Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n flesh_n lust_n sin_n 7,244 5 5.0237 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A55752 Riches of mercy to men in misery, or, Certain excellent treatises concerning the dignity and duty of Gods children by the late Reverend and Faithfull Minister of Jesus Christ, John Preston ... Preston, John, 1587-1628. 1658 (1658) Wing P3306; ESTC R13568 328,523 450

There are 34 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

assumed body and shew of grace That is a common spirit without the life of grace The third propertie of assumed bodies they are unconstant That is assumed bodies walk for a time but they walk not alwayes even so if you have but a common spirit you will not be constant in good but off and on from the Rule A man that is living in Christ you shall find him living and moving and doing the Actions of the new man A man that hath a common spirit may do some things that are good he may keep and press down sin for a while but not alwayes nor then neither as it is sin but because it crosseth his profit or pleasure or some such thing Again he may have some taste or relish o spiritual things But he is not cleansed or purged by them Again they may walk as a living man walks That is perform holy duties but they are not constant in holy duties neither do they perform them in obedience but out of self love That is they are still ebbing and seldom flowing They omit ostner then they perform Therefore let me exhort you all You that are alive and have been dead be you careful to prize your life And you that have been alive and now are dead That is you that have faln from your holiness and zeal and have lost your first love and strength labour now to renew it again But you that are alive and yet are falling let me exhort you to strengthen the things that are ready to die If there be any here such let them now humble themselves and seek the spirit with earnestness That they may be renewed That they may be strengthned and quickned to good and received to favour again But if you will not but continue in this condition still you have but a name that you are alive but indeed you are dead In Rom. 6. it is said That they that die in Christ shall live in him That is if you once live the life of grace and have received the sanctifying spirit you shall never die but live for ever in Christ. This was the promise that Christ made unto his Disciples and in them unto every Christian. That he would send the spirit and he should abide with them for ever Therefore examine if the Spirit do remain in you and make you constant in good if not it is not the sanfying spirit The fifth sign whereby you shall know whether you have the sanctifying Spirit is this examine whether it be the Spirit of adoption That is if it make you to call God Father Then it is the sanctifying Spirit in Galat. 4. 6. We have received the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father That is this is the property of the holy man no wicked man can call God Father because he hath not any such relation unto God he neither loves God nor God loves him The Apostle saith unto the Church I do this to prove or know the naturalness of your ●●ve That is they that have the spirit they have as it were a natural inclination wrought in them to love God again to delight in God and in the Communion of Saints And therefore our Saviour saith in Iohn 4. It is my meat and drink to do the will of my Father That is he that hath God for his Father will serve him willingly without constraint as willingly as a man will eat and drink without wages that is he needs not to have wages to do that so he that hath the spirit he will delight in doing Gods will he will serve God though he should give him nothing And in this that God is our Father it will raise some like affections in us to love God again so likewise in prayer to have God to be our Father it likewise raiseth Son-like affections in us whereby we do not only believe that the things we pray for we shall have but we have also boldness to come unto him as unto a Father which no man can do till he have this spirit of adoption Therefore examine with what confidence and boldness you pray with what reverence you hear with what affection you love That is examine whether you have the spirit that doth make you to call God Father The sixt sign whereby you shall know whether you have the spirit or no is this you shall know it by the manner of working That is if it change you and lie combating in you as in Galat. 5. The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh That is if you have the Spirit you will have continual fighting and striving in the soul and this will not be onely against some or more particular lusts but against all that it knowes to be a sin I say not onely that there is a striving or a suppressing but it is by way of lusting Because a natural man that hath not the sanctifying spirit may keep down a lust for ●●me by-respects but it is not from a 〈◊〉 That is it is not because his heart hates it o●●…sses it by another power then a natu●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 love of sin still But the opposing and resisting of sin in the godly is by way of lusting because they hate the sin and they fight against it with courage Therefore examine what lusting there is in you that is what hating of sin and then see with what courage and power you go about the subduing of it It is said that Iohn Baptist came in the spirit of Elias that is he came with that spirit that is full of power I say you will fight faintly against sin except you have the Spirit when the Disciples had received the Spirit in Acts 4. They spake with great boldness That is they had greater power to speak then before Therefore the Lord exhorts all men in Isai. 30. 3. Trust not in them they are men and not Gods As if the very name of men were weakness That is they are men that have no power it is God that hath power and therefore trust not in them but in every thing labour to see the power of God in it and seek for all spiritual power to good by God and examine your selves what power you have when you pray what power have you to go through to the end when you hear what power have you to edification when you see evil what power have you to avoid it when you are offered the pleasures and profits of the world what power have you to forsake them if they may prove hurtful unto the inward man if you have strong lusts in you what power have you to suppresse and lust against them Therefore you shall know by this whether you have the sanctifying spirit or no by the working of it The seventh sign whereby you shall know whether you have the sanctifying spirit or no is this you shall know it by your carriage in your words and actions and by your
the spirit That it puts the heart in a good frame of grace I say that the spirit and the spirit onely doth this And I speak of them onely that have the spirit That it sets the heart in a frame of holines and new obedience which nature cannot do because it keepes it in suspense That is the flesh suffereth it not to do what it would as to break the stubbornness of nature the flesh will make you very industrious and painful in evil But the spirit will restrain your libertie in evil That is it will not suffer you to do what you would though the lust and the temptation be violent to carry you away after it the spirit will not suffer you to be carried after that manner so long as the Spirit lives in the heart but if once the Spirit depart out of the heart then he becomes as weak as water Thus it was with Reuben in Gen. 44. Reuben is become as weak as water and he became thus after he had defiled his fathers bed that is when lust and opportunitie met together they took away strength and it weakens us because it drawes away the affections from good But when the spirit comes then it casts us into another frame as appears if we do but compare these two places together that in Iames 4. 5. with that in Act. 20. 22. Saint Iames saith That the Spirit lusteth after envie That is it laboureth to carry us headlong unto the committing of sin and to the doing of that which is evil but then comes the sanctifying Spirit and it stayes us and makes us to lust after God that is it bindes up your spirits suffers us not to do that which other wayes we would do Therefore examine whether you are bound with another Spirit that you cannot do the evil that you would do then it is certain that you have the holy Spirit Therefore Paul in the place forenamed said that he was bound in the Spirit for Ierusalem as if he had said the spirit of God bound up my spirit to go that I cannot otherwise chuse Therefore what do you mean to break mine heart what do you mean to hinder me I tell you there is a necessitie laid upon me by the Spirit that I must go whatsoever death befals me For it is the office of the Spirit to bind up our spirits and therefore in Rev. 1. it is said that Iohn was in the Spirit that is he was compast about with the Spirit he was in the Spirit as a man is in armour It keepes I say our spirits in a spiritual disposition that we cannot do the evil we would The second benefit that a Christian hath by the Spirit is this that it enableth him to see and believe the things that otherwise he would not believe And I gather it from that place of the Prophet Isai. 6. 9. where it said seeing they should see and not perceive and hearing they should hear and not understand That is they see but want another sight which is the sight of the Spirit and therefore he cannot see A man may have a great fight of humane things by learning and Philosophie and the knowledge of Arts and sciences by these he may see both into natural and spiritual things in some measure But I say he cannot see as he should except he have added unto this another sight which is the sight that the spirit brings and therefore it is called the opening of the eyes and the boring of the ears and it is that which Saint Iohn speaks of in Iohn 1. that light shined in darkness and the darkness comprehended it not That is before a man have this sight of the Spirit whatsoever he sees it is with a great deal of darkness but when the spirit comes it drives away darkness by giving us another eye to see withall and the darkness comprehended it not That is the light is so great which the Spirit brings that nothing can eclipse the light of it Now untill a man have the spirit he doth neither see or believe truely you will not believe till you have the spirit but when you have got the Spirit then you will believe in Christ. We Preach Christ unto all and exhort you to believe but what is the reason that some believe and others believe not but because they do not see that is they want the spirit to shew their sin to humble them and to shew them Christ to comfort them and therefore Peter cals them purblind As men that are purblind cannot see things afar off so men without the spirit are purblind men that cannot see Christ grace and salvation a far off as near at hand but if they had the Spirit then they would see them neer hand That is you would see a marvellous beautie in Christ and holiness It is that which the Apostle speaks of in the 1 Cor. 2. 9. The eye hath not seen nor the ear heard nor hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive the things that God hath laid up for them that love him That is he saw them before but he saw them not in that manner that he sees them now They are represented unto him in another fashion Again he sees them in another hue that is he sees another beautie in them Thus you see the sanctifying Spirit openeth the eye of the understanding to see more a blind man might see if if he had but the facultie of seeing so spiritually blind persons may see when they have the Spirit The third benefit that a Christian hath by the Spirit is this it breeds heavenly and spiritual effects in the soul as joy and comfort and the like and therefore in Ioh. 14. he is called the Comforter First I say the spirit will bring joy into the soul and therefore in Saint Iohn saith Christ he will lead you speaking of the spirit unto all truth And saith the Apostle The God of peace fill you with all Peace and joy in believing Now I make a difference between joy and comfort thus joy is unto the soul as a wall is unto a City that is as the wall doth compasse the City and so is a defence unto it and keepes out many enemies that other wayes would destroy it so doth joy it walls and fences the soul so as it keepes many dangers out that would ruine it The second effect is comfort and this I call a bulwark because a bulwark is of greater strength to beat off and keep out any that shall besiege it and make the Citizens more secure So comfort is a Bulwark of the soul. That is it strengthens the soul against the greatest temptations and tryals it maketh the soul secure resting upon Christ. The third effect that the spirit begets is boldness there is no true boldness without the spirit let Adam witness it ask him what boldness he had when he hid himself from God and what was the
a Law in his members Thirdly he describes it from the opposite it is such a Law as fights with the Law of his mind Lastly he describes it from the effect or event and success that this Law in his members hath against the Law of his mind it sometimes carried him captive to the Law of sin which was in his members So that you shall find these five things put together in the Text. First that there is a Law that is a strong inclination to evil which is in every mans nature Secondly this Law lies not idle but it fighteth and warreth I find saith he a Law in my members warring against the Law in my mind Thirdly though they do fight and contend yet in every regenerate man it finds resistance therefore he saith It fights against the Law of his mind that is there is a Law a strong inclination to good in every regenerate man which makes resistance against this Law of sin Fourthly though this Law of sin do find resistance yet it sometimes prevails for he saith it leads him captive to the Law of sin sometimes it overcometh and over-ruleth Lastly though it do overcome yet never doth any regenerate man lie under this captivity for in that he saith it carryeth him captive it argueth reluctancy a keeping a stir to vindicate himself from that bondage to his former liberty So you see by this the full meaning of the words But for the present we will pitch upon these two points which we will handle at this time First of all That there is a Law of sin in every mans nature strongly inclining him to that which is evil Secondly That in every regenerate man there is a Law of grace resisting that and strongly inclining him to that which is good To begin with the first I say There is a law of sin in every mans nature strongly inclining him to that which evil For the better understanding of this we must know that there are two laws on both sides There is the Law of God expressed in the Scriptures which is without and there is a Law within every regenerate man that is the regenerate part that which the Scripture calls the spirit and this agreeth with the Law of God in every thing so far forth as a man is regenerate so far he agrees with the Law of God Even as you see one tally agrees with another so doth the regenerate part within and the Law of God without agree together On the other side again there are two Laws likewise First the Law of sin which is without us that is the very decalogue as I may call it or the summary of evil which the Devil prescribes to his servants and then there is answerable within another Law paralelling that Law of sin without and that is a strong habit a strong inclination which carrieth the unregenerate man violently to sin against God and this the Scripture calls by divers names sometimes it calls it The old Adam sometimes it calls it flesh because it deads and dulls the spirit Sometimes it is called the body of sin because it is the very heap of lusts Sometimes it is called the body of death because it leads to death and destruction Now that I may fully open unto you what this strong inclination is wee will go no further then this very verse we have read for you shall have it described by these four things First it is a Law Secondly a Law in the members Thirdly it is a Law that fighteth Fourthly it is a Law that sometimes prevails and leadr us captive We will go through them all very briefly First It is said to be a Law because as a Law it commands with authority so doth this incline us to ill it commands strongly so that it will not be refused And again as it commands so it forbids as powerfully and will not be denied It commands that which is evil to be done by us and carries us strongly to it and it forbids us the doing of that which is good as powerfully The Apostle speaks of some 2 Pet. Having eyes full of adultery that cannot cease●to sin Again it is called a Law because it punisheth and rewardeth as a Law doth for a Law is nothing else but that rule that hath threatnings joyned to the breach of it and rewards for the obedience thereof So hath this law of sinne that is in us if we do obey it rewards us with pleasure The pleasures of sin for a season if we disobey it punisheth us again with grief As we shall see Ahab when he had a little resisted this Law how this Law of sinne punished him it laid him sick upon his bed And so Amnon when a stop was put in the course of this Law that was in his members it made him sick In this respect it is said to be a Law because it commands powerfully and because it punisheth and rewards as a Law Secondly It is said to be a Law in our members and that first because it inclines us to evil not morally evil as when a man perswades a man by strength of reason to a thing But physically and naturally that look what a natural inclination there is in the stomack to eat and to drink such a natural propensness and inclination there is in the heart of a natural man to sin As you see a wheel when a weight is hung upon it it goes and it cannot chuse but go So is it with the nature of a man it inclin●s him unto evil naturally and he cannot resist it Secondly It is said to be a Law of the members because it discovers it self in the members that is in the faculties of the soul and the members of the body whensoever they come to be used in the performance of any holy duty For at you se● it is in the body if there be a lameness or soreness in any member pernaps for the present you see it not 〈◊〉 feel it not till you come to use that member So it is with the Law of sin in our members when we fit at quiet and go not about any duty of holy obedience this Law lies still in the soul and is quiet but when the faculties are to be acted when the member is called forth to do a thing when a work is to be performed that is good then the Law of the members discovers it self Then you shall find the lameness the crookedness the soureness the backwardness that is in your hearts to do any thing that is good And last of all it is called the Law of the members because though it be also in the will and in the mind and in those higher parts of the soul yet chiefly it is operative in the members there you shall see it most As on the other side the Law of grace though it be in the whole man regulating and guiding the whole outward man yet it rests especially in the mind and the will
against this Law of sin in a man that is regenerate he fears anoath it is the expression in Eccl. 9. that is his fear is set a work against sin And so his desire My heart breaks for the desire I have after thy commandements Psal. 119. As if he should say If I had my desire there is nothing that I would wish so soon as to have my sinful lusts mortified to have my soul enabled to keep thy commandements And so for joy I rejoyce greatly saith David to keep thy commandements And so for sorrow Peter wept bitterly This is the first difference in a natural man the combate is onely between the conscience and the rest of the soul but in the regenerate the whole soul all the parts and faculties fight against this Law in the members this law of sin Again as there is a difference in the combatants so secondly there is a difference in the manner of the fight A natural man though he make resistance yet it is but a faint resistance he fights as one that is not willing to overcome or ca●es not whether he get the victory or no he gives but a faint denyal When a suitor is but faintly denyed we know it makes him the more importunate So we shall see balaam when the messengers came from Balaak King of Moab he indeed gave them a denyal but it was such a kind of denyal as that they saw he had a good will to the journey notwithstanding therefore they did not give over to importun him So the prophet that came to Bethel when he began to enter into tearms with the old Prophet we see he was not strong and peremptory in the resistance a parleying castle we know will not long hold out when we come to these faint denyals and no more there is no likelyhood of prevailing Now the resistance that the regenerate part makes it is a strong and resolute resistance like that of Saint Paul when he was to go to Ierusalem why do you weep and break my heart saith he I am not onely ready to be bound but to die for the Name of Christ Like that of David what have I to do with you yee sons of Zerviah So I say this regenerate part it fights not faintly against the Law in the members but it fights strongly like a hearty enemy whom nothing will satisfie but a conquest Secondly for the manner of fighting this is another property in it that the regenerate part doth not dally with sin for it fights out of enmity and when there is an enmity there a man will not indure any thing no not the very appearance of evil As a Pigeon that hates the Hauk will not endure the feather of a Hauk So it is with the regenerate part it will not onely abstain from gross sins but from every thing that is called evil from the tincture from the garment spotted with the flesh Whereas a naturul man perhaps abstains from the gross act but comes as near as he can to the brink of sin Many men will resolve never to be drunk yet you shall find them go to the tavern and sit there till they be overtaken Balaam took up a resolution I will go with you saith he but I will not say any thing but what the Lord shall bid me there he would abstain from the gross act but you see what the issue was even as the Levite he would not stay all night in Benjamin by no means but he would be perswaded to eat his break-fast This is the second difference when the regenerate part fights the resistance is out of enmity it hates all that is called sin it cleanseth it self from all pollution of flesh and spirit The other doth not so it resists onely the gross acts but dallies with that which hath affinity with sin Lastly In this manner of the fight there is this difference that the natural conscience though it strive and contend against the Law of the members yet it doth not fight against it as it is sin but against the shame against the disprofit against those evil consequences that follow sin committed against hell against wrath against eternal death for these are things sensible to him but against sinne it self as it is sinne he doth not resist but the regenerate part resists the sinne it self because there is something within him that is contrary to sinne and therefore he makes resistance against sinne as it is sinne the other I say never makes resistance against it as it is sin but against the consequents and effects of it and this is the second difference they differ in the manner of the fight Thirdly They differ in the object in the thing about which this contention is he that hath onely a natural conscience to fight against the Law of the members his strife is not about things of that nature that the others are moral vices and moral vertues they know and are sensible of they resist the one and stand for the other things that belong to outward credit and civill honesty things that are morally good these things they are sensible of and the contention is about them and no other You see Herod was careful about his oath and why because of those that sat at Table with him and this was the great matter that swayed him And so Darius had a contention when he put Daniel into the Lions den but his promise to the Princes overruled him But there is another kind of contention in the regenerate about things of another nature spiritual evils spiritual wickednesse he fights against those evils that are contrary to the image of God that are contrary to that purity and holiness that God requires Other men see not the things of this nature therefore they cannot resist them When the Sunne shines clear we know we may see the least moat so where there is a clear light of grace that shines in a mans heart he sees spiritual evils which another man sees not he resists them and his chief business indeed is about them Another man cannot perceive them and therefore cannot resist them this is another difference they differ in the object Fourthy This fight differs in the success there is a different success and event in these two fights a natural man though he have many good motions and inclinations and intentions suggested to him yet he walks after the vanity that is in his minde that is his law that is though he have many remorses and checks yet if you observe him in the constant course of his life he serves the flesh and the lusts thereof But in the regenerate it is contrary though he have many evil inclinations many evil suggestions yet he walks after the spirit and not after the flesh that is his constant course is good And if you object are they not foyled many times Did not David fall and Peter fall I answer It is true they may be foyled in
