follow He came not only to spread his garment over our nakedness and deformity but really and effectually to be a Physician to save our souls to cure all our inward distempers The Gospel is not only a Doctrine of a righteousnesse without us but of a righteousnesse both without for and within us too that the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us c. Christ without happiness it self without cannot make us happy till they come in within us and take up a dwelling in our souls Therefore I declare unto the most part of you who pretend to expect salvation by Jesus Christ that you are yet in your sins and as yet you have no fellowship in this redemption Do you think to walk after the course of the world and the lusts of the flesh to wallow in these common pollutions and uncleannesses among men swearing lying contention railing wrath malice envy drunkenness uncleanness and such like and yet be in Christ Iesus Do not deceive your selves God is not mocked He that is in Christ is a new creature his endeavour and study his affection and desire is toward a new walk after the Spirit Are not most of you carnal all flesh the flesh gives Laws and you obey them Are not your immortal souls enslaved to base lusts to the base love of the world Are they not prone to prostitute themselves to the service of your fleshly and bruitish part Why do you then imagine that ye are in Christ Jesus partakers of his righteousnesse Consider it in time that so you may be indeed what you now are not but pretend to be It is the opinion that you are in Christ already that keeps you out of him But on the other hand again there is nothing here to discourage a poor soul that thinks subjection to sin the greatest slavery who would as gladly be redeemed from the power of it as from hell I say to such whose souls desire it is to be purged from all that filthiness of flesh and spirit and whose continued aim it is to walk in obedience Though you have many sailings and often fall and defile yourself again yet this comfort is holden out here unto you there is no condemnation to you Jesus Christ hath condemned sin to save you he hath fulfilled all righteousness for you and therefore lay you the weight of your acceptation and consolation upon what he hath done himself and not upon what is but yet a doing in you Do you not find I say that the grace of Jesus Christ revealed in the Gospel is that which melts your hearts most Is not the goodness of the Lord that which perswades you most and do not these make you loath your self and love holiness Encourage your selves therefore in him hold fast the righteousness that is without you by faith and certainly you shall find that righteousnesse and holinesse shall in due time be fulfilled within you I know no soul so wretched but it may lay hold on that perfect righteousnesse of Christs and go under the covering of it and take heart from it if so be the desire and affection of their soul be dire●ted to a further end to have his Spirit dwelling within them for the renewing of their heart in righteousness and true holiness I do not say that this is a condition which you must perform before you venture to lay lold on Christs righteousness without you no wayes but rather I would declare unto you the very nature of faith in Christ that it seeks delivery from wrath in him not simply and lastly but that a way may be made for redemption from sin and that there may be a participation of that Divine Nature which is most in its eye SERMON XVI Rom. 8.4 5. who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit For they that are after the flesh c. IF there were nothing else to engage our hearts to Religion I think this might do it that there is so much reason in it Truly it is the most rational thing in the world except some revealed mysteries of faith which are far above reason but not contrary to it there is nothing besides in it but that which is the purest reason Even that part of it which is most difficult to man that which concerns the moderating of his lusts and affections and the regulating his walk and carriage there is nothing that Christianity requires in these matters but that which may be perswaded by most convincing reasons to be most suitable and comely for men as man you may take it in the subject in hand there is nothing sounds harsher to men and seems harder in Religion then such a victory over the flesh such an abstractedness from sensual and earthly things and yet truly there is nothing in the world that more adorns and beautifies a man nothing so elevats him above beasts as this in so much that many natural spirits void of this saving light have notwithstanding been taken with somewhat of the beauty of it and so far enamoured with the love of it as to account all the world mad and bruitish that followed these lower things and inslaved themselves unto them I take the two fountains of all the pollutions disorders and defilements among men to be the inconsideration and ignorance of God that eternal Spirit and fountain-being and the ignorance of our own souls these immortal spirits within us which are derived from that fountain-spirit This is the misery of men that scarce do they once seriously reflect upon their own spirits or think what immortal souls is within them and what affinity these have to the fountain of all spirits therefore do men basely throw down themselves to the satisfaction of the lusts of the flesh Now indeed this is the very beginning of Christianity to reduce men from these baser thoughts and imployments to the consideration of their immortal souls within And O! how will a Christian blush to behold himself in that light to see the
very image of a beast upon his nature to look on that slavery and bondage of his far better part to the worst and bruitish part in him his flesh If a man did wisely consider the constitution of his nature from its first divine original and what a thing the soul is which is truly and more properly himself then his body what excellency is in the soul beyond the body and so what preheminency it advanceth a man unto beyond a beast He could not but account Religion the very ornament and perfection of his nature Reason will say that the spirit should rule and command the body that flesh is but the minister and servant of the spirit that there is nothing the proper and peculiar good of man but that which adorns and rectifies the spirit that all these external things which mens senses are carried after with so much violence do not better a man as man but are common to beasts that in these things mans happiness as man doth not at all consist but in some higher and more transcending good which beasts are not capable of and which may satisfie the immortal spirit and not perish in the using but live with it All these things the very natural frame and constitution of man doth convincingly perswade Now then may a soul think within it self O how far am I departed from my original how far degenerated from that noble and royal dignity that God by the stamp of his image once put upon me How is it that I am become a slave and drudge to that baser and brutish part the flesh I would have you retire into your own hearts and ask such things at them Man being in honour and understanding not is even like the beasts that perish Truly we are become like beasts because we consider not that we are men and so advanced by creation far above beasts The not reflecting on the immortal spiritual nature of our souls hath transformed us in a manner into the nature of beasts perishing beasts Christianity is the very transforming of a beast into a man as sin was the deforming of a man into a beast This is the proper effect of Christianity to restore humanity to elevat it and purifie it from all those defilements and corruptions that were ingrossed and incorporated into it by the state of subjection to the flesh and therefore the Apostle delineats the nature of it unto us and draws the difference wide between the natural man and a Christian The natures of things are dark and hidden in themselves but they come to be known to us by there operations and acting their inclinations and instincts are known this way Grace is truly a very spiritual thing and the nature of it lyes high yet as Christ could not be hid in the house neither can grace be hid in the heart it will be known by its working Christ can better be hid in a house then in the heart because when he is in a heart he is ingadged to restore that heart and soul to its native dignity and preheminency over the flesh and this cannot but cause much disturbance in the man for a season to change governments to cast out usurpers and to restore the lawful and righteous owner to the possession of his right cannot be done secretly and easily it will shake the very foundations of a Kingdom to accomplish it so it is here the restitution of the soul to the possession of its right and dominion over the flesh the casting out of that tyrannous and base usurper the flesh cannot be done except all the man know it feel it and in a manner be pained with it Now the nature of Christianity doth lay it self open to us in these two especially in what it minds and savours and how it causeth to walk life is known especially by affection and motion A feeling thinking ●avouring power is a living power so a moving walking power is a living power and these are here the Christian is shortly described by his nature he is one after the Spirit not after the flesh and by the proper characteristical operations of that nature first minding or savouring the things of the Spirit which comprehends his inward thoughts affections intentions and cogitations all his inward senses are exercised about such objects and then he is one walking after the Spirit his motions are in a course of obedience proceeding from that inward relish or taste that he hath of the things of God It is not without very good reason that the name of a Christian is thus exp●essed one after the Spirit that is his character that expressed his nature unto us whether ye look to the original of Christianity or the prime subject of it or the chief end of it it deserves to be called by this name The original of it is very high as high as that eternal Spirit as high as the God of the spirits of all flesh Things are like their original and some way participat of the nature of their causes that which is born of the spirit is spirit Joh. 3.6 that which is born of God who is a Spirit must be spirit 1 Joh. 5.1 How royal a descent is that how doth it nobilitat a mans nature Truly all other degrees of birth among men are vain imaginary things that hath no worth at all but in the fancies of men they put no real excellency in men But this is only true nobility this alone doth extract a man deface vulgi out of the dregs of the multitude There is no intrinsick difference between bloods or natures but what this make this divine birth this second birth all other differences are but in opinion this is reality it puts the image of that blessed Spirit upon a man Truly such a creature is not begotten in the womb of any natural cause of any humane perswasion or intising words of mans wisdom of any external mercy or judgment no instruction no pe●swasion no allurement nor afrightment can make you Christians in the Spirit till the Spirit blow when he pleaseth and creat you again It must come from above that power that can set your hearts aright and make them to look straight above Christ Jesus came down from Heaven into the earth and took on our flesh that so the Almighty Spirit might come down to transform our spirits and lift them up from the earth to the Heaven We cast the seed into the ground of mens hearts and alace it gets entry but in few souls it is scattered rather on the high-way side and cannot reach into the arrable ground of the heart but it can do nothing without the influence of Heaven except the Spirit beget you again by that immortal seed of the Word Therefore we would cease our wondering that all the means of Gods Word and Works do not beget moe true Christians I do rather wonder that any of Adams wretched posterity should be begotten again and advanced to so high a dignity to
be born of the Spirit O that Christians would mind their original and wonder at it and study to be like it If you believe and consider that your descent is from that uncreated Spirit how powerful might that be to conform you more and more to him and to transform more and more of your flesh into spirit There is nothing will raise up the spirits of the children of Princes more then to know their royal birth and dignity how should the consideration of this make your spirits suitable to your state or fortunes as we use to say You would labour to raise them up to that hight of your original and to walk worthy of that high calling O that we could learn that instruction from it which Paul gives 1 Cor. 1.30 31 But of him are ye in Christ therefore let him that glorieth glory in the Lord Truly a soul possessed with the meditation of this royal descent from God could not possibly glory in these inglorious baser things in which men glory and could not contain or restrain glo●iation and boasting in him The glory of many is their shame because it s their sin of which they should be ashamed but suppose that in which men glory be not shame in it self as the lawful things of this present world yet certainly it is a great shame for a Christian to glory in them or esteem the better of himself for them If this were minded alwayes that we are of God born of God what power do ye think temptations or solistations to sin would have over us he that is born of God sinneth not he keepeth himself and the wicked one toucheth him not 1 Ioh. 5.18 19. Truly this consideration imprinted in the heart would elevate us above all these baser perswasions of the flesh this would make sin loathsome and despicable as the greatest indignity we could do to our own natures The strength and advantage of sin is to make us forget what we are whom we have relation unto to drink us drunk with the puddle of the world or then with our own jealousies and suspitions that we may forget our birth and state and so be enticed to anything If you would have wherewith to beat back all the fiery darts of the devil take the shield of this faith and perswasion how would it silence temptations Shall I who am a Ruler flee saith Nehemiah Shall I who am born of the Spirit shall I who am of God in Christ abase my self to such unworthy and base things Shall I dishonour my father and disgrace my self Then Christianity its chief residence its royal sent is in the spirit of a man and so he he is one after the Spirit Be ye renewed in the spirit of your minds Eph. 4.23 As it is of a high descent so it must have the highest and most honourable lodging in all the Creation that is the spirit of a man without this there is no room else fit for it and suitable to it in this lower world My son give me thine heart saith wisdom Pro. 23.26 It cares for nothing besides if it get not the heart the inmost Cabinet of the imperial City of this Isle of Man for out of it are the issues of life that flow into all the members Do not think that grace will lodge one night in your outward man that you can put on Christianity upon your countenance or conversation without except you admit it into your souls it can have no suitable intertai●ment there alone it s of a spiritual nature and it must have a spirit to abide in Every thing is best preserved and entertained by things suitable to its nature such do incorporat together and inbosome one with another whereas things keep a greater distance with things different in nature a ●●ame will die out among cold stones without oylie matter This heavenly fire that is descended into the world can have nothing earthly to feed upon it must die out except it get into the immortal spirit and then furnish to speak so perpetual nourishment to it till at length all the spirit be set on flame and changed as it were into that heavenly substance to mount up above from whence it came Do not think my beloved to superinduce true Religion upon your out-side and within to be as rotten sepul●●●es You must either open your hearts to Christ or else he will ●ot abide with you such a noble guest will not stay in the suburbs of the City if you take him not into the Palace and truly the palace of our hearts is too unworthy for such a worthy guest it hath been so defiled by sin how vile is it but if you would let him ●●ter he would wash it and cleanse it for himself Will you know then the character of a Christian he is one much within he hath retired into his own spirit to know how it goes with it and he finds all so disordered and confused all so unsetled that he gets so much bu●iness to do at home as he gets no leasure to come much abroad again It is the misery of men that they are wholly without carried into external things only and this is the very character of a beast that it cannot reflect inwardly upon it self but is wholly spent on things that are presented to the outward senses There is nothing in which m●n are more assimilated to beasts then this that we do not speak in our selves or return in to our own bosoms but are wholly occupyed about the things that are without us and thus it fares with us as with the man that is busie in all other mens matters and never thinks of his own his estate must needs ruin all his affairs must be out of course Truly while we are immersed and drowned in external things our souls are perishing our inward estate is washing away all our own affairs that can only and properly be called ours are disordered and jumbled Therefore Christianity doth first of all recall the wandering and vain spririt of man in to it self as that exhortation is Psal. 4.9 to commune with his own heart to make a diligent search of his own affairs and O! how doth he find all out of course as a garden neglected all overgrowen as a house not inhabited all dropping through in a word wholly ruinous through intolerable negligence It was the first turn of the Prodigal to return to himself he came to himself Luke 15.17 Truly sin is not only an aversion from God but it is an estrangement from our selves from our souls from our own happiness it s ● madness that takes away the use of reason and consideration of our own selves But grace is a conversion not only to God but to our selves it bringeth a man home to his heart maketh him sober again who was beside himself Hence that phrase 1 King 8.47 When they shall turn to their own hearts and return It is the most laborious vanity or the vainest labour to compass
