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A29912 Twenty five sermons. The second volume by the Right Reverend Father in God, Ralph Brownrig, late Lord Bishop of Exeter ; published by William Martyn, M.A., sometimes preacher at the Rolls.; Sermons. Selections Brownrig, Ralph, 1592-1659.; Martyn, William.; Faithorne, William, 1616-1691. 1664 (1664) Wing B5212; ESTC R36389 357,894 454

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gives over till it hath placed us in Glory 1. Here is the fat Calf kill'd for us the holy Lamb of God redeeming us from condemnation 2. Here is the Ring put upon our finger the Seal and Pledge of his Spirit and 3. Here is the choyce Robe of Glory and Immortality that we are invested with 'T is a Connexion II. It hath the use and force of an Illation But if He deduces and proves our Resurrection out of former antecedent principles and priviledges The raising and glorifying of our bodies 't is an appendix and deduction from some other things Our Resurrection is not so much a principle as a conclusion of Faith and it must be inferred not by an Enthymeme but by a Sorites it hangs not upon one principle but upon many Not conclude Praescivit ergo glorificavit but He hath redeemed he hath called he hath mortified and sanctified therefore he will raise us and at last glorifie us These assurances are not immediate and clear in themselves but are contained in their causes We must not presently affirm I shall be saved my body shall be raised but it must be lawfully concluded out of warrantable grounds If I be justified If I be sanctified If the Spirit of God dwell in me make sure of these these are Evidences and Arguments and Pledges of our Resurrection That 's the second it hath the force of an Illation III. It hath the force of a Caution and necessary Proviso And so it makes our Resurrection conditional But how can that be 1. Our Resurrection 't is absolute and necessary ex exigentia Iustiti●… 't is appointed for all men to come to Iudgment Heb. ix The Resurrection shall bring the prisoners from the Jayl to the Bar. True and yet it is conditional That there shall be a Resurrection 't is grounded on Gods Justice but the resurrection to Life that 's capable of a limitation and condition If I may attain to the resurrection of the dead saith S. Paul Phil. iii. 11. That there shall be an Assizes and Jayl-delivery is settled by Law but how the prisoners shall speed whether pardon'd or condemned there is hazard in that On Phara●…h's Birth-day both Butler and Baker shall come out of Prison but whether to Advancement or Execution is not so certain But then 2. This resurrection to Life hath a certainty in it Gods purpose hath determin'd it Christs merits have purchased it True and yet it is conditional Not any promise or mercy on Gods part but supposes and requires conditions on ours We cannot immediately from Gods purpose or Christs merits leap into heaven but there are pre-requisite conditions and subordinate means for our actual fruition I strive if by any means I may attain to the Resurrection Phil. iii. The ladder to heaven hath many staffs and steps and degrees many Iffs and Conditions to be observed 3. Our Resurrection 't is Articulus Fidei a fundamental Article of our Faith and yet limited with an If. Though in it self never so infallible yet a personal and comfortable apprehension for our selves depends on Condition Let our Resurrection be never so certain in it self yet extra studium Sanctitatis 't is not certain to us Without Holiness no man shall see God Heb. xii He that hath this Hope purifies himself as he is pure 1 Ioh. iii. So then for conceiving of this condition we will take of it a double Consideration 1. Let us consider it in the several Particulars 2. Then in the Summary drift and purpose of it I. Take it asunder into Particulars If the Spirit of him that raised up Iesus from the dead dwell in you Here we have a description of the holy-Holy-Ghost by a three-fold Reference 1. In reference to God the Father so he is called The Spirit of Him that is of God the Father The holy-Holy-Ghost is the Spirit of the Father 2. The holy-Holy-Ghost is described with reference to Christ as it was the Spirit of the Father raising Christ from the dead 3. He is described in reference to us by a gracious habitude and relation to us he is said to dwell in us 1. Here is a blessed relation he is the Spirit of the Father 2. Here is a glorious operation He raised up Iesus from the dead 3. Here is a gracious Possession He dwelleth in us 1 rst Look upon the first Reference the Holy Ghost is here called The Spirit of the Father These relations in the sacred Trinity are incomprehensible He dwells in the thick darkness Sanctius reverentius haec creduntur quàm discutiuntur 'T is safer to meditate on the gracious relations of God to us then of those mysterious relations within himself The light in the air is easier seen then the body of the Sun Briefly therefore the Holy Ghost is both the Spirit of the Father and of the Son proceeds alike from both of them The denial of this truth by the Greek Church caused that great Schism 'twixt the Eastern and Western Churches and if we will believe Bellarmine this errour was remarkably punished by God the City of Constantinople being on the Feast-day dedicated to the Holy Ghost sackt and overthrown However the Christian faith acknowledges the Holy Ghost to be the Spirit of the Father and the Spirit of the Son Sometimes he is called the Spirit of the Father Iohn xv 26. He is called the Spirit of truth which proceeds from the Father Luke xxiv 19. The same Spirit is called The promise of the Father Both in procession and in mission his being and his sending come both from the Father Again sometimes he is called and that in truth and propriety of speech the Spirit of the Son Rom. viii 9. If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his Gal. iv 6. God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts As the Spirit is the promise of the Father so likewise he is the promise of the Son Iohn xvi He promised to send them the Holy Ghost the Comforter This procession from the Son was sweetly and aptly represented by that outward Sign and Ceremony which Christ used in giving the Holy Ghost Iohn xx 22. He breathed on them and said unto them Receive the Holy Ghost Spiratio 't is ab intra it shewed the Spirit proceeded from him The Apostles they gave the Holy Ghost but not spirando it proceeded not from them Christ gave it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they gave it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as S. Basil speaks he by authority they ministerially S. Paul expresses it Gal. iii. 5. They ministered to them the Spirit The Holy Ghost then being the Spirit of the Son as well as of the Father why then is he here called the Spirit of the Father 1. Quia pater fons Deitatis the Father is the fountain and original of the Deity and doth communicate it both to the Son and to the Spirit Hence Divines compare the Father to the Fountain from whence the