is They would not put off the motions of the spirit but they would strike while the Iron is hot and grinde while the winde blowes But men will not believe and therefore it is that they go on in sin as they do It is not so for earthly things men are easily to be brought to believe any promise of them As for example If a man shall come and tell a man of a commoditie which if he would buy and lay by him it would in a short time yield an hundred for one oh how ready would men be to buy such a commoditie with the wise Merchant Matth. 8. 44. they would sell all that ever they had to buy this oh that men would be thus wise for their souls Beloved I tell you this day of a commoditie the best the richest the profitablest commoditie that ever was bought even Christ grace and salvation for which if you will but lay out your stock to buy them you shall have them that is if you have but a desire to rest your wearied souls on Christ to lay him up in your hearts I tell you it will yield you an hundred for one Christ who is the commoditie himself saith Mark 10. He that for saketh Father and Mother wife and children and life for my sake shall receive an hundred fold in this life and everlasting life in the world to come but men will not believe that but time will come when you shall see it to be true and befool your selves that you lost so precious a bargain as Christ and salvation is for the disbursing of a little profit and pleasure but as I said before the difference lies here men want faith and hence it is that they neglect the strengthening of the inward man And are so over-burthened with losses and crosses because they want faith And so much for the third difference The fourth difference is this natural strength leads a man unto a form of godliness but the spiritual strength leads a man unto the power of godliness I call that the form of godliness when a man doth perform or do any thing with carnal affections not to a right end and it is known by this when men fall away from that stedfastness or form or shew of holiness which they seemed to have this form of godliness is the same with that Heb 6. which have tasted of the word of life and yet notwithstanding fall away that is they seemed to have tasted of saving grace and to have the power with the form but it was not so because they continued not that is they lost the form which made them seem to be that which now it appeares they were not Again I call that the power of godliness which is performed by the Divine power force and efficacie of the spirit in the Rom. 2. it is said that The Gentiles that were not under the Law did by nature the things contained in the Law That is they did not by the power and efficacie of the spirit but by Nature This Paul speakes of in the 2 Tim 2. 3. In the later time men shall come in form of godliness that is with a form or shew without substance or power of the spirit But the inward strength which is in the Inward man doth not onely teach you to do but also it teacheth you how to do them from an inward principle of sanctiing grace But know also men that have but a common strength have some bubbles and motions to good and they seem to have this strength because they have the law of nature written in their hearts and they may promise much and yet not be spiritually strong having onely a form because he cannot do spiritual actions in a spiritual manner for he goes about them with a natural strength which should be performed with a spiritual strength in 1 Pet. 1. 3. Who are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation That is when aman is truly regenerated when he hath not power of his own to do the will of God then he hath the spirit to help him that is they are not only kept by his power but also they are inabled to all the acts of grace betwixt this and salvation The fift difference between the natural and the spiritual strength is this That which proceeds from the spirit is alwayes joyned with Reluctancy of the will but in the natural strength there is no Reluctancy because there is no contraries but in the spiritual man there are two contraries the flesh and the spirit in every new man there are two men and you know these can never agree but are still opposing one another As for example a man that is going up a hill he is in labour and pain but he that is going down a hill goes with much ease so there is much labour and pains which a spiritual man takes to subdue the flesh but the natural man hath no reluctancy at all that is he hath no fighting and strugling with corruption but he goes without pain because he is but one he is one man and one cannot be divided against it self but in every spiritual man there are two men the old man and the new man the flesh the spirit And hence growes that spiritual combate Gal. 5. 13. The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh that they cannot do the things that they would These two men in a regenerate man strive for masteries And you must know also That in a natural man there may be a kind of reluctancy in the will against some particular sin as covetousness strives against pride and pride against niggardness yet not fighting against it as it is a sin but as it crosseth and twarteth his covetousness and pride Again know that a natural man may have reluctancy in some part of the soul as in the conscience the conscience being sensible of sin hence it may convince the man and yet the rest of the faculties be at peace but where this spiritual strength is it is in all parts not one facultie against another but all are fighting against sin in the whole man Now the reason that there is not this reluctancy in every facultie in a natural man is because he wants saving grace to oppose the workings of sin That is grace is not in the facultie opposite unto the corruption that is in it but in the holy man there is And therefore he is like Rebekah there are twins in him Iacob and Esau the flesh and the spirit hence it is that Paul complaineth so in Rom. 7. I finde another Law in my members rebelling against the Law of my mind A Law That is I find something in me that is contrary unto me and in my members That is in my body and soul notwithstanding I see the evil of sin as most contrary to grace yet I cannot avoid it I cannot do the things that I would But
as of fire And again it is said That the Apostles were stirred up with boldness to speak That is when they saw God dishonoured this spirit kindled a high zeal in them that is set their hearts on fire it set their tongues on fire when the spirit enters into the heart of a Christian it will fill it full of zeal the heart the tongue the hands the feet and all the rest of the parts will be full of the heat of the spirit for it is imposssible that any man should have true zeal except he have the spirit Therefore it is said that they spake with New tongues us the spirit gave them utterance that is they spake with a great deal of zeal of another nature and qualitie then they did before Well then examine what heat and zeal you have in your actions so much heat so much spirit He shall Baptize you with the spirit and with fire That is if you have the sanctifying spirit you shall know it by the zeal that is in you in the performance of holy duties Therefore I say it is an excellent sign whereby a man may know whether he hath the spirit or no Now that a man may know by this I will make it clear by this example Take a bottle that is full of water and another that is full of Aqua vitae look upon them outwardly and they are all of one colour but if you tast them the one is hot and lively the other is cold and raw So look unto the formal outward actions of wicked men they have the same colour which the actions of holy men but if you tast them that is examine their lives and search into their hearts you shall find a great difference It may be they may seem to have light and heat in them but they want this Spirit for they have neither a loathing of sin nor power to resist sin They may put a false colour upon their actions but it will not hold And by this they may restrain lusts for some end they cannot Master and subdue them and it may heat a part of his heart but it cannot heat all his heart But where the sanctifying Spirit comes it heats all the soul That is it kindles a holy fire in all the faculties to burn up sin that is there Therefore this was the difference between Iohn the Baptists Baptisme and Christs Iohn could baptize them with water but Christ with the Spirit and with fire Therefore examine what heat there is in you against evil and what zeal there is in you to good Are you cold in prayer in conference in the Communion of Saints it is a sign that you have not the Spirit It may be you read hear pray and confer● but see with what heat you do them is it with you in these things as the Apostle would have you to be in earthly things in the 2 Cor. 7. 30. 31. To sorrow as if you sorrowed not to use the world as if you used it not That is do you perform holy duties with that coldness as if you cared not whether you did them or did them not Do you hear as if you heard not and do you receive the Sacrament as if you received it not do you pray as if you prayed not do you love as if you loved not then surely you have not the Spirit And on the contrary if you find spiritual heat and zeal in you a nimbleness and quickness to good● it is a sign that you have the Spirit ●or it is the propertie of the Spirit to heat the so●l therefore the Prophet saith The zeal of thy house hath even eaten me up That is I have such a measure of zeal wrought in me by thy Spirit that I cannot see thee in the least measure dishonoured but I must burn with zeal Therefore examine your selves what zeal you have for God and godliness Are you hot for the things of this world and cold for grace and holiness Then whatsoever you think of your selves yet you have not the sanctifying Spirit There is not a holy man or woman that belongs unto Christ but they have this holy fire in them And yet I would not have you to mistake me as if every Christian did attain unto the like heat and zeal as others do for you must know that some have more and some have lesse according to the measure of the sanctifying Spirit that they have but this you must know that you must be full of heat full in some measure answerable to the measure of the sanctifying Spirit but if you find no heat at all in you then you have not a grain of the Spirit in you Not to be hot is to be luke warm and luke warmness is that which God hates it is a temper mixt of both heat and cold loathsome to nature and odious to God and therefore in Revel 3. Because the Laodiceans were neither hot nor cold but luke warm that is they had neither heat to God nor were so cold as to forsake the Truth That is sin and holiness stood in arbitration together and they had as good a minde unto the one as unto the other Now because it was thus with them therefore saith God I will spew them out and in the next verse he exhorts them To be zealous and amend That is except they labour to be hot in the Spirit they cannot be saved Again in Titus 2. it is said by the Apostle That Christ died that he might purchase to himself a people zealous of good works that is this zeal must not be a constrained zeal but a willing zeal And if there were no other motive to move men to be zealous but this because Christ came to redeem them for this end that they might be zealous of good works for his glory if there be any spark of the fire of grace in us it will burn at Christs dishonour And if Christ came to this end to make men zealous then surely Christ will not lose his end but they that Christ will save shall be zealous Therefore I beseech you labour to be strong in the inward man and labour to get the Spirit that you may be zealous But alas men think that they have drunk too much of this cup of giddiness That is they think they need not be so zealous as they are but I say if you be not it is a sign that you have not the Spirit especially it stands men now upon if they have an holy zeal in them to shew it I say it is time you should when you see such halting between two opinions shew your zeal by hating and abhorring Poperie and labouring to draw men from it especially now when we see men so desirous to go into Egypt again which is to be lamented in these dayes for which the Lord hath stretched out his hand against us But where is our zeal That is what spiritual heat is there in us where are those
Christian like walking and holy conversation And this is the same the Apostle speaks of when he would assure them of their resurrection to life in Rom. 6. If you die with Christ you shall also rise with him again That is if your actions be the actions of the spirit proceeding from the inward man and have some resemblance of Christ then you shall rise again and live with him And in Rom. 8. he comes to the works of the spirit So many saith he as are led by the Spirit they are Sons of God That is they are led unto all holy actions and the duties of sons and then he comes in Galat. 5. unto the fruits of the spirit The fruits of the spirit are love joy and peace c. well then examine whether you have the spirit by the actions of the spirit and by the working and fruits of the spirit and by the teaching of the spirit For it is the Spirit which is the doctor of the soul that teacheth it all spiritual and saving knowledge and therefore the Lord saith you shall not need to be taught of any other for you shall be all taught of God that is mens teaching will never be effectual to work grace and holiness in you except God teach by his spirit Now you must know that there is a two fold teaching First there is a teaching of beast by man that they may be serviceable unto men by this to put men in mind of the spiritual teaching God hath put such a power in the creatures that they cannot chuse but they must do it there is a necessitie laid upon them by God in the very instinct of nature So when the spirit comes into the heart of a Christian it openeth another light in the minde and therefore the Apostle saith that you need not teach you to love for you are taught of God to love one another That is there is a necessitie laid upon you and therefore you must needs love I grant that sometimes a thief may be in the high way but it is for a bootie and a holy man may be out of the way That is slipt aside but here is the difference the one sets himself of purpose to do evil and the other is inforced unto evil unwillingly And you shall know the difference between these two in these 2. things If a holy man have gone besides the way as soon as the passion or temptation is overpast he will return again into the right way he will not go forward nor stand still but he will return But the other though in some sence he knowes it and is told he is besides the rule yet he cares not he will go on forward Therefore examine what fruits of the spirit you bring forth and what wayes you delight in Are you in the way of holiness do you delight to pray to hear to receive do you love God and Christ and the Communion of Saints Then it is a sign that you have the Spirit But on the contrary if you follow drunkenness and uncleanness and prophaning of the Sabbath in gaming and in sporting and idleness you never had the Spirit Again consider what are your walkes that is do you follow your old evil haunts now as fast as ever you did it is a sign that you have not the Spirit Again think not that it will excuse you to say that whatsoever your actions be yet you have good hearts for you must know that your hearts are far worse then your actions as I said before for if you had the Spirit it would not be idle in you but as it makes the heart holy so it sends forth holy speeches and actions in the life The working power of the spirit is excellently set forth in that passage between Eliah and Elizeus in the Kings It is said that Eliah cast his mantle about Elizeus presently he cries out let me go first saith he and take leave of my Father and then I will go with thee Eliah might well have reasoned thus with him what have I done unto thee or what have I spoken unto thee that thou shouldest thus reply unto me as if I tied thee unto the contrary Said I any such word unto thee that thou mightest not go But there was a necessitie laid upon Elizeus by the spirit to go with him and therefore he could not chuse but break out into these words That is the spirit now entred into his heart that he was not now his own man he must now go where the spirit would have him and do that which the spirit bid him and so we see in Act. 4. 20. when the Jewes came to Peter and commanded that he should not preach Christ unto them he answereth that he cannot chuse but he must preach Christ And in the beginning of the chapter you shall see the reason of it They had received the holy Ghost and they spake boldly Therefore you see the spirit is not idle but marvellous working and operative Therefore examine what power you have what actions you have and what fruit you bring forth But you may say that sometimes the spirit seems to be dead in the heart therefore it is not alwayes working To this I answer that the propertie of the spirit is alwayes to work and it doth alwayes work but he may sometimes withdraw his actions of growing as when a Temptation comes which before you have resisted but now you are taken with it then the spirit seems to absent himself by withdrawing his power but notwithstanding he works still for in the instant there is lusting and labouring in you against it and afterwards he gives you power to return again Again it is not alwayes thus with you but sometimes onely Thus much for the first use The next use stands thus if the holy ghost doth strengthen us in the inward man then let me above all things exhort you to seek the spirit because it will strengthen you in the inward man For what would a man desire either for the outward or inward man but if he have the spirit he shall obtain it Would a man be enabled to pray would a man be enabled to bear losses and crosses would a man master particular lusts is a man in bondage and would be set at liberty from sin is a man spiritually dead and benummed is a man spiritually affrighted with sin would a man walk as a Christian man ought to walk would a man be enabled to every good work would a man love in a word would a man do any thing that is holy and good Let him get the Spirit and he shall do these and much more Thus much for the general what the spirit can do for a Christian. Now I come unto the particulars what the spirit will do unto them where he comes and those I will reduce in these four particular things The first benefit is this which a Christian gets by enjoying
puts the very first stamp of holiness upon us Secondly The Spirit is a free gift because the Spirit is a free Agent that is it works freely of himself Now reason is the free Agent of the outward man but it is the Spirit that gives reason Therefore the Spirit must be most free Thirdly The Spirit is a free gift by his carriage towards them that he will save he might have chosen the elder and not the younger That is he might have chosen Esau and not Iacob or if he would have chosen the younger Then he might have brought him first out of the womb but he will not because he is most free in his choice he will have Iacob and cast off Esau and so he might have chosen honourable and Noble men to have both preached the Gospel and to be saved by the Gospel he might have chosen them onely for salvation but he will not The poor they shall receive the Gospel That is he will make choice of them for salvation he might as well have chosen Simon Magus as Simon Peter but he will not therefore he is free Fourthly the Spirit is free which appears by the paucitie and fewness that he chuses he is at libertie he might have saved more but this shewes his freedom he is not tied to one more then to another The winde bloweth where it listeth That is he cals when and whom he will Let them come in that my house may be full That is none shall come no more no lesse then I have chosen Fifthly that the Spirit is a free gift appears by the prosecution of his decree both of Election and reprobation nothing more free then the Spirit is he might as I said have chosen Esau and not Iacob for there cannot a reason be given wherefore he should chuse the one and not the other he will chuse the wife and not the husband and he will chuse the husband and not the wise he will chuse the childe and not the father and he will chuse the father and not the childe Again he will chuse this man and that woman and not another man or the other woman and what is the reason of it surely there can be no reason given of it because the Spirit is free to chuse and chuse not Thus briefly I have shewed you that the Spirit is a free gift Is the Spirit then a free gift and doth it work freely Then let them consider this and tremble that are not sanctified by the Spirit For if the Spirit work freely and yet thou hast not sanctification wrought in thee it is a sign that thou doest not belong unto God Again if the winde bloweth where it listeth then it stands you upon to do as Millers and Marriners do to watch the opportunitie and grind when the Spirit bloweth upon you That is if at any time the Spirit doth kindle any spark of grace in you Take heed of neglecting the opportunitie That is do not say in this case unto the Spirit as Festus said unto Paul That you will hear him another time but be sure if the Spirit command do you run or if he cals be sure to answer him left he call you no more I have often told you there is a time when he will call you no more Therefore think with your selves what time of darkness and sorrow it will be to you then when with the five foolish virgins you shall be shut out of heaven and happiness There is a time when he will swear That ye shall not enter into his rest and do not I say onely labour and watch for the opportunity that is take the Spirit when it is offered but labour to get the oportunitie That is use the means whereby you may get him And for your help herein I will lay down some means whereby you may get the Spirit The first means to get the spirit is this you must labour to know the spirit for what is the reason that men do not receive the spirit but because they know him not that is they do not know him in his puritie in his free working in his incomprehensible greatness in his increase in holiness and therefore they put off the working of the spirit when men think now that their sin in this kind is not so great as Simon Magus was It is true say they Simon Magus his sin was a great sin and worthy of punishment because he thought to have bought the spirit with mony But if we will consider mens dealing now with the spirit we shall find that the same sin is committed still I say men think that they do not commit the sin of Simon Magus when indeed you do you know how great the sin was in him and what a judgement was inflicted against him and your sins are as great and the same but you know them not Therefore let us compare them together and you shall see that they are all one and that in these three particulars First Simon Magus thought that the spirit might have been had at any time for he neglected the means and despised it presupposing that at any time with a small reward he might get it of the Apostle what shall I give thee c And so when you put off the Spirit is not your sin the same thinking that you may have him when you will that you can have him at your pleasure to mortifie a strong lust a sin that you would be rid of and for a sin that is pleasing to your nature you can subdue it when you will And is not this a great sin as great as Simon Magus his was but can you do this can you mortifie your lusts have you power over them can you love God and the Saints well if you had never so much time you can never get the Spirit except that God give him Secondly Simon Magus thought that it was in the power of man to give the Spirit Therefore he asked Peter what he should give for the Spirit and is not your sin the same do not many men think that it is in the power of men to give the spirit when all the time of their life they will neglect the calling of the Spirit but in some great affliction that is when they lie upon their death bed then they will send for the Minister but not till then as if it were in his power to give the spirit Oh sir what shall I do to be saved can you tell me of any hope of salvation and the like Thirdly Simon Magus desired the spirit to a wrong end namely for his own advantage that upon whom soever he should lay his hands They might receive the holy Ghost And do not men do the like now They desire to have the spirit and they could wish with all their hearts that they had him but yet not to a right end That is for Gods glory but for some carnal end of their own That you