heaven and earth to be so busied abroad to know other things and then to know and consider nothing of that which of all things most nearly conc●rns us our selves what shall it profite a man if he gain the whole world and lose his soul for that is himself And what shall it pro●●t to know all and not know his soul to be every where but where he ought to be Well a Christian is one called home from vain impertinent diversions one that is occupyed most about his soul and spirit how to have all the disorders h●●●●ds in himself ord●rd all these distempers cured all these defilements washed this is the business he is about in this world to wash his heart from wickedness Jer. 4.14 To cleanse even vain thoughts and shut up from that ordinary repair his own heart he is about the inclosing it to be a garden to the welbeloved to b●ing forth sweet fruits he is about the renewing of it the adorning of it with the new man against that day of our Bridegrooms appearing and bringing him up to celebrate the marriage Though he be in the flesh yet he is most taken up with his Spirit how to have it restored to that primitive beauty and excellency the Image of God in it how to be cloathed with humility and to put on the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit that he accounts his beauty how to rule his own spirit that he accounts only true fortitude and thinks it a greater vassalage and victory to overcome himself then his enemy and esteems it the noblest revenge not to be like to other men that wrong him he is occupyed about the highest gain and advantage viz to save his spirit and soul and accounts all loss to this to bring Jesus Christ into the heart that is the jewel he digs for and esteems all du●g in comparison of it If you be Christians after the Spirit no doubt you are busied this way about your spirits For others they are busied about the flesh to make provision for its lusts and there needs no other mark to know them by Alas poor souls that you have never yet adverted that you have spirits immortal beings within you which must survive this dust this corruptible flesh What will you do when you cannot have flesh to care for when your spirits can have nothing to be carried forth into but must eterternally dwell within the bosome of an evil conscience and be tormented with that worm the bitter remembrance of the neglect of your spirits and utter estrangement from them while you were in the body then you must be confined within your own evil consciences and be imprisoned there for ever because while yet there was time and season you were alwayes abroad and every where but within your own hearts and consciences and is not that a just recompence Then again as Christianity descends from the Father of spirits into the spirit of a man to lodge there for a while it doth at length bring up the spirit of a man and unites it to that eternal Spirit and so as the Original was high and divine the end is high ●oo It issues out of that fountain and returns with the heart of man to imbosome it self in that ag●in And truly this is the great excellency of true Religion above all these things you are busied about that it elevats the spirit of a man to God that it will never rest till it have carried it above to the fountain-spirit Our spirits are sparks and chips to speak so with reverence of that divine beeing but now they are wholly immersed and sunk into the flesh and into the earth by sin till grace come down and renew them and extract them out of that dung-hill and purifie them and then they are as in a state of violence alwise striving to mount upwards till they be embodied or rather inspirited so to speak in that Original spirit till they be wholly united to their own element the Divine Nature You know Christs Prayer Ioh 17. that they may be one as we are one I in them and they in me that they may may be made perfect in one v. 22 23. then spirits have attained their perfection then will they rest from their labours when they are one with him this is the only Center of spirits in which they can rest immoveable You find all the desires and affections of the Saints are as so many breathings upward pantings after union with him and longings to be intimatly present with the Lord therefore a Christian is one after the spirit groaning to be all spirit to have the earthly house of this tabernacle dissolved and to be cloathed upon with that house from heaven He knows with Paul that he is not at home though he be at home in in the body because the body is that which separats from the Lord which partition wall he would willingly have taken down that his spirit might be at home present with the Lord 2 Cor. 6.1 c. Who knoweth saith Solomon the spirit of a man that ascends upward and the spirit of the beast that goeth downward to the earth Eccles. 3.21 Truly the natural motion of mans spirit should be to ascend upward to God who gave it When this ●rail and broken Vessel of the body is dissolved into the Elements the higher and purer nature that lodged within it should flee upwards to Heaven even as the spirit of the beasts being but the prime and fi●er part of the body not different in nature from the earth naturally falls down to the earth with the body and is dissolved into the Elements But I think the consideration of that woful disorder that sin hath brought into the world that all things in man are so degenerated and become bruitish both his affections and his conversation that carnal and sensual lusts have the whole dominion over men I say the serious and earnest view of this might make a man suspect and call in question whether or not there be any difference between men and beasts whether or not there be any spirit in the one of an higher nature then in the other Truly it would hal● pe●swade that there is no immortal spirit in man else how could he be such a beast all his time serving diverse lusts Can it be possible might one think that there is any spirit in men that can ascend to heaven when there is no motion thither to be observed among men I beseech you consider this the spirit must either ascend or descend when it goes out of the body as now in affection and endeavour it ascends or descends while it is in the body there is an indispensible connexion between these what way soever the spirit aims at which way soever it turns and direct its flight thither it shall be constrained to go eternally Do you think my Beloved while you are in the body to bow down your selves to the Earth to descend unto the service of
the flesh all your time never once seriously to rise up in the consideration of eternity or lift up your heads above temporal and earthly things and yet in the close to ascend unto Heaven No no do not deceive your selves you must go forward this life and eternity makes one straight line either of ascent or descent of happines● or misery and since you have bowed down alwayes while in the body there is no rising up after it forward you must go and that is downward to that element which you transformed your spirits into that is the earth or below the earth to hell your spirits hath most affinity with these and down they must go ●s ● sto●e to the earth But if you would desire to have your spirits ascending up to heaven when they are let out of this prison the body take heed which way they turn bend and strive while here in the body If your struglings be to be upward at God if you have discovered that blessedness is in him and if this be the predominant of your spirit that carries it upward in desires and endeavours and turns it off the base study of satisfying the flesh and the base love of the world if thy soul be mounting alost on these wings of holy desires of a better life then can be found in any thing below certainly the motion of thy spirit will be in ● straight line upward when thou leaves thy dust to the earth An●els waits to carry that spirit to that bosom● of Christ where it longed and liked most to be but devils do attend the souls of most part of men to thrust them down below the earth because they did still bend down to the earth SERMON XVII Rom. 8.5 For they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh c. THough sin hath taken up the principal and inmost Cabinet of the heart of man though it hath fixed its Imperial Throne in the spirit of man and makes use of all the powers and faculties in the soul to accomplish its accursed desires and fulfill its bo●ndless lusts yet it is not without good reason expressed in Scripture ordinarily under the name of flesh and a body of death and men dead in sins are said to be yet in the ●lesh The reason is partly because this was the rise of mans first ruine or the chiefest ingredient in his first sin his hearkning to the suggestions of his flesh against the clear light and knowledge of his spirit The Apple was beautiful to look on and sweet to the taste and this eng●ged man thus the voluntary debasement and subjection of the spirit which was breathed in of God unto the service of that dust which God had appointed to serve it hath turned into a necessary slavery so that the flesh being put in the Throne cannot be cast out and this is the righteous judgment of God upon man that he that would not serve so good and so high a Lord should be made a drudge and slave to the very dregs of the Creation Partly again because the flesh hath in it the seeds of the most part of these evil fruits which abound in the world the most part of our corruptions have either their rise or their increase from the flesh the most part of the evils of men are either conceived in the flesh or brought forth by it by the ministry and help of our degenerat spirits And truly this is it that makes our returning to God so hard and difficult a work because we are in the flesh which is like stubble disposed to conceive flame upon any sparkle of a temptation there are so many dispositions and inclinations in the body since our fall that are as powerful to carry us to excess and inordinatness in affection or conversation as the natural instincts of beasts do d●ive them on to their own proper operations You know the flesh is oft●n times the greatest impediment that the spirit hath because of its lumpishness and earthly q●ality how willing would the spirit be how nimble and active in the wayes of obedience if it were not ●etarded dulled and clogged with the heavy lump of our flesh The spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak saith Christ Matth. 26.41 Truly I think the great re●issness negligence weaknes● fainting of Christians in their race of Christianity ariseth ordinarily from this weight that is carried about with them that is must be some extraordinary impulse of a higher spirit to drive us on without wearying And because of this indisposition of the flesh we are not able to bear much of Gods presence in this life it would certainly confound mortality if so much were let out of it as is in Heaven no more then a weak e●e can endure to behold the Sun in its brightness An● then the flesh as it is the greatest retardment in good it is the greatest incitement to evil it is a bosome-enemy that betrays us to Satan it is near us and connatural to us and this is the great advantage Satan hath of a Christian he hath a f●iend within every Christian that betrays him often You know the most part of temptation● from without could have no such force or strength against us if there were not some predisposition in the flesh some seeds of that evill within if they were not presented with some suitableness to our senses and they being once engaged on Satans side they easily draw the whole man with them under a false colour and pretence of friendship therefore they are said to war against the soul 1 Pet. 2.11 And they are said easily to beset us Heb. 12.1 Truly it is no wonder that the enemy storm our City when the out-works yea the very Ports of the City are possessed by traitors no wonder Satan approach near the walls with hi● temptations when our senses our fleshly part is so apt to receive him and ready to entertain all objects without difference that a●e suitable to affect them You see then how much power the flesh hath in man so that it is no wonder that every ●atural man hath this denomination one after the flesh one carnal from the predomining part though the worst part Every man by nature till a higher birth come may be called all flesh all fashioned and composed of the flesh and after the flesh even his spirit and mind fleshly and earthly sunk into the flesh and transformed into a bruitish quality or nature Now the great purpose of the Gospel is to bring alongs a deliverer unto your spirits for the releasing and unsettering of them from the chains of fleshly lusts This is the very work of Christianity to give liberty to the captive souls of men and the opening of the prison to them that are bound Isai. 63.1 The souls o● men are chained with their own fleshly ●usts and if at any time they can break these grosser chains a●●ome ●iner spirits have escaped out of the vilest
not desire to come again But how inconstrained how free are all other thoughts our minds can roave who le days about vanity about fancies dreams nothings but you n●ither like to admit nor retain the knowledge of God in your mind Rom. 1.28 Do you not intertain any s●rious weighty thoughts of Religion that by occasion may enter as fire-brand● as hot coals in your bosome how glad are you to get any diversion to other things how willing to shun them or cast them out but if it be any temporal thing any thing relating to this flesh your thoughts come freely off are steady and fixed as long as you please your minds can travel through all the ends of the earth to bring in some fancy of gain or advantage or to steal by precious time and that without wearying Now all these thing● considered my beloved are you not carnal I speak to the most of you are you not these who are born of the flesh since you mind nothing seriously resolutely constantly and willingly but the things of the flesh and the things of this life O! it is no light matter to be born of the flesh if you continue so you are ordained for corruption for death to be carnally minded is death vers 6. of this Chap. But I am perswaded better things of some of you that the true light of God hath shined into your hearts and revealed more excellent things unto you then these perishing fleshly things Heavenly substantiall and eternal things in the Gospel which you account only worthy of the fixed and continued meditation of your spirits I am sure you perceive another beauty and excellency in these things then the world doth because the Spirit hath revealed them unto you It is true that your minds are yet much darkned in the apprehension of spiritual things they are not so willing to receive them nor so ready to retain them as you desire they are very unsetled and unstudy in the meditations of spiritual things and there are innumerable thoughts of other things that pass through your hearts like common Inn● uncontrolled at their pleasure all this is true but I am sure it is the grief of your souls that your hearts are not so fixed and stablished as the excellency of these spiritual things require I know it will be the aim and real indeavour of any spiritual heart to be shutting up all the entries and doors of the mind that vain thoughts enter not yet enter they will there are so many porches to enter in at and our narrow spirits cannot watch at all every sense will let in objects and imagination it self will be active in ●raming them and presenting them but yet the indeavour of a Christian will be not to let them lodge long within Ier. 4.14 If they come in unawars he will labour to make a diversion to a ●etter purpose and so still it holds good that the current and course of a Christians thoughts and cogitations ar● upon the things of the Spirit how to get his own h●art washed and cleansed how to be more holy and conformed to Christ how to be at peace with God and keep that peace unbroken how to walk in obedience to God and in duty towa●ds men how to forsake himself and withall to deny himself in all the●e I ●ay his most serious and solemn thoughts are about these things his resolved and advised thoughts run most on t●is st●ain though it be true that whether he will or not other vain and impertinent or not concerning thoughts will passe more lightly and too frequently through his heart The other thing in which this spiritual life doth appear is the current of the affections or that relish and taste of the sweetness of the things of the Spirit flowing from the apprehension of them in the mind When the light i● discovered indeed and O! it is a pleasant thing for the eye to behold it as Solomon speaks then the spirit hath found an object suitable to its nature and so it relisheth and delighteth in it Therefore the word is not simple minding or thinking but savouring