water springs the Son to the River and Stream that floweth from this Fountain the Holy Ghost to the Pool or Sea into which both Fountain and River doth run and flow All one in the substance yet distinctly apprehended by these resemblances 2. Saint Paul here names the Holy Ghost under this expression The Spirit of the Father as delighting to shew the consent and concurrence of the whole Trinity in the work and carriage of our salvation The Father Son Spirit all joyned in this great Work As in our creation Let us make so in our repair and recovery the power of the Father the wisdom of the Son the grace of the Holy Ghost all concurred in this work Thus Ephes. ii 18. Through the Son we have access by one Spirit to the Father The Son recommends us the Spirit conducts us and the Father receives us The gods of the Heathen when one favoured another opposed Mulciber in Trojam pro Troja stabat Apollo One was against Troy the other stood for it Our God Father Son and Holy Ghost all set themselves to atchieve our salvation 3. By this expression the Apostle would send us to the Well-head of all grace and teach us to whom to seek for the gift of the Spirit the original donor of it is God the Father Hence He is called The promise of the Father Acts i. 4. We had need be set right in this point S. Iames tells us we are subject to mistake Err not my dear children Every good and perfect gift comes from above from the Father of lights Iames i. 16. Lux à primo lucido Our Saviour appropriates it to the Father Luk. xi 11. Your heavenly Father shall give the Holy Ghost to them that ask him He hath abundance of spirit as Malachi speaks In all those diversities of endowments and operations that are in the Church 't is the same God that works all in all It must teach us to whom to have recourse even to this Fountain of holiness from whom it is communicated and conveyed to all that receive it That 's the first Reference 't is the Spirit of the Father 2 d. Then here is a second Reference to Christ in a miraculous operation The Spirit of him that raised Iesus from the dead God the Father he raised Christ by the Spirit from the dead The point is observable that the resurrection of Christ is in a specimanner attributed to the Father Acts ii 32. This Iesus hath God raised up and is by the right hand of God exalted and Acts iii. 26. God hath raised up his Son Iesus Indeed we find the Resurrection ascribed to all the three Persons 1. The Father he raised him up Him God raised up the third day Acts x. 40. 2. Christ he is the author of his own resurrection his Divinity was inseparably joyned to his Humanity united not onely to his living but also to his dead body and by virtue of that Union he raised himself He had power to lay down his life and power to take it up again Ioh. x. 18. As the Sun sets and rises by his own motion 3. The Holy Ghost raised up Christ 1 Pet. iii. 18. He was put to death in the flesh but was quickned by the Spirit So then all concurr yet here it is especially attributed to the Father for divers reasons 1. In general all actions of the Deity originally flow from the Father As in being so in all acting and working he is the first in order Hence it is that Christ ascribes all that he doth to his Father Iohn v. 19. The Son can do nothing of himself but what he sees the Father do for whatsoever things he doth these also doth the Son likewise The Father saith Christ gave him those works to do 2. The Father is said to raise Christ from the dead because the Father in a special manner is the fountain of Life As the Son is made known by the attribute of Wisdom the Holy Ghost by the attribute of Love so the Father is represented by the attribute of Life Christ calls him The living Father Iohn vi 57. 'T is his glorious Title The living God It was S. Peters confession Thou art the Son of the living God And this life the Father communicates to the Son Iohn v. 26. As the Father hath life in himself so hath he given to the Son to have life in himself This Paul makes an act of Gods Paternity to raise Christ. His resurrection was a second generation Acts xiii 33. Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee If thou be the Son of God come down from the cross Why it is as good If thou be the Son of God rise up from the Grave 3. The Father is here said to raise up Christ His resurrection being the first step of his glorious exaltation it is ascribed to the Father rather then to himself desirous rather his Father should put the Garland of triumph upon his head then he himself assume it Thus the Scripture ascribes his Humiliation to himself his Exaltation to his Father Phil. ii 7. He made himself of no reputation he took upon him the form of a servant he humbled himself and became obedient wherefore God highly exalted him Usurping Adonijah steps of himself into his fathers Throne This is our ambition Shun the work but snatch the reward Solomon will be placed by his father anointed and advanced to the Throne by Davids appointment He that humbles himself shall be exalted active in his humiliation passive in his exaltation Thus Christ though he had power and authority to exalt himself it had been no robbery S. Paul tells us yet he observes this gracious Oeconomy makes his Father the approver of his obedience the accepter of his merits the rewarder of his passion the author of his exaltation 4. The Father is said to raise up Christ purposely as a ground of hope and assurance to us of our resurrection For us to hear that Christ is risen by his own immediate power weakness of Faith will object Christ was God too his Deity was united to his dead body it was easie for him to take up his life but we are nothing in our graves but weakness and corruption True but this Scripture ministers more comfort it tells us That Christs resurrection was perform'd by the Power and Spirit of the Father God reached out his hand to him and rais'd him up Here then is our comfort The same Spirit of God is communicable to us the same arm of Power may be reached out to us Look not upon thy weakness but look upon Gods strength He will employ the same Power for us which he did for Christ Ephes. i. 19. He will use the same exceeding great Power to us-ward that believe which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead That 's the second Reference 3 d. Now follows the third gracious Relation and that is of the Spirit to us that is a Reference of