the budding and putting forth of the spirit therefore all such blossomes are precious and they should be nourished in you you should not let them wither for want of sap and that you may have from Christ for it is he that quickeneth every man by his Spirit That look as the old Adam maketh sin active in every one that is born of him so the second Adam communicateth grace and life to those that are ingrafted into him by faith Therefore he is called a quickening spirit even as a man liveth when the soul is conjoyned to the body so the soul liveth when Christ is conjoyned to it Look upon all the living Saints the reason why they live among such a multitude of dead men is because Christ is in them if you see one more holy then another more active more nimble in the wayes of Gods commandments then another it is because Christ dwelleth more in him then in another if you find your selves more ready and more strong to perform any duty it is because Christ helpeth and quickeneth you for he is your life In a word all the life you have is derived from his inhabitation and dwelling in you And this is the fourth Benefit that we receive from Christ he makes us living men The fifth benefit we have and receive from Christ his dwelling in us is that he consecrateth us and maketh us holy Know ye not saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 3. 17. That ye are the Temple of God and that the spirit dwelleth in you That is Christs act no man is holy but he whom Christ consecrateth and he consecrateth the soul That is he sanctifieth it sets it apart maketh a temple peculiar to himself for holiness is nothing but an appropriating something to Gods use and sequestring it from common uses Now when Christ works such a work in the spirit of a man he is said to consecrate a man to sanctifie him And that he doth when he revealeth to us the vanitie of earthly things on one side And the excellencie of heavenly things on the other side By this means the heart is weaned from those and is knit and married to these in a conjugal love so that it loveth him and nothing besides and this I say Christ doth by revealing the truth making earthly things to appear vain as they are and God to appear beautiful and excellent as he is For when he appeareth as he is we cannot but love him and that is the reason it is said Sanctifie them with thy truth that is when any man hath the truth revealed unto him he seeth things as they are then his spirit cleaveth unto God loveth God marrieth it self unto God keepeth it self proper unto him weaneth itself and estrangeth it self from all other things That which is called sanctifying in that place you shall find in two places of Scripture exprest in such tearms as express this double act of Christ which I named unto you as in the 2 Tit. verse penult He hath purified to himself a peculiar people that is he hath emptied them of whatsoever may draw them from God and hath sanctified them by his spirit And so again in the 30. Deut. 6. And the Lord God will circumcise the heart that thou mayest love the Lord thy God with all thy heart c. That is I will draw you to me your hearts shall cleave to me Now then when these two acts are done the heart circumcised and love put into it that it cleaveth to God without separation This is the sanctifying of the heart this Christ works wheresoever he cometh And my Brethren this is not an easie thing to do and indeed no man can do it but Christ for this holiness of spirit is not onely an abstaining from the things common and unclean from pollution of flesh and spirit it is not an abstaining from them out of judgement onely but then a mans spirit it is holy when he hath an inward propence inclination to that which is good and an aversness to that which is evil When the spirit hath a new quality put into it Abhor that which is evil and cleave to that which is good this is holiness not to abstain from the evil onely but to abhor it not onely to do the good but his spirit cleaveth to the good loveth the good So it is said Lot had his righteous soul vexed with the unclean conversation of the Sodomites that is he had a holy soul and in this his holiness was seen that he vexed c. So Moses his holiness appeared when he wept when he saw the people commit idolatry so Paul his spirit was stirred within him when he saw the idolatry of the people of Athens So when a mans spirit sti●reth it self after this manner when from that new quality that is put into it it works out the uncleanness that is in it this is the holiness of the spirit and no man hath it but from Christ. As the needle unless it have it from the Loadstone could not have that property of looking to the North so it is with the spirit of a man before Christ dwelleth in him before he hath put a new quality of holiness he never looks towards God but when it is done once it cannot do otherwise therefore those in whom Christ dwelleth cannot sin that is cannot delight in sin this is a great benefit therefore and this holiness of spirit they have in whom Christ dwelleth To be holy in all manner of conversation to be holy at all times in all places in all that he doth to have a holiness of spirit acting and appearing therein It is a hard thing and therefore the benefit is the greater so now how much unholiness we may find in the spirits of men when the spirit of a man steppeth out and doth what it doth to its own ends and looks not to Christ but to other ends this is unholiness and adultery of the spirit therefore those the trade of whose life is not to look at God in their actions but to themselves to pass from pleasure to pleasure and from sport to sport and all for themselves those also that are so much occupied in worldly businesses that God is forgotten this is exactly contrary to holiness for here the spirit turneth it self from God whereas we should be holy in all manner of conversation holy in every thing holy in eating holy in drinking holy in recreation holy in all our business holy in mirth c. But you will ask how shall that be When you do all these as to God as fit●ing you for his service when you put God as the end unto all that you do then is your spirit holy you know that place Whether you eat or drink or whatsoever you do do all to the glory of God That is respect God in it make not your selves the utmost end of it for then your heart is unholy for holiness is to keep the
upon you the riches of his mercy now the more you can promise yourselves this from God the more you can expect it at his hands certainly the more you shall have of his mercy the less you do it the less you shall have if you do it not ●t all you shall have no mercy at all from God the more you can perswade your selves that God is m●rciful that he is loving and gracious and will be ready to do for you as you shall need the more of his mercy you s●all have according to the largeness of your faith so shall the largeness of the mercy ●●e For evidence of this look into Heb. 11. the whole chapter sh●weth what mercies faith bad what mercies Noah Abraham Moses and the Israelites had when they went through the red sea what mercies Samuel and David had the means they had to obtain al these mercies was their faith they beleived and therefore they had them you may there see how it is attributed to their faith The reason why they exceeded others in mercy was because they exceeded others in faith the reason why David was filled with mercy and goodness above others was because he attained to an higher pitch of faith then others Again the want of faith still hindred men from mercy and it is a good argument that is drawn from contraries now unbelief hindred Christs country-men from having any part in his miracles he could do nothing there because they beleived not it hindred the Israelites from that good land of promise they all died in the wilderness because they believed not so Mary she had like to have lost the raising of her brother Lazarus because she began to doubt for when Christ was upon the very point of doing the miracle and Mary she told him he had been dead four dayes Christ staied his hand and said to her Said I not to thee if thou believest c. as if he should say if thou believest not I will not do it The Apostles in the ship being ready to be overwhelmed with waves what was the cause because they doubted Why did ye doubt O ye of little faith Still mercies are kept from us for want of faith therefore it is true on the other side have faith and have mercy have faith in abundance and have mercy in abundance If you would have outward mercies do you believe that God is ready to give riches honour and life that is all a man can desire these God giveth to those that fear him believe this trust to it rest upon it Let Go I know you relie upon him for it the more yo● believe this the more you shall have even of these mercies And so for spiritual mercies hath he not promised to give his spirit to those that aske it and that great promise which he made when he ascended up on high that he would send down the holy Ghost the more you believe this the more of the spirit you shall have So for the forgiveness of sins the more you believe this the more assurance you shall have he hath promised to hear your prayers The more you can believe this the more you shall prevail in prayer In a word you know every one best what mercies you would have the more you believe that God is your father expecting it from his hands the more you shall have of any kinde of mercy As it was said of the faith of miracles if you have but faith you may say to this mountain be removed into the bottom of the sea it shal obey you the same may be said of justifying faith do but believe and this you shall enjoy for faith is not a bare opinion a bare perswasion for that is not operative to bring such mercies to you but faith seeth things that are not present as if present the things were before we believed them now God hath promised mercies in abundance they lie open to us the very believing of them is the taking and receiving of them God hath put them upon that Condition and not onely so but if you would have abundance of mercies add still to your faith therefore you have those words be it to thee according to thy faith that is if thy faith be great the mercies thou shalt have shall be great therefore you see now what use may be made of all that hath been said touching the riches of mercies that you might be convinced of this that according to your faith such shall your tastings be of the precious mercies of God the more you are perswaded of the greatness of his precious mercies accordingly shall you partake of them and accordingly will you look upon your selves as bound to obey and love him under the apprehension of his mercies The third meanes to obtain these riches of his mercy is humbly to rely upon the author of them as to desire much and to beleeve much so to depend upon him to wait upon him the more you do that the more readiness will you finde in him to shew you mercie I follow but the scriptures in this and set forth such mercies as is there set forth and this I take out of those places of scripture In thee the Fatherless and widow finde mercy God is still apt to help such as are in Prison and in a low degree Quest. what is the reason of that Ans. B●cause such depend upon God such as have no other fathers to depend upon such are apt to depend upon God and he sheweth mercy to such not because they are fatherless but because they depend upon him So you have it exprest by the Apostle Widowes saith he that are left alone trust in God those saith he are widowes indeed they might have trusted in God while they had husbands but that is our weakness while we have other props we are apt to trust upon them but when they are taken from us we are apt to trust in God So the woman when she had spent all in Physicke then she came to Christ so if we depend upon him we shall be as the fatherl esse and widow that know not where else to have help This winneth God to you for dependance presupposeth trust for upon whom you depend upon him you trust now God will not fail those that trust in him for he hath put so much nobleness and ingenuity into the hearts of men that they will not fail those that put their trust in them now dependance is a trust in God therefore the more you depend upon God the more mercy you shall have he hath put that instinct into every Creature the hen you see covereth her chickens under her winges because they depend upon her He is worse then an Infidel saith the holy Apostle that doth not provide for his houshold because they depend upon him this is an instinct put into the very Infidels If God have put this instinct into the Creature will he not do it himself He
Thus Sampson by the power of the spirit had power to use his strength And in the Acts 4 32 it is said that the Apostles spake boldly That is they had power for you must know that there may be habits of grace in the heart and yet want of power but when the spirit comes then it puts strength in the inward man to do Thus it is said that the spirit came upon Saul and he prophesied That is he was able to do more then before he could do and yet know that you may have true grace and yet now and then for the present want action that is power to do yet is but then when the spirit seems to absent it self from the soul and this was that which the Apostle speaks of Heb. 12. 12. Brethren you have forgotten the Consolation That is your spiritual strength may lie hidden dead and forgotten but the spirit will return and then you shall finde good again The fourth way whereby the spirit strengthens grace in the soul is by giving efficacie and power unto the means of growth which is a special advantage for strengthening of the inward man for as he sets up the building and furnisheth the Roomes and gives power unto the soul to use them so that which makes all these effectual is this when he gives power and efficacie unto the means that are for the strengthening of the inward man Now you know that the word is the onely ordinary means to work new habits and qualities in us that is to c●l●…s and beget us into Christ but if the spirit should not add this unto them namely efficacie they will never beget us into Christ Therefore this is the means to make all effectual that is it gives a blessing to the means of grace The word alone without the spirit is as I told you as a scabberd without a sword or b●t as a sword without a hand that will do no good though you should stand in never so great need therefore the A●ostle joyns them together in the Acts 20. he cals it the word of his grace that is the spirit must work grace or else the word will nothing avail you Again prayer is a means to strengthen the inward man but it the spirit be not joyned with it it is nothing worth and therefore the scripture saith Pray in the Holy Gho●t That is if you pray not by the power of the Holy Ghost you will never obtain grace or sanctification The spirit is unto the means of grace as rain is unto the plants that is as rain makes the plants to thrive and and grow so it is the spirit that makes the inward man to grow in holiness Therefore it is the promise which God makes unto his Church in Isai. 44. 3. He will pour water upon the dry ground That is the heart which was before barren in grace and holiness shall now spring up in holiness and grow strong in the inward man and this shall be when I pour out my spirit upon them Therefore you see how the spirit doth strengthen grace in the soul by setting up the building of grace in the soul and then by furnishing the Roomes with new habits and qualities of grace And then by giving power unto the soul to use those habits And then by giving a blessing unto all the means of grace The use of this stands thus If the spirit be the onely means to strengthen the inward man then it will follow that whosoever hath not the Holy Ghost hath not this strength And whatsoever strength a man may seem to have to himself if it proceed not from the spirit it is no true strength but a half and counterfeit seeming strength For a man may thus argue from the cause to the effect That that is the true cause of strength must needs bring forth strong effects And on the contrary That which is not the true cause of strength cannot bring forth the effects of strength so that no natural thing can bring forth the strength of the inward man because it wants the ground of all strength which is the spirit And therefore you may have a flash or a seeming power of strength such as the foolish virgins had in Matth. 25. which seemed to be strong in the inward man but it was but a feigned strength because they had not the spirit It is the spirit that must give you assurance of salvati●n and happiness And I have chosen this point in regard of the present occasion the receiving of the Sacrament before which you are especially to examine your selves whether you have this or no which if you have not then you have neither strength in the inward man nor any right or interest unto Christ. for I may well follow the Apostles rule It is the sign of those that are Christs they have the spirit In the 1 Cor. 2. 10. The spirit searcheth the deep things of God which he hath revealed unto us by his spirit And in the Ephesians 1. You were sealed with the spirit of Promise and in the Rom. 8. That they should be raised by the spirit which dwelleth in them and again As many as are led by the spirit of God they are the sons of God Thus you see that it stands you upon to examine your s●lves whether you have the spirit but above all places there are 2. places which prove the necessitie of having the spirit The one is this place which is my Text That you may be strengthened by the spirit in the inward man and the other place is that which Saint Iohn hath in the 1 Iob. 3. 14. By this we know that we are translated from death unto life because we love the Brethren That is if we be united in the bond of love that is a sign that we have the spirit and having the spirit it is the cause that we are translated that is changed we must be changlings from sin to grace before we can be saved Therefore examine what effectual spiritual strength you have what spiritual love there is amongst you And so accordingly you may judge of your estates whether you have any right or interest unto Christ And that I may help you in this thing I will lay down some signs by which you may know whether you have the spirit or no. The first sign whereby you shall know whether you have the sanctifying spirit or no is this if you have the sanctifying spirit you will be full of fire That is it will fill you with spiritual heat and zeal now if you find this in you then it is the sanctifying spirit and therefore Iohn saith of Christ in Matth. 3. That he will baptize them with the spirit and with fire That is he will baptize them with that spirit whose nature is as fire that will fill you full of spiritual heat and zeal and therefore it is said in Acts 2. that they had tongues
meditate power to love power to obey all above nature and a power to forsake life and libertie riches and honour pleasure and all things which no man will do except he have the Spirit Secondly as it gives a strength and an excellent qualitie above nature so it adds unto it holiness that is it puts a tincture of goodness upon all your actions it warmeth the gifts of the minde and puts the heart in a frame of grace many men have a kind of strength but they want holiness and sanctification with it Now a man is said to be a holy man when the soul is separated and divided from things that are contrarie to its salvation and happiness and joyned And then joyned and united unto Christ wholly and totally Then and not until then is a man a true holy man it is with a holy man in this case as it is with a spouse she is separated from others and united to her husband are joyned to the Spirit have holiness with it and separated from sin The vessels in the time of the Law they were holy vessels because they were appointed to Gods worship in like maner when the Spirit comes into the heart it sanctifies it and makes him a holy man by making him in all his aims and ends to pitch upon Gods glory And this can no man do till the spirit of Christ be his In Cant. 6. 3. The Church saith I am my Beloveds and my Beloved is mine That is because he is my husband and I am his spouse therefore I will labour to be like him in holiness And our Saviour prayeth for this holiness for his Disciples In Ioh. 17. 17. Sanctifie them through thy truth thy word is Truth That is the word is the means to work holiness in them when they want holiness they want all things for when profit and pleasure comes then the Spirit of holiness is as it were plucked from them but when they have the Spirit then they see the vanitie of these earthly things therefore it is that men are deceived with false and counterfeit wares because they want the Spirit of discerning but when the Spirit of God comes into the heart of a Christian then it shewes him the vanitie of these things and this he doth by enlightning the mind and therefore it is that they are kept from playing the Adulteresses with these things because they have the Spirit of discerning Now examine what strength above nature what conjunction of holiness have you with it what Spirit of discerning have you are not these things in you then you have not the Spirit The third sign whereby you shall know whether you have the Spirit or no is this examine when and by what means it came into thy heart This is the sign that the Apostle makes in Galat. 3. Did you saith he receive the Spirit by the work of the Law or else by Faith preached That is if you have the Spirit then tell me how you came by it how and by what means came he first into the heart But here all the Question is how a man may know whether the Spirit be come into the heart in the right manner or no. To this I answer That this you must know that the onely means to receive the Spirit into the heart that is the right conveyance of the Spirit into the heart is by the word purely preached That is when it comes in the evidence of the Spirit purely without the mixture of any thing of mans with it and further you shall know whether you have received the Spirit by the Preaching of the word by these two things 1. By the Antecedent 2 By the Consequent First I say you shall know it by that which went before I say if the spirit hath been brought into the heart by the word then there will be a deep humiliation wrought in the soul for sins And then Christ and the Spirit comes into the heart begins to cheer up the dejected sou and hereupon there will be a through change wrought in the whole man and it must needs be so because the nature of the spirit is first to pull down what mans corruptions have built And then to lay the foundation of the spiritual building Humilitie And then afterwards to rear the buildings of grace in the soul. As for example if you would know whether the plants receive vertue from the Olive or no Then you must know that first they must be cut off from their own stock and then they must be ingrasted into that and then see whether they have the fatness of the Olive and then whether they bear the Olive leaves So a Man that hath not received the the spirit by the word he shall see it by the ripeness of sin the corrupt branches the bitter fruit that comes and is brought forth by him But on the contrarie if the word by the spirit hath cut you down and humbled you throughly by the light of your sin and then ingrafted you into Christ by working in you a saving a justifying faith and if it hath made you fat and well liking in grace that you have brought forth better fruit then you could do before then surely the spirit came into the heart the right way and works in the right manner but as I said it will first humble you by the word as in Iohn 1. 8. The Spirit shall reprove the world of sin of Righteousness and of judgement First he will reprove them of sin to humble them Secondly of righteousness because they have not believed the all-sufficiencie of Christ. Thirdly of judgements that they might change their opinions that they might do those things and bring forth that as fruit is agreeable to Gods will Secondly consider the consequence that is look to the thing that followeth the spirit where it comes in Where the spirit comes it works a through change in the soul I call it not a bare change but a through change for as there may be a glistering shew of something like gold that is not gold so there may be a cessation and a change from sin but not throughly or heartily and so not at all for what will it avail Herod to forsake some and like of Iohn Baptist in some things well if he will not forsake all and like of Iohn Baptist in reproof of all In like manner what if you change your opinions of some sins That is what if ye esteem some sins to be sins indeed if you have no the like opinion of all whatsover you think of your selves as yet you never had the spirit Therefore if you would know whether you have the sanctifying spirit or no in you then examine whether there be a through change wrought in you That is whether you do not esteem every sin to be sin but also what spiritual life you finde in you I say you shall know whether the holy spirit be in you by this
if you find your own spirit dead in you and Christs spirit quick and lively in you And this you shall know also by your affections That is if you have other affections both to God and Christ to holiness and to the Saints then you had before it is certain you have the spirit for this is that which followes the spirit for when the sanctifying spirit comes into the heart of a Christian it works another kinde of love in a man then a man naturally hath and again it makes a man live another kind of life then he did before Thus it was with Paul in 2 Gal. 20. I live but not I but Christ in me That is there is a proportion and likeness between the life of a Christian and Christ. That is when the spirit enters into the heart Then it will begin to put off the old man and to put on the new man it will put off their own power and strength to good and put on Christ onely Yet mistake me not I say not the substance of the soul is changed for the soul in substance is the same as it was before But here is the difference when the spirit comes it puts new qualities and habits unto it it alters and changes the disposition of it it gives it that sense which before it felt not and the sight which before it saw not hence it is throughly changed in regard of the qualitie and disposition of what it was and yet in substance remains the same as for example put iron into the fire the iron is the same it was in substance before it came into the fire but now it hath another qualitie it was cold and stiffe and hard and unpliable but now it is hot soft and plyable and this change is throughout in every part of it and yet it is iron still So it is with the spirit when it comes into the heart of a Christian he mingleth and infuseth spiritual life into all the parts of the soul and therefore it is said if the Spirit of Christ be in you the body is dead as touching sin but the Spirit is alive That is he is like a tree that wants both sap and root or as a man that is dead that wants a soul he is now dead whatsoever he was before Therefore examine if this thorow and great change be you see then what death there is in you to sin and what life unto holiness I call it a thorow and great change because a little one will never bring you into such a frame as to be fit for Heaven And again the Apostle cals it a great change in Rom. 12. 2. Be you met amorphosed That is throughly changed new moulded again In the 1 Cor. 3. You are saith the Apostle changed from glory to glory and therefore consider that every change will not serve the turn but it must be a great change the changing of Christs spirit for your own spirit which if you have then shall you come out of every affliction every difficulty like gold out of the furnace like cloth out of the die of Lions you shall be made Lambes of Serpents Doves Therefore see if this change be in you or no. If this change be in you Then when your old guest that is your old lusts shall come and find that their old companions be cast out of doors and that the soul is swept and changed they will not stay but seek abiding elsewhere And on the contrary if your opinions of sin be the same if you have the same lusts reigning in you if you use the same evil company and have the same haunts that ever you had you have not the spirit And so long as you remain thus do you think that Christ will come and sup and dine with you And yet you will not erect a building for him in your hearts Therefore if you would have Christ and the spirit labour to get holiness The fourth sign whereby you may know whether you have the spirit is this If it be but a common spirit you shall find that it will do by you as the Angels do by assumed bodies They take them up for a time and do many things with them to serve their own turns but they do not put life into them So in like manner examine whether the spirit makes you loving men or no. That is when the sanctifying spirit shall joyn with the soul of a man it will make him do sutable things and brings forth sutable actions The body is dead without the soul so the soul hath of it self no spiritual life to good without the spirit Therefore that which Paul speaks of unchaste widowes that they are dead while they live so I may say of every man that hath not the Spirit they are dead men dead to good to grace to holiness I say there is no life without the Spirit Men are not living men because they walk and talk and the like but they are living men that live in the Spirit and by the Spirit And on the contrary there is no true life neither are men to be esteemed living men that want the spirit Now the difference between the assumed bodies and the bodies which have the souls joyned with them are these By the examinnation of which it will appear that the most men which think they have the spirit are deceived with the common spirit That is beause they do the actions of assumed bodies The first property of an assumed body is this we have but an assumed body of grace and holiness when in the practise of life we take unto our selves the things that are evil and leave the things that are truely holy and good I do not say when I hate good but when I prefer evil before good setting it at the higher end of the Table and serving it first and attending on it most That is when holy duties become troublesome and wearisom unto you when it goes against the hair as we say that they crosse our nature and yet you will not crosse it for the love of Christ when it is thus with you whatsoever you think of your selves you have not the sanctifying spirit but a common spirit without life The second propertie of an assumed body of grace is if you have it not in a feeling manner The sanctifying spirit works a spiritual sence and taste in the soul. That is if you have the sanctifying spirit then holy things will have a good taste it will be sweet unto you it will purge out that which is contrary to the growth of the inward man On the contrary the common spirit will never make you to taste grace as it is grace or because it is grace That is grace will not be a daintie thing and it will be without a good savour therefore examine what taste of good you have whether you can relish grace or no if not you have not the sanctifying Spirit but an