thinking with affection upon them tasting and seeding upon the knowledge o● them it is a minding of them with ca●e and delight with ea●nestness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O taste and see how good the Lord is Psal. 34.8 Some things cannot be indeed known but by some sense you cannot make a blind man apprehend what light is till he see it a dea● man cannot form a notion of sounds in his mind except he once heard them neither can a man understand the sweetnesse of honey but by tasting it Truly spiritual things are of that nature there is some hidden vertue and excellency in them which is not obvious to every man that hath bare knowledge of the letter there is a spirit and life in them that cannot be transmitted into your ears with the sound of words or infused into ink and paper it s only the inspiration of the Almighty can inspire this sensible preception and ●eall taste of spi●itual things some powders do not smell till they be beaten truly till these truths be well powdered and beaten small by meditation they cannot smell so fragrantly to the spirit As meats do not nourish till they be chewed and digested so spiritual things do not relish to a soul nor can they truly feed the soul till they be chewed and digested into the heart by serious and earnest consideration this is that which makes these same truths to be someway not the same these very principles of Religion received and confessed by all to be lively in one and dead in another it is the living conside●ation of living truth the application of truth to the heart that makes it lively in one whereas others keep it only besid● them in a corner of their minds or in a book in the corner of one hou●e the same meat is laid to you all the most part look on it others contemplat it and exercise only their understandings abo●t it but there are some who taste it and find sweetne●● in it who digest it by meditation and solemn a vocation of their hearts from the things of the world and therefore some are fed some are starved Need we to enlarge much upon this subject Is it not too too palpable that many who fill up our Churches are in the flesh because they do mind and savour only the things of the flesh and not of the spirit Will you seriously search your hearts ask what relishes most with them Can you say that it is the Kingdom of God or the righteousness thereof Or is not rather these other things of food and raiment and suchlike that have no extent beyond this narrow span of time I am perswaded the hearts of many taste no sweetness in Religion else they would fix more upon it and pursue it more earnestly Are not the things of another world the great things of the Gospel counted all strange
things Hos. 8.12 As thing● that you have not much to do with Do you not let the Officers of Jesus Christ all the sweet invitations of the Gospel passe by as strangers and as if ye were unconcerned in them What taste have they more then the white of an egg How unsavoury a discourse or thought to a carnall heart is it to speak of subduing the lusts of the flesh of dying to the world of the world to come Who findeth their hearts inwardly stirred upon the proposal of Jesus Christ But if any matter of petty gain were proffe●ed O! how would men listen with both their ears How beautiful in the eyes of the covetous mind is any gain and advantage the sound of money is sweeter to him then this blessed sound of peace and salvation How sweet is pleasure to the voluptuous What suitablenesse and conveniency is apprehended in these perishing things but how little moment or weight is conceived and believed to be in things eternal O how substantial do things visible seem to men and how triffling do other things invisible appear But for you whose eyes are opened to you Christ is precious to you the things of the Spirit are beautiful and all your grief is that you cannot affect them according to their worth or love them according to their beauty I say some there are who do see a substance and subsistance only in things not seen Heb. 11.1 And for things that are seen and visible in this world they do account them shadows only in comparison of things invisible The world apprehend no realities but in what they see but a Christian apprehends no solide reality in that he sees but only in that he sees not and therefore as in his judgment he looks upon the one as a shadow the other as a substance so he labours to proportion and conform his affection to a suitable intertainment of them to give a shadow or show of affection to the things of this life but the marrow and substance of his heart to the things invisible of another life Thus the Apostle 1 Cor. 7.29 c. Rejoycing as if we rejoyced not enjoying as if we possessed not using as if we used not half acts for half objects if we give our whole spirits the strength of our souls and minds to them we are as foolish as he that strikes with all his strength at the air or a feather there is no solidity or reality in these things able to bottom much estimation or affection only mind them and use them as in the by as in passing through towards your Countrey SERMON XVIII Rom. 8.5 6. For they that are after the flesh do mind c. For to be carnally minded is death but to be spiritually minminded is life and peace THere are many differences among men in this world that as to outward appea●ance are great and wide and indeed they are so eagerly pursued and seriously minded by men as if they were great and momentous You see what a strife and contention there ●s among men how to be extracted out of the dregs of the multitude and set a little higher in dignity and degree then they how do men affect to be honourable above the base how do they seek to be rich and hate poverty These differences of poor and rich high and low noble and ignoble learned and unlearned the thoughts of men are wholly taken up with But there is one great difference that is most in Gods eye and is both substantial and eternal and so infinitely surpasseth all these d●ffe●ences that the minds of men most run out upon and it is he●e the great difference between flesh and spirit and them that are after the flesh and them that are after the sp●rit This is of all other most considerable because widest and durablest I say it is the widest of all for all other● put no great difference between men as men they do reach the peculia● excellency of a man that is the true and proper good of his spiritual and immortal part they are such as befalls alike to good and bad and so cannot have either much good or much evil in them I have seen folly set in great dignity and Princes walking on foot Eccle● 10.6 7. Then certainly such titles of honour and dignity such places of eminency erected above the multitude have little or nothing worth the spirit of a man in them seeing a fool a wicked man is as capable of them as a wise man or a man of a princely spirit and ●o of all others they do not elevat a man as a man above others A poor unlearned mean man may have more real excellency in him then a rich learned and great person But thi● draws a substantial and vast difference indeed such as is between flesh and spirit such as is between men and beasts You know what p●eheminency a man hath over a beast there is no such wide distance among the s●ns of men as between the lowest and meanest man and the chiefest beast There is a spirit in man saith Elihu Job 32.8 An immortal eternal substance of a far higher nature and comprehension You know what excellency is in the spirit beyond the flesh such as is in heaven beyond the earth for the one is breathed from Heaven and the other is taken out of the dust of the earth the one is corruptible yea corruption it self the other incorruptible How swi●t and nimble are the motions of the Spirit from the one end of Heaven to the other How can it compasse the earth in a moment Do but look and see what a hudge difference is between a beautiful living body and the same when it s a dead carcass rotten and corrupted It is the spirit dwelling within that makes the odds that makes it active beautiful and comely but in the removal of the spirit it becometh a piece of the most defiled and loathsome dust in the world Now I say such a vast and wide difference there is between a true Christian and a natural man even taking him in with all his common indowments and excellencies the one is a man the other a beast the one is after the flesh the other after the spirit It is the ordinary compellation of the Holy Ghost man being in honour and understanding not is like the beasts that perish Psal. 49.20 and Psal. 94.8 Vnderstand ye bruitish among the people c. and Psal. 92.6 The bruitish man understands not this And Eccles. 3.18 That they themselves may know that they are but beasts Therefore you find the Lord often turning to beasts to insensible creatures thereby to reprove the folly and madness of men Isa. 1.2 and Ier. 8.7 Man hath two parts in him by which he hath affinity to the two m●st distant natures he stands in the midle between Angels and beasts in his spirit he riseth up to an Angelick dignity and in his body he fall● down to a bruitish condition Now which
of these hath the preheminency that he is If the spirit be indeed elevated above all sensual and earthly things to the life of Angels that is to communion with God then a man is one after the Spirit an Angel incarnat an Angel dwelling in flesh but if his spirit throw it self down to the service of the f●esh minding and favouring only things sensual and visible then indeed a man puts off humanity and hath associated himself to beasts to be as one of them And indeed a man made thus like a beast is worse then a beast because he ought to be far better it is no disparagement to a beast to mind only the flesh but it is greatest abasement of a man that which draws him down from that higher station God had set him into to the lowest station that of beasts and truly a Nebu●hadnezzar among beasts is the greatest beast of all far more bruitish then any beast Now such is every man by nature that which is born of the flesh is flesh even man as he comes out of the womb is degenerated and fallen down into this bruitish estate to mind to savour to relish nothing but what relates to this fleshly or temporal being The utmost sphear and comprehension of man is now of no larger extent then this visible world and this present life He is blind and seeth not far off 2 Pet. 1.9 Truly such is every man by nature whereas the proper native sphear of the spirits motion and comprehension is as large as its endurance that is as long as eternity and as broad as to reach the infinitness of God the God of all spirits now through the slavery and bondage of mens spirits to their flesh it s contracted into as narrow bounds as this poor life in the flesh he that ought to look beyond time as far as eternity and hath an immortal spi●it given ●or that end he is now half blind the eye of the mind is so over-clouded with lusts and passions that it cannot see far off not so far as to the morrow after death not so far as to the entry of eternity And truly if you compare the context you will find that whosoever doth not give all diligence to add to faith vertue to vertue knowledge to knowledge temperance to temperance patience and to patience godliness c. He that is not exercised and imployed about this study how to adorn his spirit with these graces how to have a victory over himself and the world and in respect of these accounts all things beside indifferent such a man is blind and seeth not far off he hath not gotten the sight of eternity he hath not taken up that everlasting endurance else he could not spend his time upon the provision for the lusts of the flesh but he behoved to lay such a good foundation for the time to come as is here mentioned If he saw afar off he could not but make acquaintance with those courtiers of Heaven which will minister an entrance into that everlasting Kingdom But truly while this is not your study you have no purpose for Heaven you see nothing but what is just before your eye and almost toucheth it and so you savour and mind only what you see Is not this then a wide difference between the children of this world and the children of God Is it not very substantial all others are circumstantial in respect of this this only puts a real difference in that which is best in men viz. their spirits The excellency of nature is known by their affections and motions so are these here the spiritual man savours spiritual things the carnal man carnal things every thing symphathizes with that which is like it self and is ready to incorporat into it things are nou●ished and preserved by things like themselves You see the Swine embraces the dung-hill that stink is only savoury smell to them because its suitable to their nature but a man hath a more excellent taste and smell and he savours finer and sweeter things Truly it cannot choose but that it must be a nature more swinish or bruitish then ● swine that can relish and savour such filthy abominable works of the flesh as abound amongst some of you The works of the flesh are manifest Gal. 5.19 and indeed they are manifest upon you acted in the very day time out-facing the very light of the Gospel you may read them and see if they be not too manifest in you Now what a base nature what abominable and bruitish spirits must possesse men that they apprehend a sweetnesse and fragrancy in the●e corrupt and stinking works of the old man O how base a scent is it to smell and savour nothing but this present world and satisfaction to your senses Truly your scent and smell your relish and taste argues your base degenerat and bruitish natures that you are on the worst side of this division after the flesh But alace it is not possible to perswade you that there is no swee●ness● no fragrancy nothing but corruption and rottennesse such as comes out of Sepulchres opened in all these wo●ks of the flesh till once a new spirit be put in you and your natures changed no more then you can by eloquence perswade a sick man who●e pallat is possessed with a vitiated bitter humour that such things as are suitable to his vitiated taste are indeed bitter or make a swine to believe that the dunghill is stinking and unpleasant Truly it is as impossible to make the multitude of men to apprehend to relish or savour any bitterness or loathsomnesse in the wayes and courses they ●ollow or any sweetness and fragrancy in the wayes of Godlinesse till once your tastes be rectified your spirits be transformed and renewed And indeed when once the spirit is renewed and dispossessed of that malignant humour of corruption and fleshly affection that did present all things contrary to what they are then it is like a healthful and wholsome pallat that tastes all things as they are and finds bitter bitter and sweet sweet or like a sound eye that beholds things just as they are both in colour quantity and distance Then the soul savours the sweet smell of the fruits of the Spirit vers 22. Love joy peace long-suffering meekness temperance c. these are fragrant and sweet to the soul and as a sweet perfume both to the person that hath them and to others round about him and to God also these cast a savour that allures a soul to seek them and being possessed of them they cast a sweet smell abroad to all that are round about and even as high as Heaven a soul that hath these planted in it and growing out of it is as a garden inclosed to God These fruits are both pleasant and sweet to the soul that eats them and as the pleasantness of the apple allured man to taste it and sin so the beauty and sweetnesse of these fruits of the Spirit
