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A70857 Christos angasmos, or, Christ our sanctification faithfully explained, fully confirmed, and practically applied ... being the substance of several lectures or meditations / by Tho. Pichard ... Pichard, Thomas.; Pritchard, Thomas, M.A. 1667 (1667) Wing P3524; ESTC R10560 136,857 229

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accomplished Though your wills be perverse and obstinate God can bend and bow them God never made a Creature too strong for himself he that hath begun the good-work in you will perfect it he is able to do this thing in us Phil. 1.6 and for us and he is faithful in the performance of his Promises to us 1. He is able Who hath resisted his will Rom. 9.19 Isa 59.1 Phil. 3.21 1 Thes 5.24 Heb. 10.23 His hand is not shortned He by the mighty power of his Spirit can subdue us and all things to himself 2. He is faithful Faithful is he that hath promised who also will do it Believe O ye doubting desponding Souls in the veracity fidelity and immutability of the great and good God Hear what God and not what the Tempter speaks God hath promised to work in you to will and to do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Et velle perficere These words are a M●osis Phil. 2.13 That Assertion carries along with it the nature of a Promise Hath not the living and true God Promised in the New Covenant to sprinkle you with clean water to circumcise your hearts to put his Law into our mindes to write his Law in our hearts to take away the heart of stone to give us the ministration of his Spirit not to quench the smoaking Flax that is to kindle it not to break the bruised Reed that is to strengthen it and to send forth Judgement unto Victory that is to carry on the work of Sanctification in the Soul in spight of all opposition till it be compleat in Glory Oh then What remains but that we should all act Faith upon Gods power and faithfulness in making good his Promises or else wee shall discomfort our selves needlesly and dishonour God exceedingly And withal remember 't is very expedient to turn these Promises into Prayers and act Faith on them in Prayer The Promises are as so many Bills under Gods own hand which in the name of Christ we ought to present to the Father and to put them in suit at the throne of Grace Thus come in Faith and ye shall go away with Comfo●t Use 5 As a consequent of the former let such as are distressed through the sense of Sin and for want of holiness look up to Christ Jesus for Sanctification he of God is made unto us Sanctification Joh. 6. Joh. 14.1 believe in the Mediatour in him whom God hath sent honour the Son as ye honour the Father God hath so appointed it Look up to him all ye the ends of the Earth and be saved Isa 45.22 so look up to him and ye shall be also sanctified be daily looking up to Jesus the Authour and Finisher of your Faith the Alpha and Omega of your holiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aspicientes in illum Isa 61.1 1 Joh. 1.7 Heb. 12.2 Look up to Christ for the Spirit of Sanctification from Christ if ever ye would partake of his Unction The Christal stream wherein we are washed and made clean flows out of Christs own heart The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin Faith makes Application of this blood and so it purifies you may be poring long enough on your own filthiness and be filthy and dejected still unless you look up to this Fountain and see Christ given of God for your Sanctification you must apprehend him as the Lord your Righteousness and also as the High-Priest of your holiness else your Consciences will never be pure nor peaceable Naaman by the Prophets order was to go down and dip himself seven times in Jordan if he would be cured 2 Kings 5.10 So by Gods order and appointment you must go down daily by the renewed Acts of believing to this Fountain and bathe and wash thy unclean Soul in the streams of this Jordan I mean Christs blood if ever thou wouldest be healed of thy sinful Leprosie My sixth Use shall be to press us all to a serious sense of Use 6 our absolute need of holiness Sanctification is not a thing indifferent which a man may have or not have and yet be happy no such matter You must be holy if ye will be happy 't is the unum necessarium the one thing needful Luk. 10 42 Prov. 4.7 Sanctification is the principal thing Sanctification is the Wedding-Garment which renders ye amiable in the eyes of the King of Heaven without this the King will say Binde him hand and foot and cast him into outer darkness Mat. 22.12 13. Certainly this Wedding-garment is woven of the glorious beams of the Sun of Righteousness 't is both the Righteousness of Christ imputed and imparted Christs Righteousness say others with Faith and Holiness So Calvin and other Modern Writers The Graces of the Spirit are as Parliament-Robes The Peers say some by rule of Peereage are not to sit in Parliament without their Robes The Graces of the spirit are the Jewels of the Covenant and Robes of Heaven No living or reigning there no sitting in Heaven as Peers of State as Kings and Priests without these Robes of Glory the Righteousness of Christ for Justification and the Graces of Christ for Sanctification without all this white Linnen the Righteousness of the Saints Sanctification is the Seal or Mark of Heaven There is a Necesse est put upon Sanctification 1. For the honour of God of each Person in the Trinity 2. For our own happiness 1. For the honour of the Father that his choice be not disparaged 2. For the honour of the Son that his Members be not deformed nor polluted 