reason of it but because he wanted the spirit and on the contrary when the Disciples had received the Spirit They spake with boldnesse The fourth effect that the spirit begets i holy and heavenly desires in the soul therefore the Church in Cant. 2 is marvellous inquisitive to find Christ and what is the reason there is in men such a want of holy desires but because they have not the spirit The fifth effect is That the spirit begets holy indignation holy anger is an effect of the spirit and therefore thé Apostle saith in 1 Cor. 7. What indignation and wrath This he speaks in the commendation of the Corinthians men will not be angry with sin as an evil untill they get the Spirit The sixth effect of the spirit is holy affections It will make you have heavenly affections towards God to grace to the Saints Therefore the Lord saith Eze. 26. 21. I will give you a new heart Carnal men they may do some things to make their children to reverence them as to love them in regard of some donation that is they may proffer an object but they cannot beget holy affections That is the onely work of the Spirit thus to change the heart The seventh effect of the spirit is this It will purge the soul i. e. it will cast out all rubbish out of the soul There fore the Lord saith that he will purge the sons of Levi as silver That is that they may be fit for the service of the Priesthood he will purge out of them by the spirit that which other wayes would make them unfit And David in Psal 51. often prayes That the Lord would purge him and then after he prayes for the restoring of the spirit making the absence of the spirit the cause of his uncleanness The eighth effect of the spirit is It kindles holy affections to good in us and this is that that giveth us great advantage against sin I say we have no small advantage against the devil when the heart is full of heavenly affections and that for these reasons First because the more holy affections the better man That is God accompts more of him A man is esteemed of God as he hath or hath not holy affections a man is that which he is in his affections that is a man is not a good man because he knowes much but he is a holy man because he hath holy affections when he is full of love to God to Christ and to the Saints The second reason is because holy affections are a means or a second cause of good That is they are the cause of good actions as for example for a man to suffer for Christ and yet not to do it with holy affections out of love unto Christ That is nothing worth Therefore when the affections are ripe they are drawn upwards by the spirit both to do and to suffer The third reason is because holy affections they widen the soul that is they make the soul large for when holy affections are dead in you the soul will begin to shrink in even as cloth that is not thorowly made when water fals upon it it will run in but if you stretch it it will come to its own length again so when the spirit comes and ●…rks holy affections they widen the soul and make it large and firm Therefore that you may have large hearts in prayer and in meditation labour to get the spirit that you may have holy affections kindled in you The fourth benefit that a Christian hath by the Spirit is this it will make the heart good because it is the proper work of the holy ghost to sanctifie the heart that is to cleanse and change it and so make it good It is the work of the Spirit to work repentance a thorow change because men for the most part mistake repentance That is men do think that if they be turned this way and that way from this sin and from that sin though it be not from every sin and evil way that they have true repentance but they are deceived For repentance is a true change of the whole man consisting both of soul and body whereby the parts and faculties of both are turned a quite contrary way That is the heart is turned out of the way of sin into the way of holiness Now that a partial turning is not repentance I will make it clear by this comparison Take any natural thing that is of an earthly substance whose nature is to go downwards Yet you may force it upwards by means that you may use As for example Water you know is of an earthly substance and the nature of it is to descend yet you see by the force and strength of the sun it is drawn upwards first into vapors and then congealed into ice and snow and rain and then it will not rest till it descend again But there is another motion of things light and spiritual clouds ascend upwards and are not forced but naturally do it Even so a carnal man may do the same things that a spiritual man doth he may keep down some lust and he may forsake some evil That is he may forsake his drunkenness and his uncleanness and his old evil haunts but yet he doth not forsake all neither doth he keep out sin by the spirit but by a natural strength if he do a good action it●… by constraint he is forced by something to do it but it changeth not his heart a whit he may take a resolution to be good and to be better yet to change his own nature is not in his own power for this is the work of the holy Ghost Thus much for this use and for this point We now come to a third point the Apostle saith he would have them To be strengthened by the spirit in the inward man noting thus much that God must give them the spirit before they could have him The point is this That The Spirit is a free gift I say that the sanctifying Spirit is a free gift I gather it thus The Apostle here prayes That God would give them the Spirit Not that they had deserved it and so should have it by merit as the Papists teach but he must give it them freely without defert of their own I need not stand in the proving of it long That the Spirit is a free gift onely I will shew you briefly how the Spirit is a free gift and this shall be in these five particular things First the Spirit is a free gift and it must be free because the Spirit is a gift and what more freer as we use to say then a gift is Now it is a free gift because it is not merited by us at Gods hands it is not extorted and drawn from God by force nor merited by desert because all the good that is in us is wrought by God it is God that
may be reputed thus and thus but not to any other end for know that a man may desire grace but if the aim of his desire be for his own end the desire is sin the same that Simon Magus his was Therefore I beseech you not to defer put not off the opportunitie and remember what the Lord saith in Hebr. 3. To day if you will hear my voice harden not your hearts That is this is the day now have you the opportunitie the candle is in your hands and you may light your souls by it the word is near you well then light your candles by it you may now light them whilst the fire is here but if you will not now how will you do when the fire is out That is when you shall be either taken from the means or the means from you therefore labour to know the spirit and Judge aright of him if you would get him The second means to get the spirit is faith and the best means to get faith is to be conscionable and constant in hearing the word Preached That is the Preaching of the word is a means to get the spirit And therefore the Apostle said Received you the Spirit by the work of the Law or else by Faith Preached Gal. 3. That is you may know whether you have the Spirit or no by this examine whether you have gotten ●aith by the Preaching of the word Our Saviour saith that The Tree is known by his fruit That is the branch cannot bear fruit except it receive vertue and strength from the root so if we get not faith in Christ and be joyned with him we shall never get the spirit Therefore if you would get the spirit you must get faith for faith is the knitting and the drawing grace it will draw the spirit into the soul and it will knit him fast unto the soul that it can never depart from it Faith will recover the spirit if it seem to want his power of working in the soul it will return him if he seem to depart away it will enlarge the heart if the spirit seem to be scanted in it that is it will widen the narrow bottle of our hearts And you know what our Saviour said to men and women in the Gospel be it unto you according to your Faith Therefore if you would get the Spirit you must get faith in your hearts That is if you would get a large measure of the Spirit then get a large measure of faith for what is the reason that men thrive not in the Spirit but because they thrive not in faith The third means to get the Spirit is an earnest desire joyned with prayer that is to desire and pray earnestly for the Spirit is a means to get the spirit An instance of this we find in Elishaes servant he earnestly desires and prayes that the spirit 〈◊〉 Eliah his Master might be doubled upon him Not that he meant that he might have as much more again but that he might have a greater measure of the spirit then other of the Prophets and he did obtain his desire for he was indued with a greater measure of the spirit then other of the Prophets were Even so if you would but desire and pray earnestly for the spirit you might get him Solomon desired wisdom and prayed for it and he had it and that in a larger measure then those that went before him so if you would pray for the spirit you have his promise in Luke 11. 14. That he would give the holy Ghost unto them that ask him and this he doth speak by way of opposition If you that are evil can give good things unto your children then much more will God give you his Spirit That is if a man or woman will be importunate for grace and the spirit as a childe will be unto the father for bread then he cannot deny you But you will say if he were my father and I were his childe then it is true he would give me his spirit But alas he is not for any thing I know neither my father nor I his childe To this I answer suppose thou be not his childe in thy own apprehension yet look back unto the 14. verse and see what importunitie doth Though a man would not open his door and give his neighbour that which he would have yet in regard of the importunitie of him that asketh he will open and give him what he would have this do you though you may have a denial sometimes That is no answer at all or an angry answer yet take no denial and your importunitie will at last prevail with him And to encourage you against former runnings out from God the Apostle saith that he giveth and upbraideth no man That is as no man meriteth at Gods hand so no man shall be upbraided with any railing to shame him he gives unto all men that come unto him that is without exception of persons without any by-respects freely and reproacheth no man That is he will not lay before him either that which might hinder him from coming to him or him from receiving him he might do but he will do neither And you know the promise made to the Disciples They must go to Ierusalem And he will after a certain time send the spirit but they must wait for him And this they did by constant prayer and they had the promise made good unto them for they had the Holy Ghost which came upon every one of them Acts 2. So if ye be constant in prayer what though for the present you get him not yet at last you shall have him thus much for this means If you would have the spirit you must pray and desire him earnestly The fourth means to get the spirit is to obey him and this you may do when you give him good entertainment that is when you indulge him with heavenly thoughts and do what he would have you to do out if you slight him That is set light by him and will not obey and be ruled by him you will never get him And this you do when you resist grieve and quench the spirit you resist that power when you resist the light which the spirit hath wrought in you That is when you fight against it against illuminated reasons and arguments This is a great sin You grieve the spirit when you mingle two contraries together That is when with the profession of Religion you joyn corrupt speeches and actions And you quench the spirit when you neglect the motions of the spirit and the means by which the spirit is got or increased or kept N●w if you do thus you shall never get and retain the spirit But if on the contrary you love cherish and obey the spirit you shall have him and keep him The fifth means to get the spirit is this If you would get the spirit then you must wait upon those means
which are means for the getting of the spirit Neglect none of the means because you know not in which nor when the spirit will come it may be he will come now and not another time it may be he will breath upon you at such a ordinance and not at another In Acts 9. whilest Peter was Preaching unto them The holy Ghost came upon them that heard him So be diligent in waiting upon the means and the holy Ghost at one time or other will come Again he could have sent the spirit to Cornelius without the sending for Peter in Acts 10 But Peter must be sent for and he must Preach unto him and then he shall receive the holy Ghost Thus much for the means and for this time CHRIST the best INHABITANT Text EPHES. 3. 17. That Christ may dwell in your hearts by Faith I Have chosen this Text by reason of this Sacramental occasion which doth represent Christs dwelling in us and it is the second head of Pauls Prayer The first was That they might be strengthened in the inward man This That Christ may dwell in their hearts by faith Having in the former discourse opened the words I shall not need to adde any thing here The point hence arising is That it is a great prerogative of which all the Saints are partakers that they have Christ to dwell in their hearts The Apostle prayeth for it being directed by the spirit of God in his prayer and therefore we should esteem of it as of a great priviledge And as of that of which all the Saints are partakers because it is necessarie to salvation none are saved without it Now for the better understanding of it I will first of all shew you these two things 1. What it is to have Christ dwell in our hearts 2. What benefits we receive by his dwelling in them For the first what it is to have Christ to dwell in our hearts To this I answer That then Christ dwells in our hearts when as he works in them in another manner then he did before he hath other works and we see other effects then formerly First he shewes himself kinde and favourable to us inlightning giving comfort refreshing framing and ruling ou● spirits that be●ore he did not and he doth not in others he is said to dwell in the Temple because his eyes are upon it his ears are there open to hear the prayers of men his mercy seat is there T is true God fills heaven and earth yet he is said to dwell in the Temple because there he manifesteth his peculiar presence so the phrases of the Scripture are to be understood Go not up for God is not with you That is he will not assist you God dwells where he assists he dwells not where he helpes not That you may understand this consider these four particulars First where a man dwells he must come to the house and abide in it so Christ comes into the hearts of believers in whom he dwells and unites himself to them and their hearts to him And that is done by a double act of the Spirit First he humbleth and convinceth men of sin he makes some alive and us to be dead the way to life is death as the corn dies that it may live And this the spirit of bondage doth by putting an edge to the Law by making men desirous of Christ. Secondly the Spirit of adoption that unites us that perswades us that Christ is ours Love makes the union Faith is the agent in this union but it doth it by love as fire is said to heat though the qualitie doth it immediately when after sound humiliation we believe reconciliation with Christ there is a love to Christ then there is a union That is the first word he unites himself to the heart and it to him Secondly It is not enough for a man to come to the place to be conjoyned to it for a time but he must continue there else he dwells not there but is a stranger a dwell ●r must continue Christ abides with us for ever according to that everlasting Covenant which he hath made with 〈◊〉 Is 55. 3 He hath made an everlasting Covenant with us even the sure mercies of David He never seperates himself from us after he comes he continues for ever But it may be objected though Christ will not depart from us yet we may depart from him To this I answer that he will not suffer us to depart from him Ier. 32. 4. I will make an everlasting Covenant with them That is I will not turn away from them to do them good but I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from me we are knit together without separation he never departs from us nor we from him The reason why we continue in the state of grace is not because grace is of an unsatiable nature for it is a creature and may vanish as all other creatures do But it never failes because it is in Christ and supported by his arm of omnipotencie The light in the air may quickly perish but if the sun be ever with it it never perisheth ●o the water of a stream may fail but if there be a spring to supply it it never fails grace may perish as it did in Adam but men ingrafted into the second Adam can never fall because Christ is never severed from them we have his word for it he keeps us by his power There is an everlasting Covenant on both sides The Sacrament se ls this unto us That God hath made a Covenant that he will never depart from it and we set our seal by it that we will never depart from him Gal 5. 3. He that is circumcised is bound to keep the whole Law So he that receives the Sacrament is bound he engages himself to keep the Law of faith and he receives that oath when he was baptized Thirdly where a man dwells there he must delight else he is not said properly to dwell there a man that is imprisoned is not said to dwell in the spirit because he delights not in it Now Christ is said to dwell in us because he delights in us Esai 62. 4. Thou shalt no more be called forsaken but Hephsebah because the Lord delighteth in thee presence argues delight God delights in the Saints therefore he dwells in them he works in them that which is pleasing to them Artifex amat opus proprium He loves his own workmanship Thus First God delights in them as in those that are beautiful Cant. 4. 1 2 3. Thou art beautiful my Love thou art fair Thou hast Doves eyes thy teeth are like a flock of sheep which are shorn which came up from washing thy lips are a thread of Scarlet thy Temples like a piece of Pomegranate Secondly as one delights in a garden so God delights in them Cant. 4. 12. because he hath
heart close to God peculiar to him alone eying God in all things When he turneth from him that is the unholiness of the spirit This benefit we have by Christ dwelling in our hearts our spirits are consecrated unto him all that is in us is turned and looks that way and so much for this fifth Benefit The sixth and last benefit we have by Christ dwelling is defence he defendeth those in whom he dwelleth he covereth them he is a buckler and protector to them he preserveth them from all evil from all crosses or the evil of crosses This is a great benefit For there is this difference between Christ and other Inhabitants other Inhabitants are defended by the house wherein they dwell but here the Inhabitant defendeth the house And the reason is good because though he dwell in our hearts yet he is our habitation as it is in the Psalm that is we dwell in him he covereth us as a house covereth a man and defendeth him from the violence of the weather This you have excellently exprest in the 4. Isaiah the two last verses Upon all their glory shall be a defence that is upon all the people of God which are glorious he calleth them glory in the abstract I will defend them from all evil If you ask what defence it is you shall see a distribution of it in the verses following I will be as a covering in the heat of the day That is one kind and a place of refuge and covert from storm and from rain That is if there be heat I will keep you from that if there be storms and rain I will preserve you from that you shall be as a man within doors Thus Christ defendeth those that belong unto him he is a covering to them he keepeth them safe in the 1 Cor. 3. Him that destroyeth the Temple of God him will the Lord destroy It is his Temple it is the place where he dwelleth and be assured Christ will not have his house pulled down over his head no man will promise his Inheritance to be spoyled Now Gods children are his portion they are his sheep he will not suffer them to be plucked out of his hands Therefore the Prophet Esay compareth his Church to a Tent that though it be made of two or three materials onely cords and stakes yet saith he there shall not a cord be broken nor a stake plucked up My Brethren if you look upon the Church you will wonder that they should not have been swallowed up ere this time but know that God dwelleth in this Tent he keepeth and defendeth them Christ dwelleth thus in every believer in particular he will be a buckler and defence unto him And this benefit you have by Christ dwelling in you And so much for the Benefits you receive by Christs Inhabitation in you We must add something now for the application of this point and first you may make this use of it Learn to judge aright of the works of God in your hearts and remember that it is wrought by Christ himself It is Christ himself that is in you that consulteth with you that acts in you that enliveneth you to every duty he himself is given us of God to be our wisdom righteousness sanctification and redemption it is he himself that will come in and sup with us Rev. 3. And therefore if you would have a great measure of grace a great measure of comfort and refreshing if you would feel the life of grace flowing abundantly in your hearts fasten your eyes upon Christ the fountain This is our fault my Brethren that we look upon grace and remission of sins and sanctification separated from Christ we labour not for Christ in the first place we look upon pardon for sin we go unto God for it but we think not upon Christ learn first to get Christ to dwell in your hearts fasten your eyes upon him intreat him to come thither and sup with you and then take from him justification and sanctification the spirit and every grace For so it is as when a wife marrieth a husband she must not think of the titles honours and commodities that he bringeth separately from himself for then it is an adulterous thought she must first take her husband and then those other things come along with him so must we do with Christ fasten our eyes upon Christ himself love him cleave to him labour to have our heart● married to him by faith then we have remission of sins then we have adoption then we have reconciliawith God and every particular grace coming along with him Even as if a man would have a treasure that lieth hid in a field he must first have the field it self and then he may take the treasure he must not think of the treasure as of a thing abstracted from the field even so thou must get Christ for in him are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge and of his fulness we receive grace for grace But this is our hinderance that we look upon these things separately and apart from Christ. But let us remember that it is Christ that dwelleth in our hearts and although indeed it is by his spirit yet it is he himself that is the fountain of all get Christ therefore more and more into your hearts for you must know that there are degrees of dwelling as the Sun dwelleth more in the house at several times so Christ dwelleth more and more plentifully in the hearts of men even as there is a neerer union between us and him and so he dwelleth in us accordingly as there are degrees of familiarity between friends so are there degrees of union and habitation between Christ and us And accordingly are there degrees in all the effects of his habitation labour therefore to get Christ in your hearts But you will say how shall this be done Labour to get a contrite and humble heart there God delighteth to dwell there are but two places in which he delights Isa. 57. In the highest heavens and with him also that is of an humble and contrite spirit look what delight he hath to dwell in the heavens the same delight he takes to dwell in him that is of an humble spirit This is the reason why so many living in the Church have not Christ in them they are not yet humbled they are not yet sensible of their sins they know not as yet that they are children of wrath whereas a man that is humbled and broken with the sense of his sins that hath his heart wounded with them this is one that is a fit habitation for Christ to dwell there Therefore it is that even the Saints themselves when they begin to have their hearts lifted up in them that Christ removeth them far from him and therefore also is it that he humbleth them before he returneth to them again So it was with David and Hezekiah when they were li●ted