Particulars 1. The dwelling of Gods Spirit in us is a ground of our resurrection because it is Vinculum Unionis the Spirit is the bond of our union and conjunction with Christ. By it we are incorporated into his holy Body and made members of it Now then if our head ●…ise all the members must rise with it If the Head be in Heaven the members shall not for ever perish in the Grave Not a bone of his was broken This union by the Spirit 't is like the touch of a Load-stone it will attract and draw us to him that where he is we shall be also It is spoken of his hypostatical but it is true also of his mystical union Quod semel ass●…mpsit 〈◊〉 dep●…suit Christ will part with none of his members Father I will that where I am they shall be also Because I live ye shall live also Iohn xiv 19. 2. This inhabitation of the Spirit grounds our resurrection ratione proprietatis Our bodies by this inhabitation are consecrated to be a possession of the Holy Ghost and the Temple of God must not be destroyed What Christ said of his own body it is true of ours Destroy this Temple and I will raise it up again Necesse est Spiritui reddatur Templum suum saith Tertul. Gods Spirit takes pleasure not onely in these living Temples but owns them when they are dead takes pleasure in the dead bones and favours the dust of them Psal. cii As Philosophers say of the Soul it is Artifex sui domi●…ilii it frames its own house of the body so the Spirit of God repairs re-edifies rears up this Fabrick after it is taken down 3. This Inhabitation of the Spirit works our resurrection as being the Auhor of both that initial grace that entitles us and gives us claim to the state of a resurrection Regeneration makes us Children of the Resurrection as also because it is the author of that final grace which plucks up the root eats out the core of our mortality Till then as there be Primitiae gratiae so there are Reliquiae peccati Those remainders of sin dispose us to death but our final and finishing grace roots up those Fibrae peccati and sin being abolish'd death hath no dominion over us So then for use of all 1. Is the Habitation of the Spirit the ground of our Resurrection doth that give us interest into the resurrection of Christ Sure then 1. The benefit of this resurrection belongs onely to them who have the Spirit of Christ dwelling in them The wicked and reprobate they have no share in Christs resurrection Not but that Christ raises the wicked at the last day but this he doth officio Iudicis not beneficio Mediatoris by the authority of his supreme Judicature All shall hear his voice his summons shall raise them out of their Grave but the fruit and benefit of his mediation or resurrection extends not to them 1. Not by way of Merit he communicates no merit in the world to come to those who have no interest in his merits in this present world 2. Not by way of any actual efficacie there 's no influence of Christ but into his own members all influence of grace and virtue either tends to union or flows from it 3. Not by way of Example Christs resurrection is not so much as the Pattern and Samplar of theirs there 's no assimilation 'twixt Christ and the wicked They do not bear the Image of the second Adam they are not planted into the Similitude of his death or resurrection He is the resurrection and the life to them that believe Iohn xi 2. Besides the Resurrection that Christ merited and communicates is a beneficial and beatifical Resurrection Meritum sonat in bonum the resurrection of the wicked tends to damnation Better not rise then rise to perdition Better stay in prison then to be brought to execution This rising destroys not death but increases and redoubles it In short 3. The Resurrection of the wicked 't is no fruit of the Gospel but a sequel of the Law not flowing from the second Adam but is consequent upon the first no part of the Promise The seed of the woman shall bruise the Serpents head but a part of the Threatning Thou shalt die the death soul and body both to be destroyed 2. Shall we be raised because his Spirit dwells in us See the sweet fruit and benefit of giving place to Christ and his Spirit and devoting our selves to be an habitation to him he richly requites us for his habitation See how Satan uses the bodies he possesses Luke ix 39. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He rent and tore them Oh! the Spirit of God keeps and preserves them As men say of their houses Better Lett them Rent-free to some that will use them well and keep them in repair then for Rent to others that will havock and spoil them If Satan possess thy body besides the base usage he will put it to he will make it a sink of sin a dung-hill of corruption a rendevous of unclean Spirits all the Rent he pays thee will be ruine and destruction But if Christs Spirit possess thee besides the honour which his presence puts upon thee if the King be in a Cottage he makes it a Court he will secure it and maintain it and make it good to thee Use thy body and devote it to sensuality it will end in corruption devote it to God and his Spirit it will rise to immortality S. Paul speaks 1 Cor. vi 13. Meats for the belly and the belly for meats and what will become of it God shall destroy both it and them But the body is for the Lord and the Lord for the body and then what follows Vers. 14. God hath both raised up the Lord and will also raise up us by his own power Dos immortalitatis Immortality 't is the Dowrie that God assures to the body The body is not for Fornication but for the Lord and he assures this Dowrie even a blessed Resurrection Which God grant for his sake who is the Resurrection and the Life To whom c. A SERMON PREACHED UPON WHIT-SUNDAY ON VVHIT-SUNDAY The First Sermon 2 KINGS ii 9. And it came to pass when they were gone over that Elijah said unto Elisha Ask what I shall do for thee before I be taken away from thee And Elisha said I pray thee let a double portion of thy spirit be upon me THe two Testaments have a mutual relation and reciprocal aspect and interview one with another Not any mysterie of the New but was shadowed out in the Old not any type of the Old but is represented and exhibited and fulfilled in the New They are placed about Christ as the two Cherubs upon the Mercy-seat looking each on other and both on Christ. The Faith of the Old Testament look'd forward expecting to behold the fulness of those types the Faith of the New Testament looks backward to see the sweet prefigurations