draws the spirit of a man after them he hath found the savour and seen the beauty and this allures him to taste them and then he invites the welbeloved to come and taste also to eat of these fruits with him We might instance this in many things a Christian relishes more sweetnesse in temperance in beating down his body and bringing it into subjection in abstaining from fleshly lusts then a carnal man tastes in the most exq●isite pleasures that the world can afford A Christian he savours a sweetnesse in meeknesse and long-suffering he ●ath more delight in forgiving and forbearing and praying for them that wrong him then a natural man hath in the accomplishing of the most greedy desires of revenge O what beauty hath gentlenesse goodnesse and patience in his eye what sweetness is in the love of God to his taste How ravishing is the joy of the Holy Ghost How contenting is that peace that passeth understanding These are things of the Spirit that he minds and savours Know Christians that it is to this ye are called to mind these things most and to seek them most beware lest the deceitfulness of sin intise you through the treacherous and deceitful lusts that are yet living in your members If you indeed mind these things and out of the apprehension of the beauty and savour of the sweetnesse and smell of the fragrancy of them would be content to quite all your corrupt lusts for to be possessed with them then you are on that blessed and happy side of this great and fundamental division of men you have indeed the priviledge of all others who are not renewed what ever be your condition in the world you are of the Spirit and this is better then to be rich wise great and honourable God hath not given you such things as the world go mad after but envy them not he hath given you better things more real and substantial things that makes you far better and more excellent But then this difference as it is the widest so it is the durablest as it is substantial here so it is perpetual hereafter When all the other differences between men shall be abolished this alone shall remain and therefore you have it in the next vers to be carnally minded is death but to be spiritually minded is life and peace This division that is begun here shall g●ow wider fo● all ete●nity there shall be a greater difference after this life and a more sensible separation Death and life eternal death and ete●nal life are the two sides of this diffe●ence as it shall shortly be stated When all other degrees and distances of men sha●l be blotted out and buried in eternal oblivion there shall no ves●●ge or ma●k remain of either wisdom or riches or honour o● such like but al● mankind shall be as to these outward things levelled and equalized this one unseen and neglected difference in the world sha●l appear and shine in that day when the Lord maketh up his jewels then he will discern between the righteous and the wicked between him that feareth God and him that feareth him not Mal. 3.18 The carnal and spiritual man have opposite affections and motions the spirit of the one is on a journey or walk upward after the Spirit and the spirit of the other is on a walk downward towards the flesh and the further they go the further distant they are the one shall be taken up to the company of the spirits of just men made per●ect and to the fellowship of Angels the other shall be thrown down into the fellowship and society of Devils and truly it is no wonder it ●all so low for all its motions in the body was downward to the fulfilling of the lusts of the flesh Thus you see the difference will grow wider and more sensible then it is yet between the godly and ungodly in this world it doth not so evidently appear as it will do a●terward As two men that leave one another and have their faces on contrary ai●ts at the beginning the distance and difference is not so great and so sensible but wait a little and the further they go the further they are distant and the wider their separation is Even so when a Christian begins to break off his way from the common cour●e of the world it doth not appear to be so different from it as to convince himself and others but i● his face be towards Ierusalem above and his heart thitherward certainly he will be daily moving further from the world till the distance be sensible both to himself and others he will be more and more transformed and renewed till at length all be changed No wonder then that these two cannot meet together in the end of their course whose course was so opposite Though wicked men will desire to die the death of the righteous yet it is no more possible they can meet in the end then Hell and Heaven can reconcile together because they walk to two contra●y points SERMON XIX Rom. 8.6 For to be carnally minded is death but to be spiritually minded is life and peace IT is true this time is short and so short that scarce can similitudes or comparisons be had to shadow it out unto us it s a dream a moment a vapour a flood a flower and whatsoever can be more fading or perishing and the●e●ore it is not in it self very considerable yet in another respect it is of all things the m●st precious and worthy of the deepest attention and most serious consideration and that is because it is linked unto eternity there is an indissolvable knot between them that no power or art can break or loose The beginning of eternity is continuedly united to the end of time and you know all the infinit extension o● eternity is uniform it admits of no change in it from better to worse or worse to better and therefore the beginning of our eternity whether it be happiness or misery is but one perpetuated and eternized moment so to speak Seing then we are into the body and sent unto the world for this end that we may passe through into an unchangeable eternal estate Truly of all things it is most concerning and weighty what way we choose to this journeys end seing the time is short in which we have to walk and it is uncertain too we ought as the Apostle Peter speaks give all diligence as long as the day remains we should drive the harder lest that eternal night overtake us The shortness and uncertainty of time should constrain us to take the present opportunity and not to let it slip over as we do seing it is not at all in our hand either what is past or what is to come the one cannot be recalled the other is not in our power to call and bring forward therefore the present moment that God hath given us should be catched hold on and redeemed as the Apostle speaks Eph. 5.16 We
should buy it at the dearest rate of pains and expenses from all those vain impertinent and trifling diversions that take it up that we may imploy it as it becomes suitable to eternity that is posting on And then as the shortness of it makes it the more precious and considerable in regard of the end of it eternity as the scantnesse of a thing increases the rate of it so that same consideration should make all worldly things that are confined either in their being or use within it to be incosiderable as Paul 1 Cor. 7.29 30 31. shews seing the time is short it remaineth that we should rejoice as not rejoicing weep as not weeping buy as if we possessed not use the world as not abusing it Seing all its worth is to be esteemed from the end of it eternity never ending then certainly whatsover in time doth not reach that end and hath no connexion with it we should give it but such intertainment as a passing bird that is pleasant to the eye gets of a beholder while it is in its flight the shortness of the day should make us double our diligence and put on the harder in our walk or race that so we may come in time to our place of rest and that same should make the passenger give an overly and passing look to all things that are by the way and which he must of necessity leave behind him Seing these things then are so important let us draw our hearts together to consider what the Lord speaks to us in this word for in it you have two wayes and two ends opposite and contrary wayes and walks and as contrary ends the wayes are walking after the flesh and walking after the Spirit the ends to which they lead are death and life We spoke something of the wayes and the wide difference that is between them what excellency is in the one beyond the other but truly it is hard to perswade you to take off your accustomed wayes and walks because your inward sense and the inclination of your hearts is wholly perverted and corrupted by nature You know the moving faculty is subordinat in its operations unto the knowing feeling and apprehending-faculties The locomotive power is given for a subsidiary and help to the apprehensive and appetitive powers because things are convenient and disconvenient good or evil to the nature of the living creature are without it and it could not by meer knowledge or desire or hatred of things either come in possession of them or eschew them therefore God hath given them a faculty of moving themselves to the prosecution and attainment of any apprehended good or to the eschewing and aversion from any conceived evil Thus when beasts savour or smell that food which is fit for them their appetite stirs them up to motion 〈◊〉 it to obtain it Now I say if this inward sense be ●orrup●●d th●n things that are destructive will be conceived good because they are suitable to that corrupt humor or quality that possessed the senses and thus all the motion and walk will be disordered The truth is my beloved our spirits and minds are infected with a poysonable humour fleshly passions and lusts are predominant naturally and as in them that are in a feaver their organ being distempered with a bitten unsavoury humour the pleasantest things seems unsavoury because not suitable to that predominant humour even so it is wi●h you by nature That which puts all upon motion is out of course since the fi●st distemper of m●n your spirits and minds are fleshly and carnal they have a strong and deep impression of all the lusts that are in the body and are accordingly affected and therefore you cannot fitly judge what is good or evil for you but as these Isai. 5.20 You m●st call evil good and good evil bitter sweet and sweet bitter because you are already prepossessed thus And therefore the wayes of the flesh those paths that lead to destruction you cannot but look on them as plea●ant because they suit and please your corrupted sense or spirit and so this disordered savour or smell of some fragrant perfume in the ways of the flesh puts you upon walking in these wayes and being thus possessed and ingaged you cannot but stop your ears to all contrary perswasions you think it against-your sense and reason to tell you that these are loathsome and unsavoury and that the other wayes of widom and spirit are pleasantness and peace I say you cannot believe this till your hearts and spirits be purged and your taste be pure and uncorrupted It is certainly upon this ground that our Saviour puts such characters upon the way to Heaven and Hell to life and death the one is strait and narrow and few walk in it the other broad and easie and many walk in it Matth. 7.13 Certainly it is not the way in it self simply that admit● of such a motion to speak properly as the thing is the way to life by the guiding of the Spirit is easiest plainest shortest and broadest it hath all the properties of a good way none so pleasant and plain how sweet and pleasant sights all the way its an Alley of delight the way of his Commandments it wants not accommodation in it to refresh the Traveller the most delightful company is here the Father and the Son who sought no other company from all eternity but were abundantly satisfied and rejoiced one another this fellowship the Christian hath to solace himself with and he is admitted to be partaker of that joy There is nothing that doth disbu●den the soul so of care and anxiety nothing doth rid a man of so many perplexities and troubles as this way But the way of sin in it self is most laborious most difficult it hath infinite by-wayes that it leads a man into and he must turn and return and run in a circle all the day all his time to satisfie the infinit lusts and insatiable desires of sin O! how painful and laborious is it to fulfill the lusts of the flesh how much service doth it impose how serious attention what perplexing c●res and tormenting thoughts how many sorrows and griefs are in every step of this way Do you not perceive what drudges and slaves sin makes you how much labour you have to satisfie your lusts and you are alwayes to begin as near that which you seek in the end of your years as in the beginning How thorny how myry is the way of covetousness Are you not alwayes out of one thorn into another and cut asunder or pierced through with many sorrows 1 Tim. 6.10 Mat. 13.22 Is that a pleasant and easie way I pray you that makes all your sorrow and your travel grief and suffers not your heart to take rest in the night Eccles. 2.22 23. What pains of body What plotting o● mind What labour and vexation of both must a sinner have as his constant attendants in this way The way is intricat deep
unpassable that leads to that satisfaction you desire to your lusts your desires are impotent and impatient the means to carry you on are weak and lame nothing accommodat or fit for such a journey and this puts you alwayes as it were on the rack tormented between the impatience of your lusts and the impotency of means and impossibility to fulfill them Desires and disappointments hopes and fears divide your souls between them Such is the way after the flesh an endle●s labyrinth of woes and miseries of pain● and cares ever while here But these wayes receive such names from the common opinion and apprehension of men because of our flesh which is predominant the way after the flesh being suitable to it though in it self infinitely more ●oy●●ome seems easie and plain but the way after the Spirit seems str●it n●rrow toy●some and laborious Though there be infini●e more room in the way to life because it leads to that 〈◊〉 universal good it exp●ti●ts toward the Al-fulness of God yet to flesh how narrow and strait is it because it cannot admit of these inordinat lusts that have swelled so immeasurably towards narrow and scant things The true latitude of the way of flesh is not great for it is all inclosed within poor lean narrow created objects but because the im●gin●tion of men supplies what is wanting really and fancies an infinite or boundless extent of goodness in these things therefore the sinner walks easily without straitning to his flesh it is not pinched in this way of fleshly lusts But alas the Spirit is wofully straitned fettered and imprisoned though it be not sensibly found What is the reason then that so many walk in the way to death but because their flesh finds no straitning no pressure in it it is an easie way to their natures because suitable to the corruption that is in them therefore men walk on without consideration of what follows it s like a descent or going down a hill so easie to our flesh and on the other hand the way to life after the Spirit is an ascent upward and it is very difficult to our earthy and lumpish flesh Our spirits by communion with and subjection to the flesh are made of an earthly quality near the element of the flesh and so they bow naturally downward but if once they were purified and purged and unfettered by the Spirit of God and restored to their native purity they would more easily and willingly move upward as you see the flame doth and till this be done in you we cannot expect that you will willingly and pleasantly walk in these pleasant walks after the Spirit your walk will never be free and unconstrained in the paths of godliness You may from some external motives and impulses move upward for a season in some particular duties of Religion as a stone cast up but that impression is not from an inward principle so it will not be constant and durable but you will ●all down to your old byasse in other things and move quite contrary when the external impression of fear of savour of custome or education or such like wears out But the true Christian hath a spirit within him the root of the matter in him this carries him upward in the wayes of obedience after the motions and directions of Gods Spirit At the beginning indeed it is strait and uneasie to his flesh but the difficulty is overcome if once you begin well The beginning as you use to say is the half of the whole Truly to be well entred is half progresse afterward the bulksom and burdensome lusts of the flesh are stript off at least in a greater measure and then the spirit moves easily and willingly this walk becomes a recreation that at first was a labour Now delight and desire are as wings to mount the soul aloft now it s the good pleasure of the soul to walk to all well-pleasing Indeed the way of this world is dirty and filthy and therefore a Christian had need to watch continually and to gird up his loyns that his thoughts and affections hang not down to the earth else they will take up much fi●th and cannot but clog and burden the spirit and make it drive heavily and slowly as Pharaoh did his Chariots when the wheels are off We had need to flee aloft above the ground and not to come down too low near it thinking withall to double out our journey for we shall find that because of the remnants of flesh within us that this world hath a magnetical attractive vertue to draw us down to it if we be within the sphear of its activity It is not good coming near fire with flax we would endeavour to keep our hearts at much distance and disingage them from lower consolations This world is like the pestiferous Lake of Sodom that kills all that flees over it and makes them fall down into it If we flie low upon the surface of it we cannot choose but that spiritual life will be much extinguished but to prevent this we would take our flight straight upward after the Spirit for that is the proper motion of the more pure and spiritual part of this world and give no rest till we be out of the reach of that infection till you be fully escaped the pollutions of the world But if you cannot be perswaded to come off this way that seems so pleasant to your flesh that way which is the very course of the world for these are joyned Eph. 2.2 Then I beseech you stand still and consider whither it will lead do but stop a little and bethink your selves sadly and seriously whither this will take you where it shall end And truly that is dread●ul the end o● it is death a never-ending death I am sure if you were walking by the way and one came and told you gravely and seriously That that way is full of dangerous pits that there are many robbers in it waiting to cut your throat you would count the admonition worthy of so much notice as to halt and consider what to do But now when the Lord himself that deserves infin●t more respect and credit then men gives you warning once and often day after day repeats this admonition to you sends out many ambassadors to call you off makes this word to sound dayly in your ear Oh! why will yee die such wayes lead down to the chambers of death and hell to be carnally minded in the issue is death whatsoever you may promise to your selves I say when he makes a voice to accompany us in all our walkings this is not the way that leads to life why do you not think it worthy of so much consideration as once to stop and sift your progresse till you examine what will come of it Are we so credulous to men and shall we not believe God who is truth it self who affirms it so constantly and ob●e●ts us so earnestly Are we so wise and prudent