debt And the strength of the argument is thus If Christ had not risen again but been still in the power of the grave and kept under by the enemy of our salvation the poor believer might have been justly afraid his debt had not been paid but Christ being risen and out of hold he is out of doubt As when the debtor sees the Kings Son that was his surety at liberty and in the Kings Court he fears not but his debt is paid so when the poor believer sees Christ set free from the power of the grave c. he knows God hath accepted the payment he hath made as sufficient for him Let us therefore look upon our selves as having a part in Christ and know whatsoever he did it was for us even for every true believer so that he rising again we rise again which being so it manifests that God hath accepted Christ his payment if any thing could hinder it must be death and the grave but Christ being risen they have lost their power and so none able to condemn Rom. 6. 9. Christ rose for us never to dye again and therefore that we should never dye eternally A third reason is taken from the sitting of Christ at the right hand of God which puts all out of question that he paid our debt when he laid down his life in that he is risen and ascended up to his Father Now God would never have admitted him to sit at his right hand had the work been unfinished but now being ascended to the right hand of his Father where he is advanced to the highest pitch of honour glory and Majesty and that in our Nature sitting in full authority King of heaven earth there for ever by his spirit to gather and guide all his children and quell the power of their enemies it is apparent that our Sureties payment is accepted so that now nothing can condemn a Believer not his conscience nor any thing else can condemn him and therefore he may triumph over all accusations In the fourth place add unto all this that Christ doth not onely sit at Gods right hand but so as that he also maketh intercession for every true beleever having not onely power but even the same good will and mind that ever he had to do them good consider this well whether thou beleeving needest to fear the face of any enemy whatsoever The poor man that was indebted to the great King For whom the Kings son was pleased to undertake and satisfie when he sees him come out of prison set at liberty in his fathers Court in greater honor and not onely so but highly favoured of the King his father and continually requesting him for that poor man What needs he now care for all his enemies He need not be affraid to look all officers in the face c. Is this the secure and happy estate of every true believer out of himself in Christ. Then see the necessity of using all those means and that constantly whereby Christ our Blessed Redeemer is pleased to communicate himself and this his grace unto us Faith is a special gift and grace and comes from God in Christ and Christ he comes onely in the meanes which are channels and conduit-pipes Therefore if thou wouldest have this grace and be strengthened and increased therein even as thou wouldest have thy soul thus dignified use carefully all the means As The word which is the Scepter of Christs Kingdome submit thy soul to it If thou wilt have an excellent spirit such a one as Ioshua had pray to God for it and take heed of grieving the spirit of God by continuing in the practice of any known sin which is as water that quenches the fire but rather cherish thy faith and put fuel unto it by constant consionable hearing reading prayer meditation receiving the Sacrament holy conference and watching over thy heart For if thou put fuel to thy faith and keep away that which may quench it thou shalt clearly see this blessed truth and find the power of faith in this that hath been said Therefore as thou wouldest have this confidence and comfort in thy heart and soul use the means for it The dilligent hand becomes rich in Gods ordinary providence and so mayst thou in this grace if thou use diligence there is no way else Therefore whilst thou hast time use the means give attendance to the word and all those heavenly meanes before mentioned It s true indeed Christ hath freed himself by dying rising again and bring at the right hand of God and this I believe saith the poor soul in the midst of his fears temptations and troubles of mind but how should I bee comforted in knowing that I am freed from all that danger and condemnation which my sins do deserve Yes upon this ground every beleeving soul and so thou if thou doest believe mayest be sure to be freed as Christ himself is freed and that even because Christ undertook and did all this for the poor believing soul and he had not done it but for him Esai 9. 6. To●us a child is born to us a Sonne is given All he did was for us and for our Salvation so that if Christ hath any happiness thou believing in him mayest be assured of it as Christ himself All Gods intentions towards thee are founded in love else how should that be true Iohn 3. 16. God so Loved the world c. Christ also took all upon him for our sake even to redeem and save us he needed not have done it for himself for he was God in glory c. lift up therefore thy heart by faith and beleeve this and thou shalt find it true though we miserable wretches are unworthy of any such mercies yet is God worthy to be believed Look on Christ and consider who he is and reflect it upon thy self and if thou canst believe the Lord Jesus hath done all this for thy sake To help and strengthen thee to this First Consider Christ did it for us that believe as a surety we were all bannk-rupts in the law of God for want of obedience thereunto now Christ the surety of mankind comes and undertakes for us and hath done i● Hebrews 7. 22. He was made surety of ●a better testament Therefore think on him alwayes as thy Surety in glory Christ there is said to be a Surety of better things then the legal Rites were even of the New Testament wherein whatsoever is contained it is for us and there it is treasured up ask and thou shalt have seek and thou shalt find All he did he did as my Surety all the evil he took away and all the good he purchased it was for me A second means or help to strengthen thee if thou art one that art humbled for sin and desirest more and more to believe is to know that God hath bound himself and sworn to it and he is true though every man
purse he cannot abide to let it be tryed but if it be sound and good he is not affraid to bring it to the touchstone God in this case will take nothing for currant but what hath his own stamp upon it The word of God hath that in it that will try us let us therefore every one deal sincerely with our own hearts as in the sight and presence of Almighty God that so we may know whether we have this blessed Grace of Faith or no. But before we come to this let us consider these grounds First That all that live under the Gospel have if not though it be called the word of Faith and be the very meanes to beget Faith For this look 2 Thess. 3. 2. where it is given as a reason why those that truly receive the Gospel are so reproached and hardly dealt withall by the world even because all men have not Faith for if all had Faith then could all be of the same minde and Holinesse Righteousnesse and Love would be their delight Secondly That this triumphing Faith which upholds a man and opens his mouth to speak upon grounds of Faith is so far from being a common gi●t to all that but few indeed have it It is a special and peculiar grace that makes a man triumph over condemnation That this was hard to be found the Prophet complains in his dayes Isa. 53. 1. Lord Who hath believed our report And that not among the heathen onely but even among the people of God The like complaint Christ takes up in the very words of the Prophet Iohn 12. 38. Rom. 10. 16. He admires at the paucity of true believers So now the sound of the Gospel hath come to all of us but who shewes this faith of Gods elect in them This also we may see in the parrable of the sower wherein is set forth the estate of the visible Church Where there is but one sort of the four kinds of hearers that bring forth this fruit Three sorts come to hear some but for fashion sake or compelled thereunto some to get knowledge onely some to carpe scoff or catch somewhat to run to rulers with or to judge that which shall judge them one day This triumphing faith it ariseth from an Immortal seed of Gods word alone Thirdly That though there be but few that have this faith yet not the poorest and meanest of Gods children if they have any true hope of Gods mercy but in his time shall come to it Act. 13. 48. As many as were ordained to eternal life believed whosoever is Gods childe shall have this faith and therefore Titus 1. 1. it is set out to be a pecular grace and gift of God that onely belongeth to the elect Gal. 3. 6. all are said by faith in Christ to be Gods sons Iohn 10. our Saviour shewes as none will so none can believe but such as are Gods sheep that is his elect even those that are chosen in Christ to eternal life The fourth thing we are to consider as a matter to bee believed is That those that have this faith that will save their souls they may know they have it Which is against Bellarmines reasons of diffidence and doubting First They may know it to themselves for their comfort and next they may make it known to others by the fruits thereof 1 Cor 2. 12. That we may know saith the Apostle the things which are given us of God in Christ which is spoken in common to all that truly believe and not onely to any special person the true beleever hath such a light going along with his faith that he comes to know though not perfectly yet truly and infallibly that God hath chosen Adopted and sanctified him c. He takes hold of the promise of Salvation upon Gods commandment Faith is that which receiveth the word and promise and cherisheth himself in a special manner in the Word and Sacrament The Devils works are in darknesse God gives his in light and therefore his children are called Saints in light Col. 1. 12. and Iohn 15. 10. He that believes in the Son of God hath the witnesse in himself So that thou needest not have others tell thee that thou dost believe for if thou hast faith indeed t is not so hid and buried in thy heart but that thou mayest know it Secondly Others also may know it as it manifests it self in the fruits Rom. 1. 8. Their faith was spoken of far and near which was known by their wonderful change they were become new creatures such as were now of a holy life and conversation for which Paul thanks God and desires to be with them to be comforted with their faith and his own N●xt to this consid●r that this triumphing faith wheresoever it is kindled it will endure the tryal even the fire of Gods spirit it will endure also the fiery tryal of affliction 1 Cor 3. 13. It is not a chaffie or counterfeit faith that all the troubles or temptations can blow away But being begotten by the word it pacifies the conscience and stablishes the heart in the bloud of Christ And purges the heart to make it fit for the Holy Ghost to dwell in also it works by love and makes a man not churlish and froward but loving and that even to his very enemies for Christ sake thy heart will tell thee thus much and make thee say I thank God I have this faith in me Lastly seeing it is thus namely that it is the duty of all every one that lives under the Gospel to prove his heart and search it to the bottom 2 Cor. 13. 5. Examine your selves whether you be in the faith this shewes that it is not a thing to be taken as granted that we have this faith except we find that we have it indeed but to search and try our selves for it Because else we are in a great danger even in the state of reprobates Therefore examine thy self and if thou hast it bless God that ever thou wert born to be brought to such a blessed state wherein thou mayst thus triumph Now for the notes whereby thou mayest try thy self they may be these The first is taken out of Rom. 8. 15. yea have not received the spirit of bondage to fear again but the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abb●… Father Thou hast found thy self before to have bin in an estate of bondage as those believing Romans there who were accepted in an estate of fear and bondage under the curse of the Law and condemnation even in despair of themselves the spirit of Bondage for that time shews us the law that condemns us and makes it to triumph over a man so long as it lasts try therefore if thou hast felt thy conscience set on thee and found thy self to be condemned for thy sins Thus all Gods children truly converted indeed have felt though some more some less and lyen under it some a longer
some a shorter time if thy soul have drooped been afraid to be utterly cast away if thou hast found thy self in a lost estate then is thy case good for this goes alwayes before that insulting faith that triumphs against all condemnation If thou hast not found this but hast gotten faith without it then dost thou speak peace to thy self before God speakes it and it is all one as if the Israelites should have looked up to the brazen serpent before they had been bitten with the fiery serpent in the wilderness who had been never the better not finding indeed the need thereof as those that are stung and troubled with fin do Many are driven to believe because they are convinced thereof in their judgement and the example of others they think would shame them else But that is not enough thou must find thy self throughly awakened for thy sins and feel thy self lying under the wrath of God and lost as it were in thy self before thou canst truly see the need of a Saviour and look up to him effectually Secondly If thou hast obtained this absolving quitting and triumphing Faith then after this spirit of bondage thou hast found the spirit of Adoption spoken of in the same place Rom. 8. 15. for before thou hast been bitten with thy sins the Devil and thine own conscience thou canst not receive any true comfort But when thou once findest in thee nothing but matter of condemnation art driven quite out of thy self then the spirit with the Gospel opens thy heart and inlargeth it to rejoyce and draw stronger consolation from the Gospel then the law could bring condemnation So that if thou hast found the spirit of grace and comfort calming thy minde and purging thy conscience and so sealing thy heart and giving thee som assurance that thy sins are forgiven thee then is thy estate good assure thy self nothing in the world could do this but the spirit of God Ask therefore thine own soul if thou hast in any small measure in truth found thus then hath God begun this triumphing Faith and set it up in thee Thirdly If thou hast this Faith then art thou united unto Christ and hast fellowship with him thou art then knit to Christ as a man to his wife in a mariage bond for thou must know that Christ is the believer in a spiritual and mystical manner Rom. 8. 1. We first are in Christ that is when we once come to believe and then Christ is in us as it is vers 10. when his death kills the body of sin in us and Iohn 17 21 23. I in them saith Christ and they in me which shew as in divers other places in like manner that there is then an union which is an in●allible note that floweth imediately from the grace of faith once begotten wrought in any poor soul 1 Ioh. 1. 3. They have fellowship with Christ and with the father through Christ if thou hast this faith then is there a bond that knits thee to God above all other in the world and without this thou canst challenge no Salvation from Christ. let every one therefore examine if he have such a Faith in him by which he may know whether he finde Christ in him or himself in Christ and so a blessed fellowship between them and this thou mayest know if thou findest not the world and sin working and reigning in thee but the spirit of Christ having the rule and dominion in thee Christ he is the ruler and governour of his Church and children O blessed man that hast this O blessed habitation to dwell in Christ to be ingrasted and have an happy being and fellowship with Christ. This discovers abundance of false faith in most men in the world that dream and think to be saved by Christs death on the Crosse now ascended and being in heaven c. But if this be all the wickedest heart in the world that knows of this may say as much but here is the disfence that cuts the thread the sound believer hath further the spirit of Christ to kill sin in him he hath also Christs blood in him that is the worth and merit thereof taking away the guilt of sin and purifying his conscience which he findes by the peace of it He hath also the virtue of Christs Resurrection in him to raise up his dead heart Paul desired to know nothing but Christ crucified by an inward experimental knowledge and feeling of the power thereof Also as Christ is now in heaven making intercession for him so he hath his spirit in him to teach and assist him to pray for pardon of sin and strength against the world and the Devil and that remnant thereof inbred corruption that still remains in him Try thy self for this and if thou find it in thee go on thy mariage bond here shall be broken and soul and body separated by death yet shall thy blessed union with Christ never be broken but though thy body happen to lie in the dust for a time yet shall it one day be raised up again and united to thy soul and both conjoyned to God to live with him in glory forever Fourthly If thou hast this insulting and triumphing faith then thou art a devoted and consecrated man to God and Christ to serve God in righteousness and true holiness all thy dayes hence all believers are said to be Saints that is sanctified and set apart to God dealing with worldly things not with hearts set upon them but using them as if they used them not even with holy affections and hearts consecrated to God and Christ hence also is it that they are called temples to God set apart to their Redeemer by Baptism and Profession But do those that think they have this faith thus carry themselves this belongs to every man and woman we must not be devoted to the pleasures of this world but keep our hearts as men devoted to God and Christ even in our recreations We must have a special care we destroy not this Temple by prostrating our selves to base lusts try thy self for this and though none can do this as they should yet are all to labour and endeavour it He that hath this assurance to be able to challenge and triumph over his enemies in Christ must be the most fearful man in the world not as doubting of Gods favour but in being afraid to sin against God and to offend any of his Brethren which if thou dost thou shalt be the stronger in this triumphing faith Examples hereof we have throughout the whole Scriptures in all Gods children when they were once effectually called whose carriage I pray mark what it was Luke 19. 8. Zacheus made restitution abundantly when his faith had embraced Jesus Christ again Act. 17. Those that had used unlawful A ●s when faith once entered they burnt their books lest they should draw away their hearts and infect and hurt others they so hated their sin and
Rom. 6. 1. the Apostle abhors even so much as to think of his former conversation to live in the corruption of it They that have this faith indeed there is an uproar as it were in their hearts against sin and when they are overtaken and stumble 2 Cor. 7. oh how careful are they to repent and pray to God to be washed from their sins And all this may serve to shew what kind of persons they be even the most fearful to sin and careful to please God of all others Paul after he was converted would rather never eat then he would justly offend his Brother and all because God had given him this triumphing faith This care and fear should be in all of us for he that is bold in sin say what he will he finds not this faith nor can triumph in it Sixthly It a man have this then is he the most forward unto and fruitfulness and abounding in good works above all others in the world for this faith it transplants and sets us being by nature wilde olives into Christ the true Vine who is no barren root but fruitful 2 Cor. 9. this we may see in the believing Corinthians charity he speaks of there and in the woman that cast all that she had into the Treasury and in Zacheus that gave half his goods to the poor faith opened his heart that before was nigardly and so Iohn 12. how did Mary pour out the ointment and that good woman Act. 9. 36. so full of chastity so also Acts 2. 4. they were now content all should be for Christ. Now these examples with many more are all set down for our learning and imitation if we will find indeed such a faith as will save our souls another day Seventhly he that hath this insulting faith he doth already conquer his enemies he finds the power of it dayly in giving him victory in some kind over his in-dwelling sin and strengthening him against the world and temptations leading him to sin though he find them not fully conquered yet is not his heart so fully and altogether taken up but that he hath some freedom in the midst of all the affairs and businesses of this world to set some time apart for Divine exercises to honour God he is not a slave to the world 1 Iohn 1. 5. this faith lifts him so up as he is above the dominion of the world though he may be often foiled yet gets he up again and gets ground of lusts daily and is not as many that are led away and made slaves to their pleasures profits c. This faith gets victory over the immoderateness of recreations and delights in some sort Lastly This faith 't is no phantasie of a mans brain but that which Gods Word is the ground of and therefore he that hath it it makes him receive the Ministers testimony to Gods Word which is true Now this faith it carries life in it whereby a man may know he hath it the Scripture is manifest for this Gal. 2. 20. The life that I live is by faith in the Son of God Hab. 2. 4. The just shall live by his faith and that righteousness which brings into Gods presence and favour it hath a light within which consists 1. In that if thou hast this triumphing faith then thou hast a sweet apprehension of Gods favour by an inward feeling of a reconciliation with an angry God whom thou hast so offended 2. In some peace of Conscience 3. Unspeakable joy in the Holy Ghost even when the world sets against thee and sorrows oppress thee 4 In a change a new creature the D●vils image defaced and the Image of God that was lost restored 5. It shews it self also in warranting thy actions and letting thee see that the thing thou dost in regard of the substance is good also it covers the defects of thy actions in Christ and tells thee that God accepts of thy po●r endeavours in him and hereupon it is that Gods children when they find God reconciled to them and themselves once brought into his favour are so stirred up to good works and prayer also in afflictions that it is which keeps the heart close to God in his promises neither tying God to time means nor manner but waiting patiently for deliverance This faith also it hath his sence an eye an ear a hand c. likewise its voice both inward and outward when God sayes believe it makes a man find a spirit within say●ng Lord I believe indeed it makes him also outwardly with the Publican confess his sin and wretchedness as also how doth a true believer pray he not onely speaks but even speaks because he doth believe Now of the lets to this faith there are a world of hindrances the Devil blows into the brains of men by ordinary conceits arising in their imaginations to hinder and keep them from such a faith as may assure their hearts that there is no condemnation belonging to them and so go on cheerfully about their business having all their wants supplied And there is indeed no Christian that is in Christ that can possibly be clean without them onely the difference is some have more some less but let us all well weigh them and they will appear all but conceits and to have no reality and truth in them 1. Now the first of these is That it is presumption which is a conceit the Papists take up and is in us all so far as we are naturally Popish we think this faith is but a presumption yet this is but a meer conceit for if we have faith it assures us through Christ that nothing can destroy us All presumption is either upon a mans own merit or Gods mercies as Divines acknowledge Now that faith doth neither of these it is plain for he first that knows Christ according to his Word layes hold on Christs merits and Gods mercy in him and so applies and rests thereupon before God labouring to bring forth fruit and so is assured of Gods love And this is no presum tion for he relies not upon his own merits but Christs 2. This faith builds not on Gods mercy at large but on his mercy in Christ he believes on him that hath satisfied Gods justice and therefore knows that God cannot but must needs shew mercy If this were presumption who would seek after it to lose his labour but this the Lord commands and therefore it is no presumption but obedience and duty to do it Nay if thou shouldst not seek after this faith and assurance it were a neglect and contempt of the Commandement of God A second impediment that keeps men from seeking this faith is a conceit that it is impossible ever to get it and this sticks too much in our unbelieving hearts and is strongly rooted in our ignorant Protestants that give themselves to other Books but not to the careful and conscionable reading of Gods Book