must be provided for with fruitfulness That 's the second Not Spirituali annexum That 's the Kind I come II. To the Parts of them 1. It is Spirituale donum Seek and labour for spiritual enablements The inclinations of nature must be strengthened and elevated with gifts of grace The weightiest employments require the greatest enablements Those three great Callings Kings Priests Prophets they were all anointed to signifie that large measure of grace that those Callings required Nay the High-Priest had all the holy oyl poured out upon him to signifie his Calling required plenty of grace the inferiour Servitors were but onely sprinkled in a sparing manner Indeed to be gifted and fitted by the holy Spirit 't is the only comfortable assurance to thy conscience of thine inward Calling Gods Seal set 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without which the warrant of the Church 't is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Ink and Paper as S. Paul distinguishes And yet how many run before they be sent suing like Ahimaaz to the Ioabs of Israel But what if I run though they have no tidings Who if they were questioned whether they have received the Holy Ghost in some competencie of gifts must return the answer of those uncatechiz'd Novices Act. xix We know not whether there be any Holy Ghost yea or no. No God never employs but he always enables as Saul did with David when he sent him to fight he put on his own Armour he will strengthen thee with his own Spirit to discharge His business That 's the first Spirituale donum 2. Is Spirituale ut officium Seek and labour for spiritual employments And indeed Donum obligat ad officium the conferring of a gift it is the exacting of a service 'T is like Press-money if once thou receivest it thou art bound to do service Thou art a servant and thou must and thou hast a Talent and thou mayst be profitable to thy Masters advantage To have the first Spirituale donum without this second it is to no advantage Donum in habitu 't is Talentum in sudario Donum in exercitio 't is Talentum in mensario it gains and increases Donum in habitu 't is a Candle in a bushel exercise and employ it 't is set on a Candlestick Without exercise and practice saith S. Bernard thou art Lux modii with it thou art Lux mundi Not onely the mispending but the neglecting of this gift condemns thee S. Paul bids Timothy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fire goes out for want of blowing as well as with quenching Mettal not onely wears out by use but is eaten with rust And what saith S. Iames The rust of your gold shall witness against you not onely the mispending The rust of our gifts as well as the mis-using shall rise up and condemn us To be able to preach and not to perform it S. Augustine counts it like the sin of Onan Maledictus qui non suscitat semen in Israel praedicando Christum generare Christianum Art thou invited to preach and yet refusest Art thou shod with this preparation of the Gospel and yet refusest when the Church calls for thine help thou shalt be discalceatus in Israel If thou wilt not raise up seed to thy elder brother Christ the Church may pull off thy shoes and spit in thy face Nè sis in eorum numero quorum pedes sunt speciosi 'T is S. Augustine's Allegory That 's the second Spirituale ut officium 3. Spiritualem potestatem Labour for and desire onely spiritual power and authority As in the first Donum obligat ad officium so here Officium disponit ad potestatem Our authority and power is onely spiritual The weapons of our warfare are divinitùs potentia Thus S. Chrysostom magnifying and preferring his spiritual power To a King are bodies committed to a Priest souls they fight with sensible armour we with spiritual They fight against Barbarians I fight against Devils as he speaks elswhere his doctrine is to him as fire and sword The censures are onely spiritual that the Church inflicts This thunder of the Church like that from Heaven melts the metal meddles not with the sheath works upon the soul. And yet what a stirr keeps that Priest of Rome for his temporal Power to be joyned with spiritual Joyning with his Pastoral Staff an Imperial Sword as we see some Rapiers sheathed up in Staves in censuring of the Church wishing as Balaam did in beating of his Ass I would my staff were a sword in my hand for then would I kill thee And yet we exclude not all temporal power as utterly unlawful 'T is not a consequent from our spiritual but yet it is compatible with it Christ doth not command it but the Prince may conferr it Onely of our selves 't is meerly spiritual That 's the third part Spiritualem potestatem a spiritual authority I come briefly to the Third Object propounded to them and that is Prophecy And by it I conceive with Expositors not any extraordinary miraculous Revelation but an ordinary set course of preaching and interpreting and opening the Mystery of the Gospel in S. Pauls description A speaking to men to edifying to exhortation and comfort And then take notice of the nature and honour of this holy function Preaching 't is Prophesying 1. It is loco Prophetiae 't is in the room and stead of Revelation and Prophecy As the Israelites were first fed with Mannah afterwards that ceasing they fed on the fruit of the Land Prophecy now ceasing we must wait for no more Visions but rest our selves on the set word of God See this observable in the closure of both the Testaments Malachi the last of the old Prophets shuts up the Old Testament with this Seal Remember ye the Law of Moses my servant which I commanded to him in Horeb for all Israel with the Statutes and Iudgments till Elias comes there were no more Prophets till Iohn at Christs first Coming S. Iohn the last of the Apostles he seals up the New Testament with the same Closure no more additions to the New Testament till Christs second Coming We have Moses and the Prophets Christ and the Apostles in stead of Revelation It is loco Prophetiae 2. It is aequale Prophetiae 't is as good as Prophecy of the same nature springing from the same Fountain and Original As the fire on the Altar though maintained and fed with ordinary fewel yet is counted heavenly because the first Original of it was from Heaven The Scriptures contain fully the marrow and pith of all former Prophecies in the Old Testament As at the first Creation the Lord made an extraordinary light but after conveyed it into the body of the Sun and Moon and all light now arises from them so in the beginnings of the Church God set up an extraordinary light of Prophecy now he conveys it all into the body of the Scripture comprehending all saving truths that they reveal It is aequale