in lesser things and shall we be mad self-willed and refractory in the greatest thing that concerns us eternally O! unbelief is that which will condemn the world the unbelief of this one thing that the walking a●●er and minding of the flesh is mortal and deadly Though all men confesse with their tongues this to be a truth yet it is not really believed the deep inconsideration and slight apprehension of this truth makes men boldly to walk and violently to run on to perdition Did you indeed believe that eternal misery is before you at the end of this way and would you be so cruel to your selves as to walk in it for any allurement that is in it Did you really believe That there is a precipice into utter darkness and everlasting death at the end of this alley would the pleasure and sweetness of it be able to in●atuat you and besott you so far as to lead you on into it like an Ox to the slaughter and a fool to the correction of the stocks It is strange indeed thou you neither will believe that death is the end of these things nor yet can you be perswaded that you do not believe it there is a twofold delusion that possesses the hearts of men one is a dream and ●ancy of escaping death though they live in sin another is a dream and fancy that they do believe that death is the wages of sin We might wonder how they consist together if we did not find it by so many experiences Your way proves that you do not believe it that death is the end of it and then your words evidence that you do not believe That you are unbelievers of that O! how desperat is the wickedness and how great is the deceitfulness of the heart The false Prophet that is in every mans bosome deceives him that it may destroy him As Satan is a liar and murderer and murders by lying so the heart of man is a self-murderer and self-destroyer and that is done by lying and d●ceiving There is some lie in every ●in but there is this grosse black fundamental lie at the bottom of all sin A conceit of immunity and freedom from death and hell a strong imagination of escaping danger even though such a way be chosen and walked into as of its own nature inevitably leads to destruction And there is something of this bloody murdering flattery even in the hearts of Christians therefore this Apostle gives us an antidot against it and labours often to purge it out by stirring up that knowledge they have received Know you not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God 1 Cor. 6.9 Be not deceived God is not mocked for what a man soweth that he shall reap he that soweth to the flesh shall reap corruption c. Gal. 6.7 8. O! that you might listen to this word to this watch word given you and stop your course at least for a season to think what shall be the latter end know ye not that such shall not inherit the Kingdom know you not that the way to heaven lyes upward know you not that your way lyes downward towards the flesh and the earth are you so far demented as to think to come to Heaven by walking just downward in the lusts of the flesh Truly this is the strongest and strangest inchantment that can be that you think to sow one thing and reap another thing to sow darkness and reap light to sow corruption and reap incorruption Is that possible in nature to sow nettle-seed and think to ●eap barley or wheat Be not deceived O that you would undeceive your poor deluded souls and know that is as natural for Death and Hell to grow out of sin and walking after the flesh as it is for every seed to yeeld its own fruit and herb Do you then think to disolve the course and order of nature Truly the flesh is mortal in it self it s ordained for corruption you see what it turns to after the life is out that is an embleme of the state of the fleshly soul after death As you did abase your spirits to the service of the flesh here and all your plowing and labouring and sowing was about it the seed which you did cast in the ground was Fleshly lusts earthly things for the satisfaction of your flesh so you shall reap of the flesh Corruption death and destruction that shall make your immortal spirits mortal and corruptible and subject them to death and corruption with the body as far as they are capable it shall deprive them of all that which is their proper life and refreshment and separat them eternally from the fountain of blessedness and banish them out of Heaven unto the fellowship of devils and Oh! that corruption of the incoruptible spi●it is worse then the corruption of the mortall flesh corruptio optimi pessima Now who ever of you is thus far undeceived as to believe your danger and misery and to discern that imbred delusion of your hearts be not discouraged utterly there may be hope of recovery when you see your disease I say if you see that hell is at the end of your way then know that He who sent that voice to call you off that way of death He leaves you not to your own wits to guide you into the right way but He follows with a voice behind you ●aying Here is the way walk in it turn not out of it to the right hand or left and this voice sounds plainly in the Word and it is nothing el●e but the sound of the Gospel that blessed sound that invites and allures you to come in to Jesus Christ the way truth and life the true way to the true life All other wayes all other lifes have no truth in them it s but a cloud a fancy that men apprehend and lay hold on But come to this way and it will truly lead thee to the true life eternal life if you flee unto him out of the apprehension of your danger you have a clear way to come to God and as plain a way to attain life and peace Being in Christ you have assurance of not falling into condemnation He is such a way as will hold you in and not suffer you to go out of it again to the way of Death And therefore he will give you a Tutor a guider and directer in this way to life and peace and that is the Holy Spirit to lead in all truth and to guide your feet in the way of his Commandments so that in this new and living way of Christ you shall have both light of the Word to know where to walk and life of the Spirit to make you walk toward that eternal life and thus grace and truth is come by Christ. Indeed you must suffer the mortification of your flesh you must endure the pain of the death of your lusts the cutting off your right hand and plucking out your right
favour to us especially since the goodness of God is so exundant as to overflow even to the wicked world and vent it self as out of superabundance in a river of goodness throughout the whole earth how much more will it run abundantly towards them whom he is well pleased with and therefore the Psalmist cryes out as being already full in the very hope and expectation of it That he would burst if he had not the vent of admiration and praise O how great is His goodness and how excellent His loving-kindness laid up for them that fear him Psal. 31.19 and 36.7 But on the other hand how incomparable is the misery of them who cannot please God even though they did both please themselves and all others for the present to be at odds with him in whom alone they can subsist and without whose savour is nothing but wretchedness and misery O! that must be the worst and most cursed estate imaginable to be in such a state as do what they can they cannot please him whom alone to please is of only concernment what can be invented to that Now if you ask who they are that are such the words speak it plainly in way of inference from the former doctrine Therefore they that are in the flesh cannot please God Not they in whom there is flesh for there is remnants of that in the most spiritual man in this life we cannot attain here to Angelick purity though it should be the aim and endeavour of every Christian. But they that are in the flesh or after the flesh importing the predominion of that and an universal thraldom of nature unto it which indeed is the state of all men that are but once born till a second birth come by the Spirit of Jesus Christ. The ground of this may be taken from the foregoing discourse and it is chiefly twofold one is because they are not in Iesus Christ in whom his soul is well pleased another is because they cannot suit and frame their carriage to his pleasure since all mankind hath fallen under the displeasure of the most high God by sinning against him in preferring the pleasure of the flesh and the pleasure of Satan to the pleasure of God there can be no atonement found to pacifie him no sacrifice to appease him no ransome to satisfie his Justice but that one perfect offering for sin Iesus Christ the propitiation for the sins of the elect world This the Father accepts in the name of sinners and in testimony of his acceptance he did two several times by a voice from Heaven declare first to a multitude Matth. 3.17 and then to the beloved Disciples Matth. 17.5 and both times with great Majesty and solemnity as did become him that this is his well-beloved Son in whom his soul is well pleased It pleased God to make the stream of his love to take another channel after mans sin and not to run immediatly towards wretched man but he turned the current of his love another way to his own Son whom he choosed for that end to reconcile man and bring him into favour and his love going about by that compass comes in the ●ssue towards poor sinners with the greater force He hath appointed Christ the meeting-place with sinners the dayes-man to lay his hands on both and therefore he is God to lay his hand on God and Man to lay his hand on man and bring both into a peaceable and amicable conjunction Now then whoever are not in Iesus Christ as is spoken vers 1. certainly they cannot please God do what they can because God hath made Christ the Center in which he would have the good pleasure of sinners meeting with his good pleasure and therefore without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 not so much for the excellency of the act it self as for the well-pleasing object to it Christ. The love of the Father is terminat in Him His Justice is sati●fied in Him His love is well pleased with the excellency of His person He finds in him an object of delight which is no where else and His Justice is well pleased with the sufficiency and worthiness of His ransome and without this compass there is neither satisfaction to the one nor to the other so then whatsoever you are how high soever your degree in the world how sweet soever your disposition let your natures be never so good your carriage never so smooth yet certainly there is nothing in all that can please God either by an object of love or a price for justice You are under that eternal displeasure which will fall on and crush you to pieces mountains will not be so heavy as it will appear in that great day of his wrath Rev. 6. I say you cannot come from under that imminent weight of eternal wrath unless you be found in Iesus Christ that blessed place of immunity and refuge if you have not forsaken your selves and your own natures and denied your own righteousnnss as dung to be found in him cloathed with his righteousness and satisfaction If the delight and pleasure of your soul do not co-incide and fall in at one place with the delight and good pleasure of the Father that is upon his well-beloved Son Certainly the pleasure and good will of God hath not as yet fallen upon you and met with you therefore if you would please God be pleased with Christ and you cannot do him a greater pleasure then believe in him Joh. 5.23 that is absolutely resign your selves unto him for salvation and sanctification The other ground is Such as are in the flesh cannot frame their spirits affections and wayes to Gods good pleasure for their very wisdome the very excellency that is in them is enmity to God and cannot subject to His Law and therefore they cannot please him I am sure you may easily reflect upon your selves and find not with much search but upon all these as the Prophet Ier. 2.34 speaks that it is not the study and businesse you have undertaken To please God but the bent and main of your aims and endeavours is to please your selves or to please men This makes many mens pains even in Religion displeasing to God because they do not indeed mind his pleasure but their own or others satisfaction what they do is but to con●orm to the custome of the time or commandments of men or their own humour and all this must needs be abominable to God Truly that which is in great account among men is abomination to God as our Saviour speaks of the very righteousness and professed piety of the Pharisees Luk. 16.25 the more you please your selves and the world the further you are from pleasing God The very beginning of pleasing God is when a soul falls in displeasure at it self and abhorrency of his own loathsomness therefore it is said The humble and contrite spirit I will look unto and dwell with him and such sacrifices do please
God Isai. 66.2 P●al 51.17 For the truth is God never begins to be pleasant and lovely to a soul till it begin to fall out of love with it self and grow loathsome in its own eyes Therefore you may conclude this of your selves That with many of you God is not well please● although you be all baptized unto Christ and do all eat of that same spiritual meat and drink of that same spiritual drink though you have all Church-priviledges yet with many of you God is not well pleased as 1 Cor. 10.2 3 4 5. not only because these works of the flesh that are directly opposite to his known will such as fornication murmuring grudging at Gods dispensation cursing and swearing lying drunkenness anger malice stri●e variance and such like abound as much among you as that old people But even these of you that may be free from gross opposition to his holy will your nature hath the seed of all that enmity and you act enmity in a more covered way you are so well pleased with your selves your chief study is to please men you have not given your selves to this study To conform your selves to the pleasure of God therefore know your dreadful condition you cannot please God without whose favour and pleasure you cannot but be eternally displeased and tormented in your selves Certainly though now you please your selves yet the day sh●ll come that you shall be contrary to your selves and all to you as it is spoken as a punishment of the Iews 1 Thess 2 15. and the●e are some earnest of it in this life many wicked persons a●e set contrary to themselve● and all to them they are like Esau their hand against all and all mens hand against them yea their own consciences continually vexing them this is a fruit of that ●●ndamental discord and enmity between men and God and if you find it not now you shall find it hereafter But as for you that are in Jesus Christ who being displeased with your selves have fl●d in to the well-beloved in whom the Father is well pleased to escape Gods displeasure I say unto such your persons God is well pleased with in Christ and this shall make way and place for acceptance to your weak and imperfect performances this is the ground of your peace and acceptance and you would take it so and it shall yeeld you much peace when you cannot be pleased with your selves But I would charge that upon you that as you by believing are well pleased with Christ so you would henceforth study to walk worthy of your Lord into all well-pleasing being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God Col. 1 10. This is that to which you are called to such a work as may please him to conform your selves even to His pleasure and will If you love him you cannot but fashion your selves so as he may be pleased O how exact and observant is love of that which may ingratiat it fell in the beloveds favour It is the most studious thing to please and most afraid of displeasing Ene●h had a large and honourable testimony as ever was given to man that he pleased God Heb. 11.5 I beseech you be ambitious of this after a holy manner labour to know his will and that for this end that you may approve it and prove it that you may do that good and acceptable will of God let his pleasure be your rule your law to which all within you may conform it self Though you cannot attain an exact correspondence with his pleasure but in many things you will offend yet certainly this will be the resolved study of your hearts how to please him and in a● far as you cannot please him you will be displeased with your selves But then I would advise you in as far as you are displeased with your selves for not pleasing God be as much well pleased with Christ the pleasing-sacrifice and atonement and this shall please God as much as your obedience could do or your disobedience can displease him To Him be praise and glory SERMON XXIII Rom. 8.9 But ye are not in the flesh but in the spirit if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you Now if any man c. APplication is the very life of the Word at least it is a necessary condition for the living operation of it the application of the Word to the hearts of hearers by Preaching and the application of your hearts again to the Word by meditation these two meeting together and striking one upon another will yeeld fire Paul speaks of a right dividing of the word of truth 2 Tim. 2.13 not that ordinary way of cutting it all in parcells and dismembering it by manifold divisions which I judge makes it loss much of its vertue which consists in union though some have pleasure in it and think it profitable yet I do not see that this was the Apostolick way that either they preached it themselves or recommended it to others but rather he means the real distribution of the food of souls unto their various conditions as it is the duty of a Steward to be both faithful and wise in that to give every one their own portion And as it is the Pastors duty thus to distribute the Word of God unto you so it is your part to apply it home to your selves without which application the former division of the Word aright will not seed your souls If every man act not the Pastor to his own heart it cannot profit Now indeed the right application of the Word to souls is the difficultest part of Preaching and it is the hardest point of hearing in which there needs both much affection and much direction the one to be serious and earnest in it the other to be wise and prudent in it without suitable affection it will not passe into the substance of the soul to feed it no more then the stomack can digest meat that wants convenient heat and without discretion and wisdom to choose our own portion it will not yeeld convenient food but increase humours and superfluities or distemper our spirits That which I look at in these words is the discretion and prudence of this wise Steward in Gods House after he hath represented the wretched and woful estate of them that are in the flesh how their natures cannot but act enmity against God how their end is death and destruction he subjoyns in due season a suitable encouragement to believers you are not in the flesh c. Because there is no man so sensible of that corruption that dwells within as he that is in part renewed as pain to a healthful body is most sensible and as the abundance of light makes a larger discovery of what is disordered and defiled in the house therefore such upon the hearing of the accursed estate of men in nature of their natural rebellion against God and Gods displeasure against them they are most ready I say