where there is nothing so beaten upon both in Old and New Testament as that we should trust in God and not upon our selves and that this which belongs to every child of God that shall be saved is no conceit of impossibility but this faith belongs to every child of God therefore not impossible to be attained and this is plainly proved Gal. 3. 26. where it is said Ye are all the Sons of God by faith there is none the Son of God but by believing in the Son of God and Act. 13. 40. So many as were ordained to eternal life believed which shews that all such shall have this faith that is a true and a saving faith not the counterfeit faith of the world for it is a gift common to all Gods children without which a man cannot be a Son of God A third hindrance is a conceit that it is very hard and difficult though not impossible a man may labour will some say seven years and never attain thereunto But admit it be hard as it is indeed so to flesh and blood to which every good course is irksom yet consider that the first point in Christianity is to deny our selves and to go to Christ alwayes knowing that whatsover the first Adam lost the second Adam Christ Jesus hath it for thee N●w Christ he hath bidden thee to take upon thee his yo●k and that is part of it even this conquering and triumphing faith and whatsoever belongs to Christs yoak it is easie Iohn 14 1. Ye believe in God believe also in me saith Christ where he commands thee to believe and Mat. 11. 28. Christ calls thee to come to him if thou be heavy laden and weary of thy sins Why shouldst thou then fear any thing when he can make all things easie to thee Go therefore to God in Christs Name he hath promised to give thee above all thou canst ask or think This conceit of difficulty in obtaining such a faith it belongs onely to sluggish and slothsul Christians who yet notwithstanding for the things of this world will sit up all night and ride and run through thick and thin Be not thou less careful and diligent for thy soul this faith this excellent thing will quit all thy pains if thou dealest not in thine own wisdom and strength but goest out of thy self and seekest it of Christ which if thou doest then shalt thou find it no hard thing but easie because God will give it thee in the use of the means if thou be constant therein Let not therefore this misconceit by any means hinder thee A fourth let or hindrance is a conceit that it is either needless or at least not of such absolute necessity but that a man may do well enough though he come not to such assurance and confidence in his faith as to insult and triumph therein And this is a conceit that hinders those that are more forward in profession then others and in the performing of some duties more careful yet go not home to God so throughly as they should but keep their souls aloof as it were from God but without this faith it is impossible for them to know whether they be elect or reprobates hypocrites or the true children of God indeed and therefore let such know it is of absolute necessity 2 Cor. 13. 5. Know ye not that they are in the faith saith the Apostle except ye be as reprobates Let not therefore any such conceit still possess thee but seeing this saith is of absolute necessity as the truth of Gods Word shews pluck up thy heart and go to God for it A fifth impediment is a conceit that this is the onely way to open a gap to all licentiousness but who are they that say thus surely none but Athiests that fear neither God nor man or else Papists that are blinded themselves and would blind others Oh that such learned men as many of them be should be so grossly ignorant of Gods truth Indeed they that have not this faith may open a gap to all licentiousness but no true believer that hath found this conquering and insulting faith for he is the most fearful man of all other to commit sin and before this a man never makes conscience of sin Act. 15. 9. and Act. 26. 15. when this once comes it opens his eyes and makes him pry into his own heart to see what a dunghil it is and so makes him labour to cast out all his filthy affections and sinful lusts and to endeavour after holiness and righteousness so far is this from making a man licentious for it is the very ro●t from whence all holiness of heart and life flows and therefore let no man suffer this conceit to hinder him from seeking this faith We shall be kept to the possession of that salvation we once believed and hoped for if we could quite lose it again then must there be something stronger then the power of God but we know that cannot be for God onely hath power to consume all things from the earth in a moment with the breath of his nostrils and therefore there is nothing above his power O then in how blessed an estate are they above all the world whom the Lord hath pleased to set in such an estate as once to be assured of this faith and walk in it Beware therefore of conceits a conceit had almost made the Iaylor to kill himself Acts 16. 27. 2 Kings 7. 19 20. a conceit hindered the Prince go thou therefore by sound judgement from the Word of God false suppositions and conceits make men so differ as they do All conceits at last will fall on thy head and thou with thy false conceits as cha●t be blown away labour thou therefore for truth and right in all things that will be a Buckler which will defend thy head but make account the Devil will hinder thee herein what he can for he knows well enough if thou once get this thou wilt soon be gone out of his Kingdom Now come we to consider the means which God hath appointed to work this faith and encrease it in our selves which be indeed abundant but the main means of all is the lifting up the standard The preaching of the Gospel of Jesus Christ And therefore we are diligently to attend at wisdoms posts to hear Gods word Rom. 10. 14. It is that which opens the heart and so lets in Christ who by his spirit doth inable us from an inward light and power to say Lord I believe and therefore am assured of my salvation This faith leaves not a man with his sins about him to go on in the course of this world still doubting for he can tell how he came by his faith and it is not a common but a true substantial faith that will never fail when hee comes to stand most in need of it and is no conceit or bare imagination gotten by contemplation but a settled perswasion arising from Gods
may strengthen and enable us to serve him that so we may please him in all things with fear and reverence so likewise 2 Pet. 3. ult But grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ growth is properly of that which is a permanent thing of that which is an inherent thing as when a thing is said to grow whiter and whiter c. so I say grace is an inherent quality which is stamped upon the heart which is begotten in the heart But then I add that it is a supernatural quality that is it is such a quality as elevates and raiseth a man that enableth a man to do more then he is able to do by the strength of nature As for example to illustrate it If you take water of it self you know it is able to make your hands cold or any thing that is put into it but if you will have water do any thing above the nature of it you must put in a higher quality if you will have it heat you must put it to the fire So it is here we are able to do the things agreeable to nature without any special help but when we are to do the duties of new obedience to please God to do things that nature cannot reach unto we must have a higher quality infused into our hearts therefore I say grace is a supernatural quality that raiseth nature that elevates it that helps it to do more then otherwise it is able to do Again I add that it is a supernatural peculiar quality because there are some common supernatural gifts as those gifts of temperance knowledge patience meekness and the like these are the gifts of the Holy Ghost and these are many times wrought in the hearts of those that are not truly sanctified and these are supernatural gifts too but yet they are but common gifts they are such gifts as the Holy Ghost bestows upon those that are not elected to life But now saving grace is a gift peculiar to the Elect peculiar to those that are within the Covenant therefore to make a distinction we put them together in the description and say it is a supernatural peculiar quality Again further I add that it is wrought in us by the Holy Ghost because no creature in heaven or earth is able to work grace in any mans heart for to put grace into the heart is to put life into the heart now to put life into the heart is the property of the Spirit it is he that makes a man to live another life that as it is onely fire that can beget heat so it is onely the Holy Ghost that can beget life It is true other instruments are used the Word is an instrument and holy men are instruments but yet it is the Holy Ghost that works it principally and all instruments can do nothing without the influence of the Holy Ghost I add again to make it yet more full that it is wrought by the Holy Ghost whereby we are enabled to please God All those other common graces and all the effects and fruits of them though the things be good in themselves and supernatural because they come from the holy Spirit yet they do not please God that is the Lord is not so well pleased as to accept the man that is the Subject and the Agent of them to eternall life Onely by faith a man is able to please God and faith you know is the principle and root of all other graces it is onely grace that makes a man able to please him because the Lord delights in that which is like to himself This grace is the stamp and Image of God till a man then have such a quality in him and that all the works that he doth proceeds from this Image he pleaseth not God Lastly I add it enableth him to please God in all things for it is the property of grace that as it hath a general being spread through the whole soul so it hath general effects that is it hath an influence into all a mans life into all his actions so that whatsoever he doth there is some tincture of grace seen in it some leaven as I may say of grace some taste of grace Such a grace as is bestowed upon a man as a common gift it helps a man to do such a particular business it makes him m●ek it makes him temperate it makes him to understand his profession it makes him able to rule c. but yet this property it hath not to have a general influence into all that a man doth into all his actions for that is only the property of saving grace it enableth us to please God in all things So we see briefly what grace is Now I say this grace strengtheneth us wheresoever it is it makes a man strong in the inner man it makes him able to do the duties of new obedience he is not onely willing and desirous and purposing to do them but it gives him power and strength and vigor to go through with the work and the reasons are two First because grace changeth the nature of a man when a mans nature is changed that he doth naturally he doth it strongly There is nothing so strong as the course of nature you see it is hard to turn that other things that are not natural their course is easily altered but to make a man another man of a Lion to make him a Lamb this grace can do and nothing else Now take all feigned and counterfeit things they are feigned and return quickly to their own nature again You know guilded things last not long the guilt weareth off colours that are not wadded they will not last because they are but counterfeit and counterfeit things abide not they have no strength in them Now grace changing a mans nature it runs strongly it makes a man able to do the things he is set on work to do that is the first Reason Secondly Grace is the vigour or strength or efficacy of the spirit the very force and power of the holy Ghost As it is said of the Gospel It is the power of God to salvation so you may say grace it is the power of the spirit All other things in a man do but proceed from the flesh that is they have a root in the flesh common graces have a rise in our selves though there is a help of the holy Ghost in them yet there is something of the flesh in them Now whatsoever cometh of the flesh though it be beautiful yet it is as a flower that will fade away There is a weakness in all flesh as there is a strength in spirit which is intimated Isa. 21. 3. Fear not the Egyptians for they are flesh and not spirit As if he had said if there be nothing with them but an arm of flesh they are but weak for weakness is that that follows the flesh as naturally as
a shew of holinesse what will he do when we shall neglect and abuse and prophane those things that are holy indeed We do not know what danger we incur when we come negligently to the Lords Supper You see in 1 Cor. 11. That their negligent coming to the Lords Supper because they did not discern the Lords Body that is because they did not discern the holinesse the preciousnesse and excellency of his body because they did not consider the holinesse of that duty therefore saith the Text the Lord strook many of them with sicknesse and some with death It was certainly some contagion some sicknesse at that time more then ordinary And if you compare it with that before mentioned of the Bethshemites you may see plainly that it is the Lords ordinary course to inflict a more then ordinary judgement upon those that are prophaners of holy things therefore we may well say among other causes that the unholy coming to the Lords Table is the cause of that great plague that of late hath been in this place But you will say I have received it and it may be negligently but I have felt no such thing as this you speak of Perhaps thou hast not but there is the spiritual plague and judgement which the Lord hath put upon thee as a revenge for thy unworthy receiving of the Sacrament When Iohn Baptist came to preach the Scripture saith he brought the ax with him not that men were to be cut off from their natural life but the meaning is when men abuse these holy Ordinances and will not receive the offer of the Gospel and will not profit by the Gospel When we do but preach the Gospel onely to your ears and no more the Lord commonly smites such souls with spiritual judgements he gives up such souls to hardness of heart therefore when you come hither ask your selves this question what grace have I in my heart have I any life any stomack any taste to feed upon the Lord in the Sacrament have I white raiment to cover my nakedness if not what do I here You shall see in 1 Cor. 10. when men offer to come to this Sacrament without grace what saith the Apostle Do you provoke the Lord to anger are ye stronger then he that is the Lord takes it as a provokation to his face as if ye did despight the very spirit of grace and so afterward saith he ●e cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of devils ye cannot partake of the Table of the Lord and the Table of devils and therefore for a man to come to this holy Sacrament and not cleanse himself from all pollution and filthiness of flesh and spirit but will be partaker of the Lords Table and join with it filthiness which should be abhorred in so doing he provokes the Lord to anger and what follows that The Lord will put his strength against him to destroy him Are ye stronger then he Therefore if I might but obtain so much let me intreat you to enter into consideration of this To help you to this we will apply the point That the property of grace is to make a man strong Now this power of grace is seen in three things First the power and strength of grace is seen in this That it heals corrupt nature and it elevates and helps us to do more then common nature can reach to for there are two things in every natural man corrupt nature which is contrary to grace and common nature which is beneath grace Now when saving and sanctifying grace is come into the heart it heals corrupt nature and enableth to do more then common nature can do Consider therefore whether this grace cure those hereditary diseases which we have received from Adam those diseases which breed in the heart Take any thing besides grace if the Syre and the Dam trot it is a hard thing to work the contrary in the off-spring but grace is able to heal those diseases that are hereditary If you bring a man to a Physitian and say such a man hath a hereditary disease which he hath received from his parents he will presently give him over as a desperate Patient but grace can cure those natural and hereditary diseases Therefore in Iames 4. 5. sai●h he The spirit that is in us lusteth after envy that is there is this natural disease in every man that his spirit is lusting the word there used i 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is still boyling or bubbling forth it is still lusting after envy But how shall we do to help it saith he the Scripture offers more grace that is the Scripture gives grace that can do more then nature can do it is able to heal that very l●●ing whatsoever it be That is you must not think when a man hath a strong natural infirmity hanging upon him that all the vows and resolulutions and purposes in the world can help him it is beyond natural help but it is not past the help of grace When Naaman the Assyrian could not be healed he inquired what he should do and when he came to the Prophet there he was healed so when the Disciples could not cast the Devil out of the man they went to Christ and he was able to do it When thou goest about to cast out any natural infirmity or to heal any of thy hereditary diseases think with thy self though by nature I cannot do it yet let me go to Christ let me go to grace that is able to do it though it be past the cure of nature it is not past Christs cure it is not past the help of grace When Christ was upon the earth they brought to him those that had old festred diseases those that were born blind and deaf and dumb and he healed them The same Christ doth now to the souls of men in the world and that by the vertue and power of grace here spoken of Therefore consider with your selves what natural infirmities you have what hereditary diseases you have if you find that they are not healed in you that those bloody issues run as fresh as ever they did you have not this grace for it is able to heal nature and to cure it wheresoever it comes But you will say Is there any man that hath these natural infirmities so wholly healed and cured I answer No I say not that they are altogether healed but they are cured by grace that is grace so far heals them that it gets the Mastery over them there is the power of grace seen therefore it is called a Kingdom The Kingdom of God is in power that is it is such a Kingdom that gets the Mastery wheresoever it is it hath the dominion over the disease and as we say the power of any object it stands in this that it subdues the faculty so herein the power of grace is manifested in that it overcomes those corruptions that are most
I have declared to you what it is to win your hearts to a more full assent to this that nothing but godliness is accepted we will shew you some reasons for it For a man will ask this What is the reason that God delights not in nature or natural vertues or in moral habits Why doth he not delight in these Why will he accept of nothing but godliness First there is this reason for it because the Lord loves nothing but that which is like himself as indeed no man doth nor no creature No man loves any thing but that which hath a likeness a consimilitude with something within himself For all love you know comes from similitude all delight comes from likeness Therefore the things that have no similitude with us we neither love nor delight in them Now therefore when God looks upon man and sees his own Image upon him when he sees that stamp upon a man he loves it and delights in it for it is like himself But now whatsoever is from nature whatsoever is but moral vertues it is but from the earth and is earthly it is but from the flesh and it is fleshly But that which is supernatural that which is infused into us from God that Image of his which is stamped upon us is from Heaven and is heavenly it is from the Spirit and it is spiritual Now God that is a Spirit and is holy he loves that which is spiritual and holy he loves his own Image wheresoever he finds it Now godliness is onely heavenly for all other beauties that seem so gaudy to us are but from the earth and are the beauty of the flesh therefore the Lord delights not in them the Lord loves it not with the love of complacency so as to be well pleased with it That is one reason Secondly the reason why the Lord doth love nothing but godliness that he loveth none of the rest so as to delight in them for there is a kind of love that he gives them as you know our Saviour Christ looked on the young man in the Gospel and loved him but I say he doth not delight in them he loves them not with that special and peculiar love because all these ornaments they do but beautifie the creature in it self Now no creature may rejoyce in it self or boast in it self no creature may magnifie it self which it would do if it might find an excellency in it self Therefore the Lord will have the creature to find no excellency in it self and therefore he doth not magnifie these things he sets no price upon them And the Lord would have the creature to know so much he onely magnifies and esteems that which draws the creature from it self makes the creature his therefore he prizeth and esteemeth onely the emptying graces You shall see the Scripture doth not magnifie those moral vertues that Aristotle and Plutarch and Seneca and the rest of those Heathens magnified For the scope of the Scripture looks another way and magnifieth those emptying graces most As faith for instance which emptyeth the creature of it self and makes a man to see nothing in himself not to trust in himself but teacheth a man to look for all from God therefore the Scripture magnifieth faith O woman great is thy faith that is this is the thing that onely makes thee amiable this is it that makes me set a high price upon thee And so in that speech to the Centurion I have not found so great faith no not in Israel It was that which set Iacob in that high esteem with God that which got him that title of honour to be called Israel it was his faith And why is it but because the Lord regards that onely in the creature which makes a man his which draws a man nearer to him and more out of himself Now this godliness doth for it makes a man to see nothing in himself but all in God and therefore to follow God altogether to seek God altogether Now all other ornaments all natural and moral vertues do beautifie and adorn the creature within himself they make a man to see something within himself now no creature is to do this no not the creature when it was in the flower of all its bravery When Adam and the Angels would begin to look on something in themselves and forget God and to think that they were some body and would stand upon their own bottom then they fell For the creature of it self is as a glass without a bottom if you set it down it breaks for it hath nothing to sustain it but as long as a man holds it in his hand so long it is safe Such a thing is every creature in it self Angels and men they are without a bottom when the Lord doth not hold them in his own hand when they will go about to stand of themselves they fall and break and that was the cause of the fall of the Angels and the fall of Adam and of all of us in him viz. self-dependance Our repairing again the restoring of the creature must be by learning to be altogether Gods to magnifie God to look to God and to look to him altogether for that is indeed onely prized and magnified by him And this is the second reason wherefore godliness is only accepted by God because it teacheth a man onely to mind him to look to him to draw near to him it makes a man altogether his and not his own We will add one more the Lord regards onely godliness and nothing else because it gives him all the glory Now onely the Lord may seek his own glory because he hath no other end beyond himself Every creature you know is made for a further end and therefore is bound to seek something above it self even as it stands subordinate to that Every man is subordinate a man in the Common-wealth must seek the good of that Every man is subordinate to God therefore he must seek the glory of God for the subordination will so carry it But now the Lord he hath none above himself therefore he may and doth seek his own glory now nothing gives glory to God but godliness In 1 Cor. 11. The man is the glory of God and the woman is the glory of the man The meaning of it is this look how the woman is the glory of the man so is the man the glory of God that is a man must have nothing in himself for then he would have some glory to himself but he must be wholly the Lords he must be wholly fashioned and accommodated to him as the woman to the Husband for then he is the Lords glory Even as a picture you know it hath nothing of it self but all from the Painter therefore the picture is the glory of the Painter we use to phrase it so because it hath all from him we call it the glory of the Painter because it shews his glory And so a