Tabernacle He fill'd that house with glory when Christ came into it 3. A third Time was Tempus Prophetiarum the Age of the Prophets that was yet a fuller Time then there was a more clear and particular foretelling the very manner and circumstances of his Birth and Incarnation Esay calculates and foretels the time At such a year then the Messias shall come Micah foretels the City where he shall be born At Bethleem They bring it nearer and closer home but all of them fail and fall short of this fulness They were but as Heralds and Ushers forewarning and preparing the way before him The Testimony of Iesus is the Spirit of Prophesie His comming gives a being to all their Predictions They all sate like Ionas to see when their Prophesies should be fulfilled like Elijah on mount Carmel looking often and often for his blessed Appearance His presence accomplish'd them and gave them their fulness Thus God dealt with his Church as Boaz with Ruth first he affords her some gleanings then le ts fall handfuls to her then fills her vail with a measure of clean corn dressed and winnowed then at last marries himself to her in his Incarnation So then Is Christ's Comming the fulness of time What improvement shall we make of this point for practice 1. It should teach us to take notice of our happiness that were kept and reserved to live in those times that are fulfill'd by our Saviour's comming It is a great Blessing of God to be born in good times in dayes of Peace and Plenty We pity our forefathers who lived in those Swording times when all was in an uprore and after-ages will do the like for us And one bewail'd himself that he was born nec solo nec coelo nec seculo erudito in barbarous times How happy are Christians who have all the Mysteries of our Redemption accomplish'd in these dayes of the Gospel What saith our Saviour to his Disciples Luk. x. 23. Blessed are the eyes that see the things that ye see for I tell you many Kings and Prophets have desired to see those things that ye see and have not seen them David and Solomon and Iosiah how would they have thrown down their Crowns at his feet and adored him Those Truths concerning Christ which we count common and vulgar and sleight and neglect them how would they have ravished the spirits of those Saints that were before us The Mysterie of the Trinity what dark intimations of it to the Saints of old That Christ was both God and Man Davids Lord and Davids Son it posed all the Doctors in Israel how to conceive it Matth. xxii Our Saviours Incarnation Passion Resurrection Ascension we scorn to spend time to learn them our selves and teach them others and yet the Angels and Arch-angels stand astonished at them They before us received but the Promise God providing a better thing for us that they without us should not be made perfect Heb. xi 40. 1 Sam. xvi Samuel would not sit down to the Sacrifice till young David was b●…ught from tending the sheep Christ's Sacrifice was delayed till the fulness of the Gentiles might come in The Patriarchs were the eldest sons and they were put off with a Kid the fat Calf was kill'd for us the best wine was kept last till now to entertain us 2. This fulness on Gods part doth challenge and require fulness on our part 1. Fulness of knowledge On Gods part Christ is fully revealed all the Mysterie of Godliness laid open and unfolded t is our duty then fully to know him The dim dark imperfect knowledge of the Jewish Church will not suffice the vail is now taken off and we all with open face may see and behold him When I was a child I spake as a child I understood as a child that was the condition of those times Christians must be grown men of a ripe age in understanding The times of our former ignorance God regarded not saith S. Paul but now he warns every man Act. xvii 30. The times of Christianity are foretold to be knowing times Every man shall know me from the least of them to the greatest of them Ier. xxxi 34. The earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea saith the Prophet Habakkuk a Spring-tide of knowledge Zachary foretels that the feeblest Christian shall be as David Iohn Baptist a great enlightned Prophet yet the least in the kingdom of heaven may be greater then he in the Mysteries of Religion This fulness on Gods part requires of us 2. Fulness of Faith and of stedfast Assurance We owe our Faith to Gods bare Promises Shall we not fully believe his reall Performances The Saints before Christ met with many difficulties in believing All of them are removed that they cannot hinder our perswasion There were four Difficulties that attended the Promise of Christ as it was propounded to the Patriarchs 1. Was Obscuritas They saw all in a dim light all things were made known in much obscurity they had but the light of a candle to discern by the light of the Sun shines out to us 2. Was Generalitas Christ was promised to them in more general terms not so distinctly and personally as he is to us They heard of a blessed Seed to be born that is all their Faith fastned on We know who he is Iesus the Son of Mary he is pointed out to us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with special circumstances Hic Nunc breeds distinct knowledge 3. Was Improbabilitas The Promise was propounded to them with some Improbabilities A Virgin shall conceive and bring forth a Son How can this thing be Yes we know it is performed that holy Virgin hath conceived and born him Performances confute all improbabilities Can there come any good out of Nazareth Come and see 4. Was Longinquitas The Promise of Christ made to the Fathers was for a long time after many hundred years to be spent ere Christ should come Tell a man what shall happen a thousand years hence you can hardly perswade him The Prophesie is for many dayes to come said those mockers in Ezekiel We need not stretch our faith so far the Promise is before us With Thomas we may lay hold on him and say My Lord and my God 3. Hath Christ brought a fulness with him It must work in us fulness of content and satisfaction rest fully in him and in his plentiful Redemption The fulness of Christ is abundantly able to satisfie and fill up all our desires Fills the soul with marrow and fatness All other cravings of the soul may be quieted for a time but they return again as eager as ever 't is like a dream of meat saith the Prophet and when he awakes his soul is empty This heavenly Manna it breeds appetite and yet it pinches not it satisfies the soul and yet it cloys not Indeed Christ hath in him all that we need or can possibly wish