to apply suc● things to themselves to the weakning of their own h●nds and sadning of their hearts as the upright-hearted Disciples were more ready to take with the challenge of betraying Christ than the false-hearted Iudas Therefore the Apostle prevents such an abuse of the Doctrine by making application of the better part unto the Romanes but for you ye are not of the flesh c. Indeed self-examination is necessary and it s like the chewing of the meat before it be sent into the stomack it is as necessary and precedent before right application I wish that every one of you would consider well what this living Word concerns you it is the ground of all our barrenness no man bring● this home to himself which is spoken to all but truly the Lord ●peaks to all that every man may speak to himself and ask at his own heart what is my concernment in it what is my portion As for you whom the Lord hath put upon this search of your selves and hath once made you to find your selves in the black roll of perdition under the hazard of the eternal weight of Gods displeasure and there hath shewed unto your souls a way of making pea●e with God and a place of refuge in Jesus Christ which hath sometimes refreshed and eased your hearts and only was able to purifie your consciences and calm the storms that did arise in them if it be henceforth your study To walk to please him and this engagement be on your hearts To make no peace with the flesh and corruption that dwells in you then I say the Lord he calls and accounts you not carnal but spiritual though there be much carnality in you yet he denominats from the better part not from the greatest part you are not after the flesh but after the spirit Though Isaac be a weak young child and Ishmael the son of the bond-woman be a strong man yet thou art in Gods account esteemed according to the promise which shall be the ground of thy stability Isaac must abide in the house for ever and grow stronger and stronger and Ishmael must be cast out and grow weaker and weaker the one is ordained for destruction and so is called the old man drawing near to its grave the other for life and so is a new man renewed day by day Thus they are in Gods promise and you would learn thus to look upon it not according to their present inequality in strength but that future inequality and difference which is wrapt up in the promise of God and the seed whereof is in you As there is a woful penury and scantnesse of examination in the most part of men who are wholly spent without and take no leasure to recognize their own souls so there is a miserable excesse and hurtful superfluity of examination and disputation among many of Gods children who are alwayes in reflection and almost never in action so much on knowing what is that they take not much leasure to do or pursue what is not Truly I think when the Apostle commands u● to examine whether we be in the faith and prove ourselves he did not mean to make it our perpetual exercise or so to presse it as we should not endeavour to be in the faith till we know whether we be in it that were no advancing-way to refuse to go on in our journey till we know what progresse we have made as the custome is But simply and plainly I think he intended to have Christianity begin at examination as the first returning of a soul must needs be upon some inquiry and search of the way and knowledge upon search that our former way was wrong and this is only right But if this be the Porch to enter at will you sit down and dwell in it and not go on into the Palace it self Because you must begin to search what you have learned wrong that now you may unlea●n it will you be ever about the learning to know your condition and by this means never attain to the knowledge of the truth But when you have upon any inquiry found your selves out of the way you should not entertain that dispute long but hea●ken to the plain voice of the Gospel that ●ounds unto you This is the way walk in it I am the way saith Christ enter at me by believing in me Now once having found that you are unbelievers by nature to suspend believing till you prove whether you be in the faith is unreasonable and impossible for certainly having once ●ound your selves void of it you must first have it before you know that you have it you must fi●st apply to action and afterward your examination shall be more easie But I would tell a more profitable improvement of such representations of the sinfull and miserable estate of the ungodly world then you use to make of it and I think it is that the Apostles intend in the frequent turning the eyes of Saints about to the accursed state of the world partly consolation and partly some provocation to suitable walking things that are opposite a●e best known by compa●ison one with another each of them casts abroad a light to see the other by Therefore it is that the Apostles do frequently remind the converted Gentiles of the wretched estate the world lyes into and themselves once were into You see it 1 Cor. 6.11 And such were some of you but now ye are washed And Ephes. 2.1 You who were dead in sins hath he quickned There is not any thing will more commend unto a Christian the grace of God towards him nor to look abroad round about him and take a view of the whole world lying in wickedness and then to lock backward to what himself once was and compare it with what the free grace of God hath made him O what a soul-ravishing contemplation is that 1 Ioh. 5 19. And we ●now that we are of God and the whole world lyes in wickedn●sse how doth this highten the price of grace and how much doth it add to a souls inward contentment to think what it was of it self and what it would undoubtedly have been if not thus wonderfully surprized One used alwayes to look to those below him that he might n●● en●y these above him Truly it might do well here when a Christian is grieved and disquieted because he hath not attained to that desired measure of the Image of God and fellowship with him To cast a look about him to the miserable and hopeless estate of so many thousands who have the image of Satan so visibly engraven on them and have no inward stirring after this blessed Image and reflect a little backward to the hole of the pit whence he was taken to look upon that primitive estate that grace found him into so loathsome as is described Ezek. 16. Would not such a double sight think you make him break out in admiration and be powerful to silence and compose his
God shall dwell in sinful men by his Spirit but in order of nature it hath some influence upon the other without which God could not have dwelt in us There is so much distance and disproportion between his Majesty and us that we could not be well united but by this interveening God coming down f●●st a step into the holy nature of the Man Christ that from thence he might go into the sin●ul nature of other men Our sin●ul and rebellious nature behoved to be first sanctified this way by the pers●nal in-dwelling of God in our flesh and this had made an easie passage into sinful Us for His Spirit to dwell into us powerfully and graciously therefore the Spirit of Christ is said to dwell in us Christs Spirit not only because proceeding from Him as from the Father but particularly because the inhabitation or operation of the Spirit in us is the proper result and fruit of that glorious union of our nature with him He took our flesh that he might send us His Spirit And O what a blessed exchange was this He came and d●elt in our nature that so He might dwell in us He took up a Shop as it were in our flesh that He might work in us and make us again conformed to God We shall not cut this asunder into many parts you see the words contain plainly The very essential definition of a spiritual man and of a Christian. You find a spiritiual man and a Christian equivalent in this ver that is to say they are taken for one and the self same thing and so they are reciprocal of equal extent and restraint every Christian is one a●ter the Spirit and whosoever is after the Spirit is a Christian one of Christs and one a●ter the Spirit is one thing Now the definition of the Christian is taken from that which really and essentially constitutes him such He is one in whom the Spirit of Christ dwells that makes him one after the Spirit that makes him one of Christs because it is the Spirit of Christ. As if you define what a man is you could not do it better then thus he is one endowed with a reasonable soul So the Apostle gives you the very soul and form of a Christian which differenceth from all others As the soul is to the body to make up a man so the Spirit of Christ is to the soul and spirit of a man to make up a Christian as the absence or presence of the soul makes or unmakes a man so the absence or presence of this Spirit makes or unmakes a Christian for you see he makes it reciprocal If you be Christian● the Spirit dwells in you but if the Spirit dwell not in you you are not Christians A word then to the first of these that a Christian and a spiritual man are commensurable one to another It is true there are Iews who are not Iews inwardly but only according to the letter Rom. 2.28 29. And so there are Christians so called who are but so outwardly and in the letter who have no more of it but the name and vi●ible standing in the Church but we are speaking of that which is truly that which it is called whose praise is not of men but of God The name of ● man may be extended to a Picture or Image for some outward resemblance it hath of him but it is not a proper speech no more is it proper to extend the Name of Christians unto the Pictures or Images of Christians such as are destitute of this inward life You may be properly according to Scripture-phrase members of the visible body but you cannot have that real and blessed relation to Jesus Christ the Head which shall be the source of happinesse to all the living members I wish you would take it so and flatter your selves no more with Church-titles as i● these were sufficient evidences for your salvation You would all be called Christians but it fears me you know not many of you the true meaning and signification of that word the most comfortable sense of it is hid from you The meaning of it is That a man is renewed by Christ in the spirit of his mind As Christ and the Spirit are inseparable so a Christian and a spiritual ●ature are not to be ●ound severed Certainly the very sound of the name whereby you are called imports another nature and conversation then is to be ●ound in many You cannot say that you have a shadow of spirituality either in your affections or actions or that you have any real design and study that way but only to please your flesh and satisfie the customs of the world why do you then usurpe the name of Christianity this is a common sacriledge to give that which is holy unto dogs Others give it to you and you take it to your selves But know that though you please your selves and others in this yet without such a renovation of your natures and such a sincere study to be inwardly and outwardly conformed to the profession and name of Christianity you have not your praise of God and him whom God praises and allows not he cannot blesse for ever I am perswaded there are some who are not only in the letter but in the Spirit whose greatest desire and design is To be indeed what they professe and such their praise is of God and if God praise them now they shall be made to praise him for ever hereaf●er such are allowed to take the name and honourable style of Christianity unto them You are Christs nearly interessed in him and if you be Christs own he cannot be happy without you for such was his love that he would not be happy alone in Heaven but come down to be miserable with us and now that he is again happy in Heaven certainly he cannot enjoy it long alone but he must draw up his members unto the fellowship of that glory Now the other thing that which gives even beeing to a Christian is The Spirit of Christ dwelling in him Of this inhabitation we shall not say so much as the comparison being strained will yeeld neither expatiat into many notions about it I wish rather we went home with some desires kindled in us after such a noble guest as the Holy Spirit is and that we were begun once to weary of ●he base and unclean guests that we lodge within us to our own destruction That which I said that the Spirit is to a Christian what the soul is to a man if well considered might present the absolute necessity and the excellency of this unto your eyes Consider what a thing the body is without the soul how defiled and deformed a piece of dust it is void of all sense and life loathsome to look upon Truly the soul of man by nature is in no better case till this Spirit enter it hath no light in it no life in it it is a dark dungeon such as is described Ephes. 4.18
and in his own person he submitted to be tempted to sin though it had been evil for us he had been overcome by it yet this brings him a step lower and nearer us and maketh the union more hopeful But since he can come no lower and can be made no liker us in the case we are in then certainly if the match hold We must become liker him and raised up out of our miserable estate to some suitableness to his holy Nature and therefore the love and wisdom of God to fill up the distance compleatly and effectuat this happy conjunction that the creation seemeth to groan for for vers 22. the whole creation is pained till it be accomplished he hath sent his blessed Spirit to dwell in Vs and to transform our natures and make them partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 as Christ was partaker of humane nature and thus the distance shall be removed when a blessed Spirit is made flesh and a fleshly man made spirit then they are near the day of espousals and this indwelling of the spirit is the last link of the chain that fastens us to Christ and maketh our flesh in some measure like His holy flesh By taking on our flesh Christ became bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh But the union becometh mutual when we receive the spirit we become bone of His bone and flesh of His flesh as it is expressed Eph. 5.30 In allusion to the creation of Eve and her marriage to Adam the ground of the marriage is That near bond of union because she was taken out of man and therefore because of his flesh and bone she was made one flesh with him even ●o the sinner must be partaker of the Spirit of Christ as Christ is partaker of the flesh of sinners and these two concurring these two knots interchanging and woven thorow other we become one fl●sh with him And this is a great mystery indeed to bring two who were so far assunder so near other Yea it is nearer then that too for we are said not only to be one flesh with Christ but one spirit 1 Cor. 6.17 He that is joyned to the Lord is one spirit because he is animated and quickned by one Spirit that same Spirit of Christ and indeed spirits are more capable of union and more fit to embosome one with another then bodies therefore the nearest union conceivable is the union of spirits by affection this maketh two souls one for it transports their spirit out of the body where it lives and setleth it there where it loveth Now my beloved you see what way this great marriage that heaven and earth are in a longing expectation after shall be brought about Christ he did forsake his Fathers house when he lest that holy habitation his Fathers bosome a place of marvellous delight Prov. 8.30 And descended into the lowest parts of the earth Eph. 4.9 And He came out from the Father into the world John 16.28 This was a great journey to meet with poor sinners But that there may be a full and intire meeting you must leave and forsake your fathers house too and forget your own people Psal. 45.10 You must give an intire renounce to all former lovers if you would be His all former bonds and engagments must be broken that this may be tyed the faster And to hold to the subject in hand you must forsake and forget the flesh and be possessed of his holy Spirit as he came down to our flesh you must rise up to meet him in the Spirit the Spirit of Christ must indeed prevent you and take you out of that natural posture you are born into and bring you a great