3. For the honour of the Holy Spirit that his charge may not miscarry or fall short of Glory 1. For the Honour of the Father whose choice we are we are chosen in Christ to be holy Ephes 1.4 and chosen to the Sanctification of the Spirit 2 Thes 2.14 Meere morality hath something of Majesty in it in the eye of nature Those abominable Bruits at Rome could not practice their filthy lascivious pranks while grave Cato was on the Theatre the most carnal men have some inward respect for holiness for all their quarrelling with it and dislike of it Now should not Gods chosen be an holy People and live holily they would be a dishonour to his Name a scandal to his Gospel a cloud to his Glory God therefore chiefly aims at our holiness in all his dispensations I shall instance in these three 1. God Chuseth us 2. Calleth us 3. Correcteth us that we might be holy 1. God Chuseth us the chosen Generation are to be an holy Nation and to shew forth Gods vertues God chuseth us that we should be of a choice Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 virtutes 1 Pet. 2.9 he loved us with a singular love that we should be persons of singular lives to him 2. God calleth us that wee may be holy that hee may put the honour of holiness upon us in the eye of the whole
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 OR CHRIST OUR Sanctification Faithfully Explained fully Confirmed and Practically Applied for the special Benefit and Consolation of the truly sanctified as also for the discovery of the Formalist or Hypocrite And for the awakening of the secure Sinner who makes a mock at sin and either scorns or slights Holinesse Being the substance of several Lectures or Meditations By Tho. Pichard Preacher of the Gospel Heb. 13.12 Wherefore Jesus also that he might sanctifie the people with his own Blood suffered without the Gate John 37.19 And for their sakes I sanctifie my self that they also might be sanctified through the Truth Hebs 12.14 Follow peace with all men and holinesse without which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is without which Holiness no man shall see the Lord. Deu. dedit filium omnium Bonorum fontem Quidni cum eo omnia alia darer huc recurrendum est si desertio divina si Egestas inopia solicitet Pareus Fidelis non minus apprehendit Regenerationem in Christo quàm Peccatorum veniam Calvin London Printed for Tho. Passinger at the 〈…〉 upon London-Bridge 〈…〉 To all that are sanctified in Christ Jesus especially to my Christian Friends and Acquaintance in and near London The Authour wisheth all prosperity and true felicity the progress of Sanctification in this world with the perfection thereof in Glory Worthy and good Friends BY the wonderful over-ruling and sole-disposing hand of Providence which some call the Queen of the World Providentia Dei Regina mundi I had the honour and the happiness to be cast into your Acquaintance with whom at a leastwise with many of you I have had for years through mercy comfortable and sweet society in the things of God and from whom I have received so many real and ample manifestations of cordial respect and kindnesse for my support and succour in the crisis of my extremity For all which according to my bounden duty in all humility and sincerity I desire to blesse and Magnifie the Possessor of Heaven and Earth as also to thank you Begging the Father of mercies to reward your labour of love an hundred fold And to enrich you with the fulness of the Blessings of the Gospel of Christ 'T is I confess Rom. 15.29 a duty incumbent on me To render ye a due acknowledgment of hearty thanks for you● kindness to me not long since a perfect stranger to all your faces least otherwise I should c●●tract the stain Ingratum si dixeris omnia dixeris and O●●um of that monstrous and multipli●a sin Ingratitude debating in my thoughts not how to make Compensation or requital fo● that as the case stand● with me is impossible but how at most to make some small Testification of the unfeig●●d honour and l●●e I bear you not onely for your Goo●nesse to mee but primar●●y and princip●lly for the spiri ual worth and goodnesse the God of all Grace according to the riches of of his Grace hath I trust confer'd upon ye and infu●ed into ye I knew no better expedient than the dedication of this ensuing Treatise which is not presented to ye or any mortals for Patronage or pro ection but for Acceptance and perusal at your most serious hours I never loved to dawb with untempered mortar nor to sew Pillows under mens elbows since I knew any thing of the mind of God in truth If this small piece doth not cannot spea● for it sel● though in weaknesse I will not speak a word for it neither do I desire Veritas non quaerit angulos V●●tas stat in aperto Campo that any should 'T is an old and true Maxim Truth needs to Patronage and Errour I am sure deserves none What by the Word and rule of truth ye finde consonant and conse●taneous to the mind and will of God the prime Truth that call God's and Christ's and therefore prize and practice it But whatsoever you finde of errour obliquity and deflexion from the Rule that call mans and mine and carefully eschew it imputing to it humane frailty and weaknesse for humanum est errare I remember I have read of Artaxerxes a most noble and munificent King of Persia Plutarch in the life of Artaxerxes that such was the Princely condescension and sweetnesse of his disposition as not onely to give great Gifts unto his Friends and Favourites but also kindly to accept of mean Presents from mean persons so hoping with the like candour you will please to receive this small Tract I have