Ezek. ii The word of the Lord came unto me saying Son of man stand upon thy feet And the Spirit entred into me and set me upon my feet Come we to the eighth and the ninth Verses Of which in short Vers. 8. And when they had lift up their eyes they saw no man save Iesus onely Vers. 9. And as they came down from the Mountain Iesus charged them saying Tell the Vision to no man until the Son of man be risen again from the dead We are now come to the closure and conclusion of this glorious Vision In it two things 1. The issue and end of it They saw Christ alone 2. The use they were to make of it A seasonable concealment of it for a time First For the issue and end of it And this offers to us a threefold Consideration 1. A cessation of all other Appearances Moses and Elias are vanished and withdrawn they see no man remaining 2. The continuance and abode of Christ. He stays and appears and continues amongst them 3. Their eyes are fixed upon him Him onely they behold And so from hence draw these three Conclusions 1. Moses and Elias the Law and the Prophets have but a temporary station and abode in the Church Christ being brought into the world they are withdrawn 2. Christs Office and Glory and Government in his Church 't is lasting and perpetual 3. The Eye and Observation and Faith of the Church is fixed upon Christ onely They look upon none other nor expect any other after him I. The Law and the Prophets they are determined by Christs Coming Moses and Elias they vanish 1. They were of a finite and limited duration not set over the Church as a perpetual Order but had their times fixed and bounded Three times there were that bounded them 1. The time of Reformation God had appointed a more exact and perfecter Government of his Church to succeed them When that which is perfect is come then that which is in part shall be done away that which is imperfect must yield Thus we see Aaron he was call'd upon by God to dye and then Moses 2. The Fulness of time that was their stint till he should come who should fill up all things with his Coming 3. A third time was Adulta aetas Ecclesiae When that time is come the Heir is no longer under Tutours and Governours Gal. iv 2. Their Nature and Purpose was for a time onely 1. They had an use of Promising that Age was trained up all under Promises When the Performance came then all Promises were to be abolished 2. They had an use of Prefiguring and Typifying and Shadowing out of good things to come When the Body and Substance comes the Shadows and Figures cease Blossoms wither when the ripe Fruit appears 3. They had an use of Prophesying and Prophesie we know looks not upon present things but upon future When the truths of all Prophesies are fulfilled then they cease II. Christs Presence and Authority and Government in his Church 't is lasting and perpetual Moses and the Prophets have served their time and have given place but Christ remains for ever This the Jews believed We have heard out of the Law that Christ abideth for ever Ioh. xii 34. Hence the Gospel 't is called Evangelium aeternum And the time of the Christian Church it is called The last time because there is to be no more instruction in Religion no new Sacrifice or Priest or Prophet or Sacraments or Form of Government 1. He hath made a full accomplishment of all Prophesies and Predictions there is no looking for another 2. He hath manifested and revealed all truth to his Church This is the dignity that God reserved for his Son All things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you Ioh. xv 15. The Church of the Jews had all necessary Truths revealed But 1. Not so clearly 2 Pet. i. 19. That was but as a candle that shines in a dark place Christ brings all Truth to light by the Gospel Now the whole Wisdom of God shines in the Face of Iesus Christ. We understand more clearly then the Prophets themselves 1 Pet. i. 10. 2. Not so fully Indeed they had a Sufficiency for that present estate but now abundance of Truth covers the Earth as the Waters cover the Sea 3. They had Additions and the rule of Faith was increased to them But we are to expect no more the Word of God is sealed up and ratified 3. He hath accomplished and effectually wrought all the good that the Church can be capable of He hath offered up a full Sacrifice obtain'd the gift of the holy-Holy-Ghost This was one cause of abolishing of the Law it was weak made nothing perfect They received not the Spirit by the hearing of the Law That comes by the Gospel And therefore it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The fulness of the Gospel III. The eye of the Church looks onely upon Christ fixes upon him and expects no other This is the main difference betwixt the Jewish Church and Ours They were all in expectation and were wayters for better times But our Faith hath him exhibited and presented and rests upon him Hence Christ forewarns them not to listen to or look after any other If any shall say unto you Lo here is Christ or there believe it not Matth. xxiv 23. Go not forth look not after him Oculis videntibus Iesum nihil dignum praeter Iesum The Sun arising darkens all the Stars so all the former Saints are obscured to the eye of the Church and he alone must shine in his full glory As when the King enters into any City all Authority is resigned up to him all Vice-royes and Lieutenants must resign up to him So Moses and the Prophets all yield up their place in the Church to Christ. Now follows Secondly The Use they must make of this Transfiguration and that is a seasonable concealment In it 1. The Injunction it self Iesus charged them 2. The Nature and Purpose of it Not to Publish it 3. The time how long Till the Resurrection First the Injunction Iesus charged them Observe It is the Dignity and Prerogative of Christ to prescribe to his Church a Law of Truth what should be published and taught in his Church and what should be concealed 1. He is Primarius Doctor Legislator He teacheth As one having Authority and it is in his power to propound what Truths he will He is Lord of our Faith and may propound to our Faith whatsoever he pleaseth All other are but subordinate and limited Teachers and must be regulated from this grand Doctour Eccles. xii 11. The Masters of the Assemblies receive all their words as given from one Shepheard Hence they are described with terms and title of Limitation 1. They are Apostles Messengers not going in their own names or publishing what pleases them but receiving tidings from him who sent them 2. They are Ambassadours They