godliness is That it is first a thing that is alway exercised with reluctancy alway with difficulty you shall alway find a contrary stream of corrupt nature running against it you shall alway find the flesh rebelling against it And secondly it is alway wrought with plowing and sowing And if you find not these two in your selves be assured that that which is in you is not godliness So much for this first Consectary or Use that we draw from this doctrine Secondly we must exhort you from hence now to do the thing and exalt God for God in your hearts to be godly men to use the phrase of Scripture to make him your God and to have no other gods before his face You will say What other gods Not to make your riches your god as covetousness is called Idolatry not to make your belly your god Now that is but a part for the whole that is to make no kind of creature your god nothing in the world not to make the praise of men your god c. Now what is it to make these things a mans god It is to exalt these things for God in a mans heart when you place your summum bonum in any of these that if they be taken from you you think your selves undone and if you enjoy them you think your selves well and in a happy condition In a word it is to do the same to these that you should do to God When a man shall think well I live in credit among men I have a good estate I am at liberty and all things go well with me I am now well and if I be put off from this condition if my estate be taken away if my credit with men be taken away then I am undone when a mans heart is thus affected with these things he makes them his God for he gives them that which is proper to God to think that these things can make him happy or miserable Therefore you shall observe that the phrase of Scripture Ro. 3. 10. is that they have not the fear of God before their eyes That is a man that doth exalt God in his heart he looks upon God altogether he is alwayes before his eyes That is he thinks himself happy so long as he hath his favour he fears nothing but the loss of that therefore whatsoever he doth he hath still his eye upon God As when a man fears any thing he will be sure to have his eye upon that because that is the thing which he thinketh can do him good or hurt So I say when a man hath God before his eyes when he feareth him altogether when he dares do nothing without his warrant this is to exalt him for God Contrary to this was Davids miscarriage 2 Sam. 12. Thou hast saith God by Nathan to him cast my commandments behinde thy back Indeed David did it out of infirmity upon a special temptation but when a man shall do it in his general course that he shall alwayes cast God behind his back this is not to exalt God for God in his heart but to cast him away And a man is said to cast him away when he is not still observing of him when he is not alway seeing what his will is and what his commandments are Therfore we should labor to do what the Psalmist prayeth for that the Lord would turn away our eyes and our hearts and affections from regarding vanity that is from receiving any thing into our hearts which is vanity that so our hearts may be placed upon God altogether to fear him to delight in him and nothing besides This is the thing we ought to do to the Lord and this is Godliness this is to exalt him Now to do this we must do two things First To look for all from God And then the second will easily follow we shall be ready to do all for God I say to do this effectually First We must learn to know God aright to have our hearts so filled as it were so satisfied and contented with him that we need to look for nothing else When a mans heart looks upon God as an adaequate object as the main principle of his happinesse that the having of him is essential and substantial to his happiness and he looks upon all other things but as accessories onely he cares not how other things go he hath learned so far to know God that his heart is fully satisfied with him he is content to have communion with him though he have him alone So that he looks upon riches and poverty upon honour and disgrace upon good report and evil report as upon things of smaller moment that if the worst befal it is no great matter because he hath the Lord. He that hath the sun-shine what cares he for a candle A man that seeth God and enjoyes him and is satisfied with him he regards not other things And then when a man sees God is this manner the second will follow he will be ready to do all for him for those two will follow one another As the yvie though it have no root of it self it cleaves fast to the tree and depends upon it Let a man be brought once to this to see that he hath nothing of his own and that God is all in all to him he will easily depend upon God and cleave to him but still remember that God be all in all That as it is said Col. 3. of Christ there is in him neither Iew nor Gentile but Christ is all in all to us That is we must make God all and he must be so in all things And in this we fail for the most part we can be content to have God for part but to make him our all to seek all our comfort from him all our happiness and to do it not onely in some things but in all things herein we come short But when we are able to do this to look upon God as all in all to us then we shall be ready to do all to him and that is the other thing that we must do to refer all to him to care for nothing but to please him to do all in sincerity to do it to the Lord. For otherwise it is not godliness you may do much but you may do it for by-ends for vain glory for self-respects but that which we exhort you now unto is to do it for the Lord in sincerity For the Lord hath a quick eye he observes narrowly whatsoever you do what ends you have in all your actions It may be you do much but if it be not done for him you have a reward indeed but this is not that which is acceptable to God For as it is said of the word of God Heb. 4. that it divides between the flesh and the spirit between the marrow and the bones What is the meaning of that that is it divides between the actions of the flesh and of the
spirit That when any man doth a business of the Lords the word discernes it because it is the word that cometh from the spirit So here when we do any business the Lord seeth how far the spirit hath a hand in it and how far the fl●sh and he discerneth exactly between them though it be as near as the bone and the marrow As if he should say even as the bones and the marrow even as the joynts and the sinnews the eye of man cannot see into them yet the Lord searcheth the reins to the bottom he discerneth what of the flesh and what of the spirit is in every action And my brethren you should learn to do thus to your selves to judge your selves after this manner to consider in all the actions you do whether you do them in sincerity to the Lord for it is godliness no further it is something it may be which is good some moral vertues it may be or else an act of Religion and publick worship but it is not godliness except it be done for the Lord. Therefore you must do th●se two things 〈◊〉 him for God in your hearts look for all from him care for no comfort but what comes from him it is no matter what you loose so you have him you reckon him the main you reckon him essential to your happiness Other things if they be better or worse so it is it is no no great matter And again to do it in sincerity as to God Last of all if this be the thing that the Lord looks for from you then labour to excel in it because it is the best excellency you have for that in a man which is onely acceptable to God is certainly the best thing in him and the more he excels in such a thing the more acceptable Every man seeks after excellency why should we not labor to excel in this that is labour to be very godly to do very much for the Lord. Every man is ready to do something for some body he will do something for his friend for his Wife for his Children for his Prince for his countrey and it is well you should do all this but now look upon the Lord and see in how many respects you are bound to him more then to all these And think if I ought to do for all these how much more ought I to do for the Lord And therefore consider what you have to do and how much you are bound to him and labour to excel in godliness that is to do much for God A man will do much for himself he will devise what is for his own good he will project it and study it with solicitousness now a man is bound to love God above himself and therefore to do more for God then for himself This is a thing that is much forgotten among us and by those whom we call godly men they forget it they think not what they have to do for the Lord. You have many opportunities afforded to you remember that to be a godly man is as you have opportunities as to do much for God so to do much to him God observes what talents every man hath what occasions what hints every man hath to do him service what advantages what power he hath in his hand and he looks that all these should be improved for his advantage It is no better then thievery and robbery to take these from God and to bestow them upon your selves As you reckon it in a steward to be the greatest theft to turn his masters good and benefit to his own profit so when a man shall have an eye to himself in all these things it is an extream robbery of God for you knew you should use them all for God And the more you do for him for he sees it and observes it will recompence every man a hundred fold No man payes wages so as he doth but we will not stand to urge this because I would not be kept from handling that which is the main scope of this text Having a form of Godliness but denying the power thereof The second point that we would deliver to you it lies so plain that there needs no further opening of the text for the gathering of it it is this that Most men have but a form of Godliness though the Lord require the power of it We will even deliver it plainly as it lies It is a point that needs no proof and I wish it did I wish that it were not written in Capital letters in the fore-heads of most men that he that runs may read it For if we look about us we shall see a form of Godliness every where but the power and life of it is exceeding rare Our business will be rather to consider the cause of this disease What the reason is that the form of godliness is to be found frequently enough and the power and life of godliness is so rare and so seldom to be seen And we shall find these reasons of it First Men will have a form of godliness because there must be something to satisfie that conscience which every man hath For there is a natural conscience which the Apostle speaketh of Rom. 2. 16. speaking of the Gentiles he saith this of them their thoughts accusing or excusing one another So that there is a natural conscience even in men that yet know not God aright Now that natural conscience must have something to satisfie it it will not be at rest else Now because men are unable to judge and discern aright therefore a form of godliness is enough for them they are quieted and satisfied and contented with that although they have not the power thereof it self Even as children you know are contented with counters because they do not know their worth Satan deals with us in this case as we do with them when they cry and are unquiet such flight things of no moment contents us though they be as empty and as beggarly as counters and rattles because men are not able to judge what the conscience will have something it must have to satisfie it he gives us that which is but a form which is but counterfeit that hath not the power and life of godliness and hence it is that men are contented with it Secondly Another cause why the form is found every where but not the power it is because the form of godliness is very easie but the power and life of it is very hard and difficult It is an easie thing to do the things wherein the shew and the form consists It is an easie thing to come to Church to hear the word to here prayers it is an easie thing to read a prayer every day in private it is an easie thing to have such a formality in serving of God these are things that are done with facility But come now to the power and life of godliness that mortifieth thy lusts that subdueth
profitable delight in them above others and if we were truly thirsty and hungry we would do so A thirsty man stands not to look at the carving of the cup but drinks off the wine and a hungry man had rather have a good meals meat then hear a whole noise of musicians and he will not stand commending but he will fall to his meat though this be too little practised for many when the Word is delivered finde no relish in it but are ready to complain of the plainness and simplicity of the spirit which to do is to do as children that bites the nipples of the teats that gives the sweetest milk And this secondly shews their vanity for when they meet with a Sermon partly good partly not wherein Heterogenies are mixed for otherwise I know not how better to call them this is sure to go into their table books I mean not sound and wholesome points but pretty sayings and frothy matters and these are not unfitly compared to our sileing bowls that let all the milk run through but retain the hairs and that which is nought that sticks in them for how choise soever their eloquence is it is but as hairs in that case although they be flowers in an oration yet are they but weeds in a Sermon Thirdly To hold that which is good to retain and keep it in memory 1 Thess. 5. 21. The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is hold it fast let it stay in your affections comprehend it when you have heard it keep it let it not slip away but practise it and this is to hold it Now this is done by recalling and by repeating the Word after it is delivered This is commended in Mary that shee laid up the Word in her heart she laid it as one that layes a thing up to have it to use against another time Why is this Word recorded if not to be imitated suppose they were the words of Angels are not Ministers the Angels of God So it is said that the Holy Ghost brought to the disciples mindes all the things that he had told them Now the Holy Ghost would do no unnecessary thing and doth not Christ speak as well to us as he did to them onely with this difference to them he spake immediately but to us by his Ministers What other was the fault of the first ground the seed lay on a while whilest the ●ower was by but after it was stollen away by the Devil because it was not repeated and wrought in the memory so when a S●rmon is done if it be soon forgot as we have a natural proneness thereunto the Devil hath a hand in it and this hath brought Gods Judgements on many therefore take heed saith our Saviour how you hear Luke 8. 18 when Christ delivered any thing in publick the Disciples repeated it in private and came to Christ and asked him of such things they doubted of Act. 17. 11. The men of Berea searcheth the Scriptures whether these things were so which they had heard which they could not do without repeating Where there is a double duty performed First they did repeat it Secondly they tryed it To make this evident consider these four things First not repeating the Word of God after it is preached doth quench the spirit and that is sin 1 Thess. 5 24. Now it is quenched thus In the time of preaching for that is the time when the Holy Ghost breaths into our hearts as he did into Cornelius when he stirs up motions and we let them die and recall them not we quench and grieve the spirit for then it is a mercy of God to trouble us the time of healing being nigh if he step in as it was in the pool of Bethesda while the heart is soft therefore put in the plough and join with God for we must not be like those that are Sea-sick while they are on the Sea they are troubled but as soon as they get to shore out of the Church door they are well enough If God at any time breaths his Word into us we must do as Mariners do who because they have not winde at their call when it doth blow they hoise up sail and go on their Journey the Word and Spirit blow when it listeth therefore we must take opportunity to set our souls in the way of Heaven to recall the motions which have been stirred up in the inner Chamber of our hearts and to make use of them lest by often neglecting them the Spirit grow wearie and cease to strive any more It is despising of prophesie which is a pearl Mat. 7. 6. Christ will not have him admonished that before contemptuously refused it because he will have no pearls be cast before swine If admonitions be pearls then much more instructions if a private admonition be a pearl then sure publick instructions Now that is despising of prophesie which is made plain thus Suppose a man give another a pearl while the giver is by he looks on it and beholds the beauty of it but when he is gone he casts it away and trampleth it under his feet So it is if while the Word is delivering we attend to it and when Sermon is done reject it and look no more on it but cast it away is not this a despising of prophesie It is food of the soul and therefore not to recal it is as it were children to take meat of their parents hands and perhaps taste of it but after cast it away or it is as if sheep should tread their fodder under their feet So it is when the Word is delivered for it is the food of the soul to receive it and after to cast it away It will not profit us except it be remembred and hid in our hearts we shall get no good by it meat though it be eaten yet if it stay not with us it will not nourish us unless therefore we labour to gather something from it and retain it it will not breed succum sanguinem nourishment in us as it ought But this is much neglected of among men for as many go into Gardens some to see the variety of flowers some to smell of them but onely it is the Bee that fastens on them and gets Honey out of them So many come to Church some to see what variety the Minister hath some get sweetness for the time but onely they that do insidere notare lay them up and minde them get profit by them See this in other things let a man hear a Philosophy Lecture or Logick never so long if he recals not what he hears it will be long enough ere he be an Artist and are not Gods Ordinances much more to be respected Not respecting of it takes Gods name in vain and the Judgement of it is fearful viz. He will not hold him guiltless And that which is a taking of Gods Name in vain is plain thus The
and through temptation it will vanquish and subdue corruption and bring him on his knees and so he falls flat before the Lord In such a case I say a man that hath his corruption subdued though it were a tryal tentimes greater and more sore yet he may live upon better terms with the Lord and more comfortably then another man with a lighter cross As it falls out many times in the time of War and hostility between two Cities or Nations the weaker part in the time of War indures and sustains more inconvenience and blood-shed and loss of men then after the full conquest is made especially if the government of the Conqueror be moderate and just as it is sometimes So as long as a man stands out with God in pride of spirit and will not yield he lives far more uncomfortably then when he is truly humbled and subjected to God Thirdly and lastly these general and greater afflictions may be born more comfortably and a less may more disquiet and trouble the heart because when a man hath been afflicted but in some one thing or a few things and hath many outward contentments and comforts yet remaining to him this is the usual course of men in such a case they think when their spirits are bruised and wounded with grief of heart they have lost such a friend they have lost part of such an Estate or credit then presently they fall to other things that are left them and they think to make themselves whole there when they have lost their contentment in one particular they enjoy they think to make them whole and to supply it with the outward things that remain This succeeds not because the wound that is made in the spirit by the loss of that whatsoever it be thou art crossed with it may be the anger of the Lord is mixed with it it may be the arrow of the Lord sticks in thy soul. Now if that be thy case all the outward application of comforts of the world will not do the turn Onely that hand that strook the arrow in our side is able to pluck it out of us And we see nothing more frequent and usual in the world men as long as they have other things to solace themselves with to set their delight on they never go to God If a man go to God for comfort it is as it were because he shuts every door else against him he hath no passage else that he must needs go that way or no way Therefore as long as God affords men the things of the world to solace and comfort them they do their utmost to seek it there but when God takes away all things and strikes away every prop that he hath nothing to rest on as the Dove that Noah sent that had no rest for the sole of her foot till she returned to the Ark this forceth a man of necessity to the Lord. Now though the wound were ten times more grievous and heavy coming to the right Physitian the Lord that made the wound he can cure it and comfort a man again If a man have but a scratch with a pin if he have an unskilful Chyrurgion the wound goes on to ranckle more and more and at last it costs a man his life On the other side if a man have a wound that is dangerous if he go to one that is skilfull this man recovers and lives in the world So many times many men live with disquiet minds they go to the world and seek to be whole there they seek their Physitian there and make the wound that is made worse and the latter end is worse then the beginning But now though a man be never so empty of comfort and be struck down and the hand of God be never so heavy upon him if he go to God and seek to him the Lord is able to make him a comfortable man again and to revive his spirit and bring him again from the grave So we see that objection fully answered that though we be not able to stand under lighter afflictions we may be able and strong enough to bear greater So much for this time THE LAVV OF SIN and GRACE COMBATING Rom. 7. 23. But I see another Law in my members warring against the law of my mind and leading me captive to the law of sin which is in my members THat which is to be done for the solemnity of this day which hath been most profitable and necessarily set a part by the Church for the rememberance of our deliverance from the Gun-powder Treason I leave it to be performed by another We have now pitched upon a text which will serve for our particular use This day indeed puts us in mind of a great Treason which was intended against the whole State both of Church and Common-wealth and this will put us in mind of a Treason within us Now it is true that these outward Treasons and when we hear of Wars and rumours of Wars such things as are terrible to us every man is ready to be affected affrighted with things of this nature change of state loss of goods abreption of life these things are naturally terrible to us the very hearing of them But this now is a War within which is much more dangerous and concerns every one of us to be affected with a thousand times more for it is a deadly War a War that devours the soul the other destroys onely the body this is a War which kills us with an everlasting death when as the other is onely the loss of a temporal life And this is a War which is for the most part forgotten and not minded for it is a fight that makes no noise it comes not with the sound of drums and trumpets it carrieth along with it no terrible appearance hence it is that we think of it but little Now what do we serve for that are the watch-men of your souls but to stir you up to a mindfulness of this War to sound an allarm to you and if you will be stirred up to work your deliverance well if not we have delivered our own souls and he that perisheth his blood shall be upon his own head In this Chapter in the verse before my Text the Apostle Paul triumpheth in that liberty which he had through the grace of God I delight saith he in the Law of God concerning the inner man though I find many temptations to the contrary But when he had exprest that triumph he comes now with another caution which he expresseth in these words that I have read But I see another Law in my members warring against the Law of my mind and leading me captive to the Law of sin that is in my members That is I find in my self a strong inclination a strong habit of sin carrying me violently to that which is evil Now this he sets forth by these properties First he calls it a Law Secondly he saith it is
as you see light is most in the candle though it shine through the horns of the lant-horn so this is called a Law in the members because though it reach to the inward parts of the the soul yet it is chiefly seen and is most operative in the members Thus you see why it is called a Law and why a Law of the members Thirdly it is added here that it is a warring Law it is a Law that wars or fights against the Law of the mind Now it is said to be so because it breaks the Law of God it makes resistance it goes out of compass So that as in a state while men carry themselves orderly and live by the Laws they are reckoned good subjects but when they grow mutinous against the Lawes and their lawful Prince then they are accounted rebels so is it with our affections so long as they keep within compass and contain themselves in their own sphear that the Lord hath appointed them to move in so long they are called ordinate affections but when they exceed their measure and flow over their bancks then they are said to be warring lusts inordinate lusts As for example in Rachel the desire of Children was a lawful thing but when she came to be so importunate and so unreasonable so excessive in her desire that either she must have Children or else she must die then it was a warring lust So was Esaus desire of pottage It is a lawful thing to desire the things of this life the comforts of this life but to desire them in that measure in that excess it degenerates from an ordinate affection and turns to an unruly lust Such was Davids desire of numbring the people And therefore it is not without cause that the holy-Ghost useth this expression here I find saith the Apostle a Law in my members warring For as the word in the Original signifies it wageth a war against the Law of the mind even as one army doth against another For there are a Legion of lusts an army of lusts fighting against an army of graces And if we shall a little open this to you you shall see that it wageth war and exerciseth a fight in that manner that one army doth against another For First This Law in our members these warring fighting lusts they take the bridges they keep the passages that is when we are about to perform any good duty it stops us in our proceedings and suffers us not to do it If a man have any good motion or intention put into his mind to pray to hear the word or to do any other holy duty then commeth a prohibition this Law hath a prohibiting party in the soul that stayes the proceedings As you see Saint Paul often complains that when he would do good evil was present with him That is he found a prohibition in his flesh so that either the mind is taken off from the main duty or it causeth us to ommit the duty altogether or if it cannot do that it hinders us from such a lively performance of it that is required or if it cannot do that neither yet it puts us upon the d●…ing of the duty for evil ends for vain glory c. And this is one part of the war it stops the passages But this is not all it doth not onely hinder us from doing that which is good barely resisting but it goes further it instigates and provokes us to that which is evil Therefore this Law is said to fight against the soul by way of lusting The flesh lusteth against the spirit that is it fighteth as fire fighteth with water or sickness with health for as in sickness sickness not onely hindereth those operations which we might otherwise perform but it likewise weakens that strength that vigour of the body which should make us able to resist it so is it with this Law in our members it doth not onely hinder from doing good but it weaketh those good things that are in us yea it extinguisheth them as we shall see it oft by experience those that have good things in them by education and the like how they are deaded and damped when they suffer these warring lusts to prevail against them Moreover as it hinders us in good and instigates to evil so it doth it not slugish but as the manner is in war they keep watch continually so this Law in the members it never slumbers truly it never keeps any conditions of peace but is ready to take all occasions it lies in continual ambush and therefore if we sleep at any time and stand not upon our guard and watch if we fall to surfe●ing and drunkness and neglect our watch by any kind of excess it is ready to take the advantage as Ahab did of the Army of Benhadad or as David did the Philistines at Ziglag he came upon them when they were all eating and drinking and dancing and making merry So this law in our members when we have forgotten our selves at any time When we exceed in our pleasures for this you must take for a rule when there is any excess be it in things lawful that putteth us into a spiritual slumber we lie open unto the advantage of our adversaries therefore the rule is be sober and watch least you enter into temptation That is you shall surely enter into temptation if you watch not and you cannot watch except you be sober that is except you be temperate in the use of all ●…l things Let there be any excess in sports and recreations in meats and drinks it casts us into a slumber and then this enemy takes advantage against us Therefore in a word let us never think to have an end of this War to be at peace for it doth not onely watch diligently but if at any time this Law in our 〈◊〉 be wasted and spent that is if it give over for a 〈◊〉 yet it gets a new supply and gather together its forces again That lust that is dispelled to day gathers n●w forces against tomorrow Partly because i● hath ●ome strong holds within us to which it retireth for a 〈◊〉 And partly because there is a root of sin in us which breedeth new blossoms And as it is in your gardens though you weed them to day yet you shall find them full of weeds again within a few dayes so it is with our hearts there is still a new root of corruption that keeps place and spro●ts up as oft as they are suppressed And lastly to add one thing more it is such a War as is not without stratagems and wiles That as it is in W●r we do not onely go to it by main ●orce but we use many devices and advantages and wiles and policies to prevail against the enemy So in this War you shall see here this Law in the members if you observe the proceedings of it you shall find how it strengthens its faction in us