journey from your selves that you may be joyned unto Him This Spirit of Christ is his messenger and ambassadour sent before-hand to fit you and suit you for the day of Espousals and therefore he must have a dwelling and constant abode in you This indwelling imports A special familiar operation and the perpetuity or continuance of it The Spirit is every where in his being and he worketh every where too but here he hath a special and peculiar work in commission To reveal the love of God in Christ to engage the soul to love him again to prepare all within for the great day of Espousals to purifie and purge the heart from all that is displeasing to Christ to correspond between Christ and his Spouse between Heaven and Earth by making intercession for her when she cannot pray for her self as you find here vers 26. and so sending up the news of the souls panting and breathing after Christ sending up her love groans and sighs to her beloved giving intelligence of all her necessities to Him who is above in the place of an Advocat and Interceeder and then bringing back from Heaven light and life direction from her Head for the Spirit must lead in all truth and consolation for Christ hath appointed the spirit to supply his absence and to comfort the soul in the mean time till he come again you have this mutual and reciprocal knot in 1 Ioh. 4.13 Hereby we know that we dwell in him and he in us by the spirit that he hath given It is much nearness to dwell one with another but much greater to dwell one in another and its reciprocal such a wonderful interchange in it we in him and he in us for the Spirit carries the soul to Heaven and brings Christ as it were down to the earth He is the Messenger that carries Letters between both our prayers to Him and His prayers for us and love-tokens to us the anointing that teacheth us all things from our husband 1 Ioh. 2.27 and revealing to us the things of God 1 Cor. 2.12 giving us the fi●st fruits of that happy and glorious communion we must have with Christ in Heaven as you see ver 23. of this chap. and sealing us to the day of redemption Eph 1.13 and 4.30 Supplying us with divine power against our spiritual enemies fetching alongs from Heaven that strength whereby our Lord and Saviour overcame all Eph. 3.16 Gal. 5.17 This is a presence that few have such a familiar and love-abode But certainly all that are Christs must have it in some measure Now whosoever hath it its perpetual the Spirit dwells in them It s not a sojourning for a season not a lodging for a night as some have fits and starts of seeking God and some transient motions of conviction or joy but return again to the puddle these go through them as lightning and do n●t warm them or change them but this is a constant residence where the Spirit takes up house he will dwell he dwelleth with you and shall be in you and abide for ever Joh. 14.16 17. If the Son abide in the house for ever Joh. 8.35 much more the master of the house must abide Now the Spirit where he dwells hath gotten the command of that house all
truly these are but shadows and that is the body or substance and because an union that is mutual is nearest it is often so expressed as it imports an interchangeable relation a reciprocal conjunction with Christ. The knot is cast on both sides to make it strong Christ in us and we in him God dwelling in us and we in Him and both by this one Spirit 1 Joh. 4.13 Hereby we know that God dwelleth in us and we in him by his Spirit which he hath given us You find it often in Iohn who being most possessed with the love of Christ and most sensible of his love could best expresse it I in them and they in me He that keepeth his commands dwelleth in Him and he in Him as the names of married persons are spelled through other so doth he spell out this in-dwelling it s not cohabitation but inhabitation neither that alone singlely but mutual inhabitation which amounts to a kind of Penetration the most intimat and immediat presence imaginable Christ ●welleth in our hearts by faith and we dwell in Christ by love Eph. 17. and 1 John 4. Death bringeth him into the heart for it is the very ●pplication of a Saviour to a sinfull soul. It is the very applying of his blood and sufferings to the wound that sin hath made in the conscience the laying of that sacrifice propitiatory to the wounded conscience is that which heals it pacifies it and calms it A Christian by receiving the offer of the Gospel cordially and affectionatly brings in Christ offered into his house and then salvation comes with him Therefore believing is receiving John 1. the very opening of the heart to let in an offered Saviour and then Christ thus possessing the heart by faith He works by love and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God and God in him Love hath this special vertue in it that it transports the soul in a manner out of it self to the beloved Cant. 1.9 anima est ubi amat non ubi animat the fixing and establishing of the heart on God is a dwelling in Him for the constant and most continued residence of the most serious thoughts and a●fections will be their dwelling in the all fulness and riches of grace in Jesus Christ as the spirit dwelleth where he worketh so the soul dwelleth where it delighteth its complacency in God maketh a frequent issue or outgoing to Him in desires and breathings after Him And by means of this same God dwelleth in the heart for love is the opening up of the inmost chamber of the heart to Him it brings in the beloved in to the very secrets of the soul to lye all night betwixt His breasts as a bundle of myrrhe Cant. 1.13 And indeed all the sweet odours of holy duties and all the performing of good works and edifying speeches spring out only and are sent forth from this bundle of myrrhe that lyes betwixt the breasts of a Christian in the inmost of his heart from Christ dwelling in the affections of the soul. Now this being the bond of union betwixt Christ and us it follows necessarily that whoever hath not the Spirit of Christ he is none of His and this is subjoyned for prevention or removal of the misapprehensions and delusions of men in their self-judgings Because self-love blinds our eyes and maketh our hearts deceive themselves we are given to this self-flattery to pretend and claim to an interest in Jesus Christ even though there be no more evidence for it then the external relation that we have to Christ as members of his visible body or partakers of a common influence of his Spirit There are some external bonds and tyes to Christ which are like a knot that may easily be loosed if any thing get hold of the end of it as by our relations to Christ by baptisme hearing the word your outward covenanting to be his people all these are loose unsure knots It is as easie to untie them as to tie them yea and more easie and yet many have no other relation to Christ then what these make But it is only the Spirit of Christ given to us that intitles and interesseth us in Him and Him in us it s the Spirit working in your souls mightily and continually making your hearts temples for the offering of the sacrifice of prayer and praises casting out all idols out of these temples that He alone may be adored and worshipped by the affectionate service of the heart purging them from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit It is the Spirit I say thus dwelling in men that maketh them living members of the true body of Christ lively joyned to the head Christ this maketh him yours and you his by vertue of this He may command you as His own and you may use and imploy Him as your own Now for want of this in most part of men they also want this living saving-interest in Christ they have no real but an imaginary and notional propriety and right to the Lord Jesus for Christ must first take possession of us by His Spirit before we have any true right to Him or can willingly resign our selves to Him and give Him right over us What shall it profite us my beloved to be called Christians and to esteem our selves so if really we be none of Christs shall it not highten our condemnation so much the more that we desire to passe for such and give out our selves so and yet have no inward aquaintance and interest in Him whose name we love to bear Are not the most part shadows and pictures of true Christians bodies without the soul of Christianity that is the Spirit of Christ whose hearts are treasures of wickednesse and deceit and stor●-houses of iniquity and ignorance It may be known what treasure fills the heart by that which is the constant and common vent of it as our Saviour speakes Matth 15.19 and 12.34 35. Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks the feet walks and the hand works Consider then if the Spirit of God dwelleth in such unclean habitations and dark dungeons certainly no uncleanness or darkness of the house can hinder him to come in but ●t is a sure argument and evidence That he is not as yet come in becaus● the Prince of darkness is not yet cast out of many souls nor yet the unclean spirits that lodge within these haunt your hearts and are as familiar now as ever Sure I am many souls have never yet changed their guests and it is as sure that the fi●st guest that taketh up the soul i● darkness and desperat wickedness with imparalelled deceitfulness there is an accur●ed trinity in stead of that blessed T●inity the Father the Son and the Holy Spirit and when this holy T●inity cometh in to dwell that other of Hell must go out Now my beloved do you think this a light matter To be disowned by Jesus Christ Truly the word of Christ which is the
The more the soul be satisfied with ea●thly things it is the deeper bu●ied in the grave of the flesh and the ●urther separated from God Alas many o● you know no other li●e then that which you now live in the body you neither apprehend what this new birth is nor what the perfect statu●e of it shall be afterwards but truly while it is thus you are but walking shadows breathing ●l●y and no more A godly man used to calculat the years of his nativity from his second birth his conversion to God in Christ And truly this is the true period of the ●ight calculation of life of that life which shall not see death True life hath but one period that is the beginning of it for end it hath none I beseech you reckon your years thus and I fear that you ●eckon your selves many of you yet dead in sins and trespasses Is that life I pray you To eat to drink to sleep to play to walk to work Is there any thing in all these worthy of a reasonable soul which must survive the body and so cease from such things for ever Think within your selves do you live any other life then this What is your life but a tedious and wearisome repetition of such bruitish actions which are only te●minat on the body O then how miserable are you if you have no other period to reckon from then your birth day If there be not a second birth day before your burial you may make your reckoning To be banished eternally from the life of God As for you Christians whom God hath quickned by the Spirit of His Son be much in the exercise of this life and that will maintain and advance it let your care be about your spirits and to hearten you in this study and to beget in you the hope of eternal life look much and lay fast hold on that Life-giving Saviour who by his righteous life and accursed death hath purchased by his own blood both happinesse to us and holinesse Consider what debters ye are to Him who loved not his own life and spared it not to purchase this life to us Let our thoughts and affections be occupied about this high purchase of our Saviours which is freely bestowed on them that will have it and believe in Him for it if we be not satisfied with such a low and wretched life as is in the body He will give a higher and more enduring life and only worthy of that name SERMON XXX Rom. 8.11 But if the Spirit of him that raised up Iesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken you c. IT is true the soul is incomparably better then the body and he is only worthy the name of a Man and of a Christian who prefers this more excellent part and imploys his study and time about it and regards his body only for th● noble guest that lodges within it and therefore it is one of the prime consolations that Christianity affords that it provides chiefly for the happy estate of this immortal piece in man which truly were alone sufficient to draw our souls wholly after Religion suppose the body should never taste of the fruits of it but die and rise no more and never be awak'd out of its sleep yet it were a sufficient ground of engagement to godlinesse that the life and well-being of the far better part in man is secured for eternity which is infinitly more then all things beside can truly promise us or be able to perform Certainly whatsoever else you give your hearts to and spend your time upon it will either leave you in the midst of your dayes and at your end you shall be a fool or you must leave it in the end of your dayes and find your selves as much disappointed or to speak more properly because when your time is ending your life and being is but at its beginning you must bid an eternal adieu to all these things whereupon your hearts are set when you are but beginning truly to be But this is only the proper and true good of the soul Christ in it most portable and easily carried about with you yea that which makes the soul no burden to it self and helps it to carry all things easily and then most inseparable for Christ in the soul is the spring of a never-ending life of peace joy and contentation in the fountain of an infinit goodnesse and it out-wears time and age as well as the immortal beeing of the soul yea such is the strength of this consolation that then the soul is most closly united and ●ully possessed o● that which is its peculiar and satisfying good when it leaves the body in the dust and e●capes out of this p●i●on unto that glorious liberty But yet there is besides this an additional comfort comprehended in the vers read that the sleep of the body is not perpetual that it shall once be awakened and raised up to the fellowship of this glory ●or though a man should be abundantly satisfied if he possesse his own soul yet no man hateth his own flesh the soul hath some kind of natural inclination to a body suitable unto it and in this it differs from an Angel and therefore the Apostle when he expresseth his earnest groan for intimat presence o● his soul with Christ he subjoyns this correction not that we desire to be uncloathed but cloathed upon it 2 Cor. 5.1 2 3. If it were possible sayes he we would be glade to have the society of the body in this glory we would not desire to cast off those cloaths of flesh but rather that the garment of glory might be spread over all if it were not needful because they are old and ragged and would not suit well and our earthly Tabernacle is ruinous and would not be fit for such a glorious guest to dwell into and therefore it is needful to be taken down well then here is an overplus and as it were a surcharge of consolation that seing for the present it is expedient to put off the present cloathing of flesh and take down the present earthly house yet that the day is coming that the same cloaths renewed shall be put on and the same house repaired and made suitable to Heaven shall be built up that this mortal body shall be quickned with that same Spirit that now quickens the soul and makes it live out of the body and so the sweet and beloved friends who parted with so much pain and grief shall meet again with so much pleasure and joy and as they were sharers together in the miseries of this life s●all participat also in the blessednesse of the next like Saul and Ionathan lovely and pleasant in their lives and though for a time separated in death yet not alwayes divided Now is the highest top of happinesse to which nothing can be added its comprehensive of the whole man and its