Inhabitation He dwells in ●…s A speech of great Emphasis importing the near and close and intimate conjunction and union 'twixt the Spirit and us And this Inhabitation is expressed in Scripture in a double Notion 1. It is Domestica familiaris habitatio 't is Habitatio ut in domo that is a near conjunction Thus the Church is called The house of the living God 1 Tim. iii. 15. And Heb. iii. 6. Whose house are we And again Ephes. ii 22. We are built for an habitation of God through the Spirit 2. It is Sacra Religiosa 't is Habitatio ut in Templo that 's more The first In Domo imports a near Conjunction The second In Templo inferrs a Sacred Presence Indeed Gods Presence makes us a Temple sanctifies and consecrates us to holy Uses 1 Cor. iii. 16. Know you not that you are the Temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwells in you Nay not onely our souls but our bodies are hallowed to be a Temple 1 Cor. vi 19. Know you not that your body is the Temple of the holy-Holy-Ghost For the understanding of this sacred Inhabitation let us consider 1. How the Spirit dwells in us 2. What this dwelling implyes I. How doth the Spirit dwell in us 1. This dwelling of the Spirit in us 't is like the Spirit it self wholly spiritual all in a mystical and heavenly manner As is his Essence so is his Presence onely spiritual Papists enforce a bodily Presence of Christ we must corporally receive him into our bodies No saith S. Cyprian Nostra Christi conjunctio non miscet personas nec unit substantias sed affectus consociat confoederat voluntates 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. vi 17. 2. This Inhabitation is performed in us by the production and infusion of those saving Graces which the Spirit works in us As Luther speaks of the Soul 't is Officina Dei mei 't is the Work-house where the Holy-Ghost frames and fashions the new Man in us And though he dwells in us by every Grace yet there are two special Graces to which the Scripture ascribes the Inhabiting 1. Is Faith that 's the Grace that lets in God into the soul and gives him possession Ephes. iii. 17. He dwells in our hearts by Faith Infidelity excludes him Faith receives and entertains him 2. Is Charity by it the Spirit dwells in us God is love and he that dwells in love dwells in God and God in him 1 Iohn iv 16. Love amongst men it is a cohabiting quality Amor congregat 't is an associating virtue t is the glew and cement of the world it makes men dwell together These two are the two uniting Graces Faith unites to God mystically Love morally 'T is the formal union of the soul with God 3. The Spirit dwells in us not onely by his gifts and graces but really The Holy-Ghost is present and applies and unites himself to a Christian. Our bodies are the Temples of the Holy-Ghost not of his Graces but of his own sacred Person The Fathers prove the Holy-Ghost to be true God in Substance because he hath a Temple None but God possesses a Temple And Habitatio 't is Actus Personae properly none but a person is said to Inhabit Indeed Substantially the Holy-Ghost is every where but yet Dwelling adds to his natural Presence a more special Habitude He is tanquam in suo where he doth Inhabit A stranger may be present in an house as well as the owner but to be there by special Interest as in his own Possession so the holy-Holy-Ghost is present in a Christian. That 's the first Consideration How the Spirit dwells in us But II. What doth this Dwelling imply 1. Dwelling implies Propriety and special Right and Interest It is a Possessive word The soul and body of a Christian is Gods more immediate Possession he hath the reference of a lord and owner to it Thus S. Paul tells us 1 Cor. vi 19. Ye are the Temple of the Holy-Ghost and ye are not your own A Christian is Gods upon a fuller right and title then another man All are his as all wasts are the lord 's of the Soil but his lordship and mansion-house are more specially his Such a reference hath a Christian to God He is his not upon common tenure but by peculiar appropriation 2. Dwelling implies Residency and Continuance and Fixedness of abode A man is not said to dwell in an Inn or in the house of a friend though he sometimes be in them A stranger or a wayfaring-man saith the Prophet Ieremy turns aside to tarry for a night There a man dwells where he resides and abides constantly So then the Spirit dwells in a Christian that is he is constantly fixedly in him sets up his rest makes him his Mansion Here will I dwell for I have a delight in it Thus David expresses Gods residence in his Church Psal. cxxxii 13. The Lord hath chosen Zion he hath desired it for his habitation vers 14. This is my rest for ever here will I dwell for I have desired it Thus the Spirit fixes his abode inseparably to the soul of a sanctified man His Graces have 1. Firmitatem radicis they take root in us 2. Perennitatem fontis they are always springing never decaying The Annointing which you have received of him abides in you 1 Ioh. ii 27. His Grace 't is laid in oyl no waterish colours that will wash off presently Indeed for his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some such endowments they are in a man Per modum actus transeuntis as Prophesie but Saving Gr●…ces are Per modum habitus permanentis According to some Graces the Spirit comes and goes saith S. Gregory Recessurus venit venturus recedit sed sine quibus ad vitam aeternam non pervenitur in elec●…orum cordibus semper permanet Saving Graces are never vanishing That is a second residency 3. Dwelling implies Command and Authority and right of Disposal of all things He who dwells and possesses as an owner doth like the Centurion he saith to this Do and he doth it to another Go and he goes It was the law of the Medes and Persians That every man should bear rule in his own house Esther i. 22. So then Doth the Spirit of God dwell in us He must bear sway in us with all authority he must rule and govern and order all in the soul of a Christian. His moti●…ns they must be commands 'T is a rule in Oeconomicks Voluntas Superioris quomodocunque innotescit vim praecepti obtinet The Master of the house the glance of his eye the beck of his hand must find obedience 'T is that which Paul practiseth Gal. ii 20. I live yet not I but Christ lives in me Christ and his Spirit bore all the sway in S. Paul s life Christians must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 acted and managed all by the Spirit S. Paul expresses it Acts xx 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