dare I do this and sin against God That is there was a certain Law within him that came with a prohibition that would not suffer him to do it Again it punisheth and rewardeth as the other if we do well and resist the other it refresheth us with joy unspeakable and glorious if we do not obey it it breedeth remorse within us As we see in David when he had sinned in cutting off the lap of Sauls garment his heart smote him Now it is said to be the Law of the mind because it wonderously enlargeth the mind to see the wondrous things contained in the Law of God it enlighteneth the mind We are renewed in the spirit of our mind to see those things that others see not to see the secrets of God You may read over the Bible an hundred times and yet know nothing except you have it in the spirit of your minds Again it not onely reveals these truths to you that are regenerate but likewise it puts a strong inclination into your minds to do them And therefore it is a part of the Covenant Ier. 32. 40. I will put my Law into their hearts that they may fear my Name that is I will so ingraft it in their hearts that they shall not onely know my will but they shall have a strong inclination to do it they shall be careful to please me and fearful to offend me Yea not onely so it doth not onely enlighten us and give us a strong inclination to do it but when we come to the performance it gives us ability to do it Other men have good desires and good motions and purposes but when they come to the birth they have no strength to bring forth New purposes are in them as new wine in old bottles or as new pieces to old cloathes When a man hath an old nature still though he have good desires and now and then new purposes and resolutions yet they abide not there they are not fruitfull there but this Law doth not onely put good intentions into a man but when they come to the performance it gives the deed as well as the will He works in us both the will and the deed also Now as this is a Law you see and such a Law of the mind So likewise it is a Law that makes resistance for that is intimated in these words Warring against the Law of my mind that is it resists the Law of sin and fights against it In a regenerate man there is a certain strong habit a certain strong inclination which is called the spirit or the regenerate part which runs in a contrary course to the Law of sin and whensoever the Law of sin assaults us this makes resistance and carries us a contrary way Only this is here carefully to be observed that we be not deceived herein For this objection may be made Is this proper onely to regenerate men There are many men besides that were never acquainted with this work of regeneration yet such a man finds resistance in himself he finds something in himself that opposeth this Law of his members For there is a natural conscience in a man there is another Law which is like this Law of the mind and it makes resistance in the natural man as well as it which is spoken of Rom. 2. 15. the Apostle there speaks of the Law written in the minds of the Gentiles having not a Law they do the things that are written in the Law being a Law to themselves c. So that you must know and mark that in a man that is yet but a meer natural man that is not yet regenerate there may be a very strong resistance of that which is evil yea he may make conscience of many things in secret it may make him keep a constant course in the performance of many duties when no eye seeth him There is a certain vigor and strength in the natural conscience which shews it self upon occasion and yet it differeth much from that Law of the regenerate part which fighteth against the Law of sin You will say how shall we know it Because this is a matter of great moment therefore I will shew you the difference in these five things First of all when the natural conscience the law that the Apostle there speaketh of which sheweth the effect in the conscience when that strives against the Law in the members it is no more but the contention of that one part of the soul. There may be a light which discovers that which is evil which may cause a man to approve of that which is good but this light is kept within the compass of the conscience and goeth no further it doth not enlighten the whole soul. As you may see a spark of fire may lie in a dark room which you may see there but it doth not enlighten all the room as a candle doth when it cometh After this manner there may be many sparks of truth which may lie in the conscience of a natural man there he seeth them and observeth them but they do not enlighten the whole soul that is this light is not shed into the rest of the faculties the will and affections are not wrought upon by it therefore the contention is onely in the conscience and that part of the soul. But now in the fight of the regenerate it is quite otherwise there every faculty all the faculties fight in their courses as it is said the stars fought against Sisera A man fights against it in his judgement in his understanding in his will and affections That is a man that is sanctified he is enlightened to looke upon sin with another eye then before When he looked on his beloved lust before he looked on it as one that which was pleasant and profitable to him now he looks on it as poyson as an enemy as a thing contrary to him so that he fights against sin in his judgement And while a man fights against sin in his judgement though it may sometimes transport him yet so long as his judgement is right I say when that is set right there is a continual fighting against sin for it is one thing to know and approve but when the bent of the mind is set against sin then when the passion is past he returns again and goes on in the wayes of godliness And then as he fights against this Law in his mind so likewise he doth it in his will as Saint Paul saith I do the things that I would not as if he should say my will stands f●●m though sometimes I am transported And so Ioshua I and my house will serve the Lord. That is there was a fixed constant mature resolute will to do that which was good So David oft we shall hear him say I have sworn to run the wayes of thy commandements And as in the mind and will so likewise in the affections the affections fight
in the right way and a good man may sometimes miss the the right way and go out of it therefore you must observe what your constant course is For the constant course of a mans life ariseth from the inward root and bent of his disposition and look what the inward bent of his disposition is in that he will be constant Sometimes he may do the contrary yet he will return again As you see waters that are naturally sweet if brackish waters break in to them they grow salt indeed yet if the nature of that water be sweet it will work out that brackishness and return to its former sweetness So here let a mans disposition be good let his heart be regenerate let him be renewed in the spirit of his mind though sin break into him yet he purgeth it out he cleanseth himself from it though sometimes he be stopped in a good course yet he breakes over this damme and falls to his former course that is to those holy wayes that he was wont to walk in So it is on the other side take but an evil man whose course is to do evil though he may be stopped sometimes and may have some good purposes and desires yet his heart works them out and he returns to his old byass And therefore you mu●…try your selves by your constant course Take a swine put him into a clean medow he keeps himself clean but let him come into a durty lane and he will wallow in the myre and if you wash him again yet if he come near such a puddle again he will do the like and why because his swinish nature is not washed and so long as his nature remains his constant course will be suitable So it is with the unregenerate man when his nature is not changed his constant course will be evil God may sometimes hedg a man in and when a man is put into a way where there is a hedg on either side so long as that lane lasts he must keep on but if he be at liberty when he is at the end of that lane he turns aside So I say God oft times hedgeth in the wayes of men So he hedged in Ioash so long as Iehoiada lived it is said he did that which was upright in the sight of the Lord but after when this hedge was taken away when he died he fell to Idolatry So much for this time SELF-SEEKING Opposite to CHRISTS INTEREST PHILIP 2. 21. For all men seek their own and not the things that are Iesus Christs THe occasion of these words you shall see in the two verses going before them The The Apostle tells the Philippians to whom he wrote that he would send Timothy to them which saith he will be much for your advantage and he gives them this reason of it for saith he in the words before he will be very diligent to do you any good to take care of your matters which he sets out comparatively saith he I have no man like minded who will naturally or faithfully take care to your things Now he gives a reason why he saith he had no man like minded to Timothy that would faithfully and naturally take care for their matters for saith he this is the condition of men this I have found by experience every man seekes his own things and not the things of Iesus Christ. So you see these words containe a complaint of that common condition that common frailty that generall desease and corruption to which all men are subject every man is apt to seek his owne things every man is apt to it and for the most part doth it he seekes his own things and not the things which are Jesus Christs The words are so plain that I need not to analyse or open them or stand long upon the exposition These three things you shall see may very easily be observed out of them First Whereas the Apostle complaines of it as a great fault and a sin that men seek their own things and not the things of Jesus Christ one conclusion hence then is that It is every mans duty or every man ought to seek the things of Iesus Christ and not his own This you know must needs be a conclusion arising from hence for if it be the complaint of the Apostle of the corruption that is in men in this kind then by the contrary rule it must be every mans duty to seek the things of Jesus Christ. Secondly Though this be the duty of every man yet when we look to the execution and performance of this duty every man is ready to do the contrary every man seeks his own things and because every man doth the contrary therefore the duty is the more precious When a man denies himself because there are so few that deny themselves that makes self denial to be the more regarded and esteemed God makes the more account of it for he hath no need of such men as will not deny themselves and seek the things of Jesus Christ. There is scarce any man but seeks his own things therfore you need not wonder why all the world is ready to go in a wrong way a man in this business hath so few to keep him company It is a thing that alway hath been every man is apt to seek his own things Therefore let not a man be discouraged with it it is no more then hath been it is no more then you are 〈◊〉 look for for the most seek themselves and their own things Those that will seek the things of Jesus Christ the world accounts them busie-bodies because they are occupied about things that the world likes not of it hath been the custom of all times to seek their own things and it is in every mans nature thus to do he that doth best and doth deny himself yet he hath the same nature with the rest so then that is the second observation that every man doth it he seeks his own things And lastly from this opposition every man seekes his owne things and not the things of Jesus Christ there is this third conclusion that for the most part our owne things and the things that tend to Jesus Christ and his advantage they are contrary and opposite one to the other for our natures are contrary there is an enmity between Christ and us that which we do for Christ must needs be contrary to our selves that which is for the advantage of Christ for the most part is for our disadvantage And the reason is I say because of the contrariety between our natures and the nature of Jesus Christ and his wayes Now we will begin with the first that It is the duty of every man not to seeke his owne things but the things of Iesus Christ. It is not only the duty of every man but it is best for every man to do it It is a thing that you are all perswaded of that you ought not to seek your
own things and therefore to spend time in proving the point were a needlesse labor our business will be to perswade you to the duty And to that end we will use no more motives but those in the text The one is taken from our selves and the other from Christ. There is this reason from your selves why you should seeke the things o● Jesus Christ because God hath commanded you so to do You know this is the command Thou shalt love the Lord above all and thy neighbor as thy self Christ is to be loved above all above your selves Now for the most part when we hear such a command as this we look upon it as a legal precept which onely shewes a man his sin and to be as a Scholemaster a precept that no man can keep But you must know that it is not so for every command is to be kept by every regenerate man It is said that not the least tittle of the Law shall perish heaven and earth shall passe away first The meaning is not that no man can be saved nor no man is in Christ but he that keeps every jot and little of the Law but we must endeavour to keep even the very least tittle of Gods commands with all our might If God will not suffer the least command to pass but you must bend your selves with all your strength to keep it then this which is a main command to Love God above all you must think you are bound to keep it and every regenerate man doth keep it in some measure he keeps it in sincerity and truth with an upright heart though he cannot rise to that degree and height as he should do Now I say it is not onely a command but it is best for every man to deny himself and not to seek his own things partly because his good is contained in God more then in himself and so he shall provide better for himself in self-denial by seeking God then by looking directly to his own matters The beeing of the beams you know are in the Sun more then in themselves So is every mans good contained in God from whom it floweth even as the beam doth from the Sun A man shall provide better for himself in seeking Gods glory then in looking immediately to his own preservation Therefore you shall find Deut. 10. 13. This is that the Lord thy God requires of thee that thou keep his commandments that he hath given thee for thy wealth Mark it the commands of God are given for our advantage Whensoever a man is a looser by keeping any command though it appear so he is not so indeed for every command is for our wealth So I say it is best for us partly because our good is contained in God And partly also because God is the end of every creature now you know the perfection of every creature stands in obtaining its end Whatsoever the end of any thing is when it hath gotten that end it is brought into a perfect condition For there are certain rules that God hath given to every creature to walk by to attain its end that in attaining thereof it might attain perfection so he hath given to the fire and to the water c. when they kept close to that rule there is the perfection of them So he hath given a rule to the reasonable creatures to walk by that is to walk in his commands now in keeping close to them that creature attains his happiness he puts himself into a happy condition Now God is not bound to this because he is the utmost end the utmost cause there is nothing beyond him and therefore he may do all for himself but if the creature do all things for himself he destroyes himself because there is a cause an end beyond him Now as there is this reason for the duty why we should do it in regard of our selves So also in regard of Christ. Partly in respect of his love and goodness he hath already shewed to us you know when a man hath done much for one he hath reason to respect him When Christ hath done so much for us if there were nothing to come there is reason and justice and equity to seek him to do whatsoever may be for his advantage that we should seek not our own things but the things of Jesus Christ. And partly also why we should seek the things of Jesus Christ is in regard of the wages which are to come they are so large that he is not worthy to have them he is not worthy to be saved by him that will not do something for him that will not deny himself and neglect his own things for his sake So you see what reason there is for this duty why we should do Now to make use of it if this be a duty that lies upon every man not to seek his own things but the things of Jesus Christ what remains but that you consider how you have kept this and if you be failing in it that you stir up your selves to do it in a better manner then you have done formerly Let every man therefore ask this question with himself have I sought the things of Jesus Christ have I not many times sat stil for my own ease for my own safety for my credit and profit when if I had stirred I might have done something for the advantage of Jesus Christ And consider that our behaving of our selves after this manner is not onely sinful but it is very unreasonable and disadvantagious for our selves for the more we lose for Christ the more we gain he● that will be content to be no body in the flesh he shall be the more in the spirit For that rule holds true he that will lose his life shall save it I say it holds true in every thing else he that will lose his credit shall gain his credit he that will be content to let go his friends or profits or advantages he shall be a gainer by it So that he that is most prodigal of all these things to spend them for Christs advantage he that is most forward to suffer imprisonment and loss of goods to indure infamy and disgrace for Christs sake he is the wisest man the happiest man he provides best for himself For alas my brethren what is it that we have of all our labors under the Sun but onely the riches of good works those onely go with us The good that we do is onely a foundation sure and stedfast as you have it 1 Tim. 6. 19. Laying up a sure foundation that is a foundation upon which you may build All other things that you have in this life are of a contingent nature but your good works the things you do for God your seeking after the things of Christ they are of a sure nature and will not fail you Therefore let us consider what we do in this case when we come to any business wherein we are
the shaddow doth the body Now I say grace is the immediate work of the spirit the very power of the holy Ghost which is able to out-wrestle all difficulties and to help us against all spiritual wickednesses assist us in all holy obedience But it may be objected I but grace though it do strengthen thus yet it is but a creature for though it be a quality that is wrought by the holy Ghost in the heart if it be so yet it is but a creature therefore seeing every creature is subject to weakness how doth grace strengthen a man thus To this I answer First that grace is a quality of that nature that it empties a man of himself it is an emptying quality It is not as other indowments other qualities and other habits put into the soul but it is an emptying quality that takes a man off from his own bottom it cuts him off from his own root and ingrafts him into another it teacheth him to depend upon God For if you look upon faith which is the main grace and gift as it were the root and foundation to all other graces is it not an emptying Grace what is faith but to teach a man to trust in God Now no man trusts in another fully but he distrusts himself fully it makes a man nothing in himself and wholly dependant upon the Lord. Even such is grace it takes a man quite off from any root of his own and makes him as ivie that hangs upon and clasps about the tree receives its being and sustenance from it So grace it annihilates the creature as it were it takes a man off from that sufficiency that every man seeks to have in his own spheare in his own nature it teacheth a man to know that he is not able to think a good thought nor to do a good work of himself Again I answer though it be a quality and that our strength is from God immediately yet God will have us to use means and instruments wherein he himself helps us to do For it is true if any man will trust to this habitual grace which I say is an inherent quality wrought in the heart by the holy Ghost if any man will grow careless in the strength of this grace and say well I am now a man grown strong I have now gotten some good measure of grace therefore now I will venture upon occasions of sin c. Here a man makes flesh his arm though he do trust to grace for he ought not so to do he ought to look up to God for another transient exciting and assisting grace besides this inherent quality which I speak of to have a dependance upon him and yet not altogether to rest in that for then a man should not be bound to increase in grace and to grow in it which every man is bound to do grow in grace and in the knowledge of Iesus Christ. Therefore there is a use of that you must make account you are so much the stronger by it for no man will labour for a thing but he will know some end of it As we see in other things a man may use the strength of horses and of men he may use means and friends but still it is required that he remember how he useth them that his eye be still upon the Lord as him that giveth the strength It is he that keeps that grace in being it is he that must act it and stir it up to do the works we are to do from time to time The chief use we are now to make of it is to examine and try our selves whether we have grace in our hearts or no by this property and character of grace here set down that it makes a man strong thou my son be strong in the grace c. We must I say examine our selves for there are two special times wherein the Lord himself makes a privy search as it were the one is at the time of the Sacrament the other at the day of death Therefore when men come to the Lords Table the Lord as it were goes down himself and takes a view of the guests and sees whether they be so qualified as men ought to be that come to his Table therefore look to your selves now you are bidden examine your selves In the Law a man might not come to the passeover but he must be circumcised those you know were but legal types and resembled somewhat else You must not come to the Lords Supper but there must be this circumcision made without hands there must be such a fitness in you as you may be accepted therefore you must examine your selves when you come hither Again another time wherein the Lord makes this privy search is at our entrance into the wedding chamber at the day of death When the Bridegroom goes in then the Lord searcheth whether we have oyl in our Lam●s or no whether those that offer to enter in have any effects any tincture of his Sons blood upon them The effect of his Sons blood you shall see Heb. 9. 14. It is to purge the conscience from dead works If there be no strikes as it were of his blood if there be no dye of it he gives the destroying Angel power to devour them because there is not that grace that is the effect of the blood of Christ they have no oyl in their Lamps therefore they are shut out Therefore I say when we come to the Lords Table let us consider what we do for you must know that the Lord admits none to his Table but friends such as are of his acquainance those that are strangers to him may not presume If thou come to the Lords Table be a stranger to him that is if thou want grace in thy heart this quality that we now speak of thou hast nothing to do here for you must know that no man must sit at his Table here in earth that is not to sit at his Table in Heaven to sit with Abraham Isaak and Iacob in his Kingdom The Lord will take it for a great presumption therefore take heed of intruding upon this duty When the Ark was brought among the Philistines and the Bethshemites would be so bold as to look into it the Lord smote fifty thousand of them for it What was the reason of this say they who shall stand before this holy Lord God If the Lord were thus ready to revenge himself on them for prophaning of that which was but a type what will he do for prophaning the body and blood of his Son You know that is the comparison Heb. 12. If any man transgressed against the Law of Moses he received a recompence and reward What will he do then to those that contemn the salvation that is brought by his Son So if the Lord would do this for the prophaning of the Ark that was but a type of Christ Jesus but a legal rite that had but