from sin as the death of Christ is made the pledge of our dying to sin so his rising of our living to God Rom. 6.4 5. These are not meer paterns and examples of spiritual things but assured pledges of that divine vertue and power which he being raised again should send abroad throughout the world for as there are Coronation-gifts when Kings are solemnly installed in office so there are Coronation-mercies triumphal gifts when Christ rose and ascended he bestowed then on the world Eph. 4. And certainly these are the greatest the vertue of his death to kill the old man and the power of his resurrection to quicken the new and by faith a believer is united and ingra●ted into him as a plant into a choice stock and by vertue and sap coming from Christs death and resurrection he is transformed into the similitude of both he groweth into the likenesse of his death by dying to sin by crucifying these inward affections and inclinations to it and he groweth up into the similitude of his resurrection by newnesse of life or being alive to God in holy desires and endeavours after holinesse ●nd obedience And thus the first resurrection of the soul floweth from Christs resurrection But add unto this that Christs rising is the pledge and pawn of the second resurrection that is of the body for He is the head and we the members now it is most incongruous that the head should rise and not draw up the members after him certainly he will not cease till He have drawen up all his mem●ers to him if the head be above water it is a sure pledge that the body will win out of the water if the root be alive certainly the branches will shoot out in Spring-time they shall live also There is that connexion betwixt Christ and believers that wonderful communication between them that Christ did nothing was nothing and had nothing done to him but what He did and was and sufferd personating them and all the benefi●e and advantage redounds to them He would not be considered of us as a person by himself but would rather be still taken in with the children as for love he came down and took flesh to be like them and did take their sin and misery off them and so was content to be looked upon by God as in the place of sinners as the chief sinner so he is content and desirous that we should look on him as in the place of sinners as dying as rising for us as having no excellency or privelege incommunicable to us And this was not hid from the Church of old but presented as the grand consolation Thy dead men shall live ●ogether with my dead body they shall rise and therefore may poor souls awake and sing though they must dwell in the dust yet as the dew and influence of Heaven maketh herbs to spring out of the earth so the vertue of this resurrection shall make the earth and sea and air to cast out and render their dead Isa. 26.19 Upon what a sure and strong chain hangs the salvation of poor sinners I wish Christians might salute one another with this Christ is risen and so comfort one another with these words or rather that every one would apply this cordial to his own heart Christ is risen and you know what a golden chain this draweth after it therefore we must rise and live The other cause which is more immediat and will actively accomplish it is the Spirit dwelling in us for there is a suitable method here too as the Lord first raised the Head Christ and will then raise the Members and he that doth the one cannot but do the other so the Spirit first raiseth the soul from that woful fall into sin which killed us and so maketh it a Temple and the body too for both are bought with a price and therefore the Spirit possesseth both but the inmost residence is in the soul and the bodily members are made servants of righteousness which is a great honour and dignity in regard of that base imployment they had once and so it is most suitable that he who hath thus dwelt in both repair his own dwelling-house for here it is ruinous and therefore must be cast down but because it was once a Temple for the Holy Ghost therefore it will be repaired and built again for he that once honoured it with his presence will not suffer corruption alwayes to dwell in it for what Christ by his humiliation and suffering purchased the Spirit hath this Commission to perform it a●d what is it but the restitution of mankind to an happier estate in the second Adam then ever the first was into Now since our Lord who pleased to take on our flesh did not put it off again but admits it to the fellowship of the same glory in heaven in that he died he dies no more death hath no more dominion over him he will never be wearied or ashamed of that humane clothing of flesh and therefore certainly that the children may be like the father the followers their Captain the members not disproportioned to the head the branches not different and heterogeneous to the stock and that our rising in Christ may leave no footstep of our falling no remainder of our misery therefore the Spirit of Christ will also quicken the mortal bodies of believers and make them like Christs glorious body This must be done with divine power and what more powerful then the Spirit for it is the spirits or subtil parts in all creatures that causeth all motions and worketh all effects What then is that Almighty Spirit not able to do You have shadows of this in nature yea convincing evidences for what is the Spring but a resurrection of the earth Is not the world every year renewed and riseth again out of the grave of Winter as you find it elegantly expressed Psal. 107. and doth not the grains of seed die in the ●lods be●ore they rise to the harvest 1 Cor. 15. All the vicissitudes and alterations in nature give us a plain draught of this great change and certainly it is one Spirit that effects all But though there be the same power required to raise up the bodies of the godly and ungodly yet O what infinit distance and difference in the nature and ends o● their resurrections there is the resurrection of life and the resurrection of condemnation Joh. 5.29 O happy they who rise to life that ever they died but O miserable thrice wretched are all others that they may not be dead for ever The immortality of the souls was infinit misery because it is that which eternizes their misery but when this overplus is added the incorruptibility of the body and so the whole man made an inconsumable subject for that fire to seed upon perpetually what heart can conceive it without horrour and yet we hear it often without any such affection It is a strange life that death is the only
who only think it easie because they have never tryed it It is a Circumcision of the foreskin of the heart and you know how it disabled a whole City Gen. 34. and how it enraged the heart of a tender mother Exod. 4 26. It is the incision or cutting off a member and these the most dear and precious be it the right hand or right foot which is a living death as it were even to kill a man while he is alive It is a new birth and the pains and throws of the birth are known Regeneration certainly hath a travelling pain within it in so much that Paul travelled in pain till it were accomplished in these Galat. 4.19 Though men conceive sin in pleasure yet they cannot be rid of that deadly burden without throws and pain and to half this work or to be remiss and negligent in it is ●s foolish and unwise as for a child to stay long in the place of breaking forth as the Lord complains of Ephraim Hos. 13.13 He is an unwise son for he should not stay long in the place of breaking forth of children It is one of the greatest follies not to labour by all means to be rid of the in●umbrances of sin Much violence offered to it and a total resignation of our selves to God may be great pain but it is short pain then the pleasure is greater and continues But now Christians lengthen their pain and draw out their crosse and vexation to a great extent because they deal negligently in the businesse they suffer the Canaanites to live and these are thorns and briers in their sides continually Then this businesse is called Mortification as the word is here and Col. 3.5 which imports a higher degree of pain for the agonies of death are terrible and to hold it out yet more the most painful and lingering kind of death is chosen to expresse it Crucifiction Gal. 5.24 Now indeed that which makes the forsaking of sin so grievous to flesh and blood is the engagements of the soul to it the onenesse that is between it and our natures as they are now fallen for you know pain ariseth upon the dissolution or division of any thing that is continued or united and these things that are so nearly conjoyned it is hard to separat them without much violence And truly as the Kingdom of Heaven suffers violence so we must offer violence to our selves to our lusts and inclinations who are almost our selves And if ye would be truly Christians this must be your businesse and imployment to cut off these things that are dearest unto you to cast out the very idols your hearts sacrifice unto and if there be any thing more one with you than another to endeavour to break the bond with that and to be at the furthest distance with it It is easie to perswade men to forsake some sins and courses that they are not much in●lined to and find not much pleasure or profit by them You may do that and be but dead in sins but if you aim at true mortification indeed you would consider what are the chief idols and predominant inclinations of your heart and as to set your self impartially against all known sin so particularly against the most beloved sin because it interrupts most the communion of God and separates from you● Beloved and the dearer it be the more dangerous certainly it is But to encourage and hearten you to this I would have you look back to that former victory that Christ hath gained in our name and look about you to the assistance you have for the present the Spirit to help you Truly my beloved this will be a dead businesse if you be not animated and quickned by these considerations that Christ died to sin and lived to God and that in this He was a publick person representing you that so you may conclude with Paul I am crucified with Christ Gal. 2.20 We are buried with him by baptism into his death Rom. 6.4 Consider that mystical union with Christ crucified and life shall spring out of his crosse out of his grave to kill sin in you That the great businesse is done already and victory gained in our head this is our victory even faith Believe and then you have overcome before you overcome and this will help you to overcome in your own persons And then con●ider and look round about to the strong helper you have the Spirit If ye through the Spirit mortifie c. Stronger is he that is in you then he that is in the world though he doth not vent all his power to you yet you may believe that there is a secret latent vertue in the seed of grace that it cannot be wholly overcome or conquered and there is one engaged in the warfare with us who will never leave us nor forsake us who of set purpose withdraweth his help now and then to discover our weaknesse to us that we may cleave the faster to Him who never letteth sin get any power or gather any strength but out of wisdom to make the final victory the more glorious in a word he leads us through weaknesses infirmities fainting● wrestlings that his strength may be perfected in weaknesse that when we are weak then we may be strongest in Him 2 Cor. 12 9. Our duty then is to follow this Spirit wheresoever he leadeth us Christ the Captain of our Salvation when he went to Heaven he sent the Spirit to be our guider to lead us thither where he is and therefore we should resign and give up our selves to His guidance and direction The n●ture of a creature is dependence so the very essence of a Christian consists in dependence and subordination to the Spirit of God Nature it self would teach them that want wisdom to commit themselves to these that have it and not to carry the reins of their own life themselves Truly not only the sense of our own imperfection of our folly and ignorance in these things that belong to life should make us willing to yeeld ourselves over to the Spirit of God as blind men to their leader as children to their nurses as orphans to their Tutors but also because the Spirit is made our Tutor and leader Christ our Father hath left us to the Spirit in his latter-will and therefore as we have absolute necessity so he hath both willingnesse and ability because it is his office O Lord I know saith Jeremiah the way of man is not in himself it is not in him that walketh to direct his steps Jer. 10.23 O! it were a great point of wisdom thus to know our ignorance and folly and this is the great qualification of Christs Disciples simple as children as little children as void of conceit of their own wisdom Mark 10.15 And this alone capacitats the soul to receive the impressions of wisdom as an empty table is fittest to write upon so a soul emptied of it self whereas self-conceit draweth a number of
spirit O to think that I was once in that black roll of these excluded from the Kingdom such were some of you and then to consider That my name was taken out and washed by the blood of Christ to be enrolled in the Register of Heaven what an astonishing thing is it you see in nature God hath appointed contrarieties and varieties to beautifie the world and certainly many things could not be known how good and beneficial they are but by the smart and hurt of that which is opposite to them as you could not imagine the good of light but by some sensible experience of the evil of darkness Heat you could not know the benefit of it but by the vexation of cold Thus he maketh one to commend another and both to beautifie the world It is thus in art contrariety and variety of colours and lines make up one beauty diversity of sounds makes a sweet harmony Now this is the art and wisdom of God in the dispensation of his grace He setteth the misery of some beside the happiness of others that each of them may aggravat another he puts light beside darkness spirit sore-against flesh that so Saints may have a double accession to their admiration at the goodness and grace of God and to their delight and complacency in their own happiness he presents the state of men out of Christ that you may wonder how you are translated and may be so abundantly satisfied as not to exchange your portion for the greatest Monarchs Then I say this may provoke us and perswade us to more suitable walking Doth he make such a difference O do not you unmake it again do not confound all again by your walking after the course of the world conformity to the world is a confusion of what God hath separated Has infinit grace translated you from that kingdom of darkness to light O then walk in that light as children of light are ye such owne your stations consider your relations and make your selves ashamed at the very thoughts of sin he points out the deformed and ugly face of the conversation of the world that you may fall in love with the beauty of holiness as the Lacedemonians wont to let their child●en see their slaves drunk that the bruitish and abominable posture of such in that sin might imprint in the hearts of their children a detestation of such a vice Certainly the Lord calls you to mind often what you have been and what the world about you is not to engage you to it but to alienat your minds from the deformity of sin and to commend to you the beauty of obedience You would learn to make this holy use and advantage of all the wickedness the world lyeth into To behold in it as in a glasse your own image and likenesse that when you use to hate or despise others you may rather loath and dislike your selves as having that same common nature and wonder at the goodness of God that makes such difference where none was This were the way to make gain of the most improfitable thing in the world that is the sins of other men for ordinarily the seeing and speaking of them doth rather dispose us and incline us to more liberty to sin Many look on them with delight some with contempt and hatred of these that commit them but few know how to speak or look on sin it self with indignation or themselves because of the seeds of it within them with abhorrency I would think if we were circumspect in this the worse the world is we might be the better the worse the times are we might spend it better the more pride we see it might make us the more humble the more impiety and impurity abounds it might provoke us to a further distance from and disconformity with the world Thus if we were wise we might extract gold out of the dung-hill and suck honey out of the most poysonable weed The surrounding igno●ance and wickedness of the world might cause a holy Antiperistasis in a Christian by making the grace of God unite it self and work more powerfully as fire out of a cloud and shine more brightly as a torch in the darkness of the night As for you whose woful estate is here described who are yet in the flesh and enemies to God by nature I would desire you to be stirred up at the consideration of this that there are some who are delivered out of that prison and that some have made peace with God and are no more enemies but friends and fellow-Citizens of the Saints If the case were left wholly incurable and desperat you had some ground to continue in your sins and security But now when you hear a remedy is pos●ible and some have been helped by it I wonder that ye do not upon this door of hope offered b●s●ir your selves that you may be these who are here excepted But you are not in the flesh since some are why may not I be Will you awake your selves with this alarm If you had any desire after this estate certainly such a hope as this would give you feet to come to Jesus Christ for these are the legs of the soul some desire of a better estate and some probability of it conceived by hope SERMON XXIV Rom. 8.9 If so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you Now if any man c. BVt will God in very deed dwell with men on earth 2 Chron. 6.18 it was the wonder of one of the wisest of men and indeed considering his infinit Highness above the hight of Heaven his immense and incomprehensible greatnesse that the Heaven of Heavens cannot contain him and then the basenesse emptinesse and worthlessnesse of man it may be a wonder to the wisest of Angels and what is it think you the Angels desire to look into but this incomprehensi●le mystery of the descent of the most High to dwell among the lowest and vilest of the creatures But as Solomons Temple and these visible symbols of Gods presence were but shadows of things ●o come the substance whereof is exhibited under the Gospel so that wonder was but a shadow or type of a greater and more real wonder of Gods dwelling on the earth now It was the wonder shall God dwell with man among the rebellious sons of A●●m But behold a greater wonder since Christ came God dwelling in man ●●st personally in the Man Christ in whom the fulnesse of the God-head dwelt bodily then gra●iously in the seed of Christ in man by His Spirit and this makes men spiritu●l if so be the Spirit of Christ dwell in you You heard of the f●●st in-dwelling ver 3. God sending his own Son in the likenesse of sinful flesh the inhabita●ion of the Divine Nature in our flesh which had the likenesse of sinful ●●esh but without sin for he sanctified himself for our cause And truly this mysterious and wonderful inhabitation is not only a pledge of the other That