that were in the Old That as the motion of the Sun makes the shadow sometimes before the body sometimes after it so the divers dispensations of God make these Shadows sometimes useful before the Messiah by way of prefiguration sometimes after the body by way of after-remembrance and representation In particular Those two glorious mysteries of our Faith Christs Ascention and his Donation of the Spirit the one lately Celebrated the other the subject of this day's Solemnity they were lively prefigured in the Prophet Elijah Christs Ascension was typified in Elijah's Fiery-Chariot The gift of the holy-Holy-Ghost was typified in this gift and Grant that is made to Elisha The doubling the spirit of Elijah upon him That was upon Elisha The Spirit of Christ upon his Disciples The Text 't is a relation of the settling the gift and spirit of Prophesie upon Elisha And it is conferred upon him not suddenly and unexpectedly but by the interposition of some mutual entercourse betwixt the Prophet and Elisha This entercourse stands upon two parts 1. Elijahs gracious proffer Ask what I shall do for thee before I be taken away from thee 2. Elisha's wise and religious desire I pray thee let a double portion of thy spirit be upon me First In Elijah's proffer there are two things 1. The Substance of the Motion Ask what I shall do for thee 2. The Circumstance of Time and so the Opportunity of it Before I be taken away from thee I. For the Substance of Elijah's proffer In it these four particulars are remarkable 1. The forwardness and freeness of it 'T is a preventing offer Elijah stayes not till Elisha sues to him but prevents him and makes the Motion first and freely invites him to enjoy a blessing from him True Charity and desire of doing good stayes not for entreaties expects not importunity but freely offers it self and begins first Thus Isaac called his son to bless him unsought-to Thus Christ called Matthew who never look'd after him bids himself to Zacheus As the Prophet bids the Widow borrow vessels of her neighbours to pour Oyl into so Charity borrows and begs of others to receive the communion of those graces with which she is furnished Elisha's first calling was a preventing favour now his second calling 't is by prevention Christian Charity is not like a dry and deep Pump that must be often pumped before it sends out water but like a full Fountain flowing over and streaming to all about it T is S. Chrysostoms observation of S. Pauls readiness to the Macedonians it must be an express revelation that must forbid him to preach in Asia and Bithynia They who are of Elijahs and S. Pauls spirit expect nothing but the opportunities and advantages of communicating their goodness Acts xvi That 's the first the freeness of it 2. A second thing observable is the fulness and largeness of this his Offer Ask what thou wilt The Popish Saints are limited to some sorts of blessing wherein they may prevail Such a Saint he can pleasure thee in thy health such an one is for such a disease such an one can bestow such a favour Here is a Favourite of heaven can speed any suit procure any favour or blessing that is fitting for thee What cannot the prayer of an Elijah obtain He can open and shut heaven bring down Fire or Water as S. Iames speaks of him Am I God to kill and make alive that this man doth send to me said the King of Israel to those that were sent to him from Syria 2 Kings v. But what saith Elisha Let him come now to me and he shall know that there is a Prophet in Israel God hath given a kind of Omnipotency to the prayers of his Saints The King can deny you nothing Prayer is a key that opens all Gods Store-houses And he gives this key to his Saints and Children Happy they who enjoy the society of such an Elias But thrice happy they who have the spirit of Elijah who can be agents for themselves and all who seek to them But I demand Was it safe to make such an unlimited offer to Elisha To trust him with such an unbounded wish to ask what he would I answer We must conceive this large and liberal proffer is bounded and circumscribed with these limitations 1. The Caveat of lawful Conditions and matter of Expediency God never gives us so ample a power to ask what we will but straitens it up with these proviso s If lawful If useful If absolutely necessary If agreeable to his Will If serviceable to his Glory Observe these Proviso's and ask what thou wilt Solomon in 1 Kings ii 21. bids Bathsheba Ask on my mother for I will not say thee nay But yet her unadvised petition was justly denied her If we ask things agreeable to his will we know he heareth us 1 Iohn v. 14. Then God saith as to the woman of Canaan Matth. xv 28. Be it unto thee even as thou wilt 2. A second limitation is Congruitas vocationis If Elisha means to speed it must be a Suit answerable and fitting to his State and Calling Elisha was a Prophet let him ask what befits a Prophet to ask and he shall not return empty The mother of Zebedees sons sped not in her request to Christ. Why Her suit in general might be lawful but it agreed not with them to ask such favours Ye know not what ye ask Are ye able to drink of the Cup that I shall drink of and to be baptized with the baptism that I am to be baptized with Matth. xx 22. So Ieremy to Baruch Seekest thou great things for thy self Seek them not Ier. xlv 5. 3. A third limitation is Idonietas person●… 〈◊〉 Ask what is fit for Elijah to grant thee Dost thou meet with a Prophet Ask the proper gift of a Prophet We must learn the art of making the best improvement of the Saints of God to share in those excellencies wherewith God hath furnished them As Christ saith to the woman of Samaria If thou knewest the gift of God and who it is that saith unto thee Give me to drink thou wouldest have asked of him and he would have given thee Living water As S. Peter said to the lame man Silver and gold have I none but such as I have I give thee In the name of Iesus Christ of Nazareth Rise up and walk Act●… iii. 6. Thus where the Apostles or Christ came they brought out their sick and their blind and their dumb and their deaf Dost thou gain the opportunities of an Elijah 〈◊〉 Ask that which is proper to an Elijah to grant When one said to Christ Master speak to my brother that he divide the Inheritance with me He said unto him Man Who made me a Iudge or a Divider ever you 4. A fourth limitation that warrants this Offer is Intima directio That Spirit that directed him to offer would direct Elisha to ask We know not what we should pray