presumed to dedicate and commend it to your Christian consideration I modestly confesse I have been sollicited to print some of my former Meditations though I know Apologi s of this nature are little credited yet through sense of my own weaknesse I ●ave forborn as iudging none of my Grapes worth the Presse Besides the great numbers of profitable and practical Books of many famous men already extant But at length at the friendly desire of some sober Persons willing me to leave some Manifesto of my love or Legacies in their hands as they pleased to tearm it I have Adventured to make these Labours publick which I trust will not seem nauseous or unpleasant to a spirit truly sanctified I have long since thought that every faithfull labourer in the Lords Vineyard had principally a double work to do both tending unto and terminating themselves in holiness viz. 1. To convert Sinners 2. To confirm Saints 1. By the Spirit of Grace and word of Truth to beget holinesse in unholy souls to bring in them that are without Jam. 1.18 who belong to the election of Grace 2. By the same effectual means the Word and Spirit to nourish and nurse up the new Man begotten 1 Pet. 2.2 to breed up those that are within I hope through grace this holy and blessed work hath been the white the mark I have aimed at in the series of my Employment and particularly in this undertaking of Sanctification here offered to your Judgments which is a Doctrine most Necessary most Excellent most Comfortable 1. 'T is a Doctrine most needfull for the sons of men to learn and practice 't is the one thing needfull 't is the principal thing there is no seeing the face of God without it Luke 10.42 Pro. 4.7 Heb. 12.14 for without holinesse no man shall see the Lord. Consider the Decree of the Father the Mission of the Son the Office of the holy Spirit the publication of the Gospel the Jewels of the Covenant the nature of the great and precious Promises the Tendency of all Gods Dispensations Whether smiles or frownes mercies or afflictions do they not all respectively speak the same thing and mutually conspire yea meet and center in the same end viz. to make ye partakers of his Holiness nay Heb. 12.10 they all tell ye in plain tearms ye must be holy God will not alter his Decree for you nor send another Saviour nor chalk out
have it restored in the second Adam Christ received the spirit above measure we have but some drops or drams of it Joh. 3 34. he was annointed with the Oyl of gladness above his fellows yet for his fellows whole Christ was given to us Isa 9.6 To us a Child is born to us a Son is given His sanctification also must needs be for us for our good and benefit For their sakes I sanctifie my self saith Christ that they might be sanctified by the truth Joh. 17.19 Holiness in Christ is as the light in the Sun ever shining and as water in a living fountain never sailing S●●ile ever running He is b●th an ever-flowing and an over-flowing fountain of grace to us as 't is endless and boundless in Christ so it is diffusive and communicative to h s members J●s s Christ is the Candlestick from whence the Golden Pipes do empty the golde● oyl through themselves Zech. 4.11 12. Christ is this Candlestick See the Dutch Annotat on the place the two Olive-trees signifie his Kingly and Priestly Offices the Golden Oyl signifieth the gifts and graces of the Spirit It must needs be so because it is the pleasure of the Father that in him should all fulness dwell Col. 1.19 What is this fulness It is all the fulness of the Godhead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bodily i. e. personally substantially for as the Hebrews put souls for persons as so many souls went down into Egypt c. so the Greeks put bodies for persons Our Lord Jesus is his Fathers Gazophylacium the great Magazine of infinite riches and treasures Note here a Climax yea three gradations the Godhead the fulness of the Godhead yea all the fulness of the Godhead dwells in Christ bodily Now our holiness is a stream derived from this Fountain a part or parcel of this fulness 4. 4 The formal cause What is the formal cause of our Sanctification I answer 'T is the infusion of the habits of grace into us as the School-men call them 't is the endowment of the soul with inward holiness So Mr. Perkins 'T is the infusion of or communion with the spirit So D. Reynolds 'T is the operation of the spirit dwelling in us as a spirit of sanctification Luke 11.13 Joh. 14.16 17. 'T is the deriving or drawing down the holiness that is in Christ our Head by the spirit of holiness who is the Bond of union and communion between him and us 't is the spirits transforming of us into the likeness of our Lord Jesus or the delineation of the Picture of Christ The spirit looks directly upon the glorious Image of Christ represented in the Gospel and draws exactly the picture thereof in a Saints heart Mr. Rich. Vines in Loc. Zech. 13.1 by the spirit of Christ in the soul of man 2 Cor. 3.18 It s Synonima's in Scripture are very emphatical 't is called a quickning Ephes 2.1 a birth Joh. 3.3 a forming of Christ Gal. 4.19 a Regeneration or begetting again 1 Pet. 1.3 a new heart and a new spirit Ezek. 36.26 a renewing of the mind Rom. 12.2 a new creature 2 Cor. 5.17 the new man Ephes 4.24 the renewing of the Holy Ghost Tit. 3.5 And the Divine Nature and the Image or likeness of Christ in respect of its Divine original and transcendent excellency The Father sends the Son into the world to work out eternal Redemption for us and to that end to open a fountain in his side and heart for our purification he furnisht him with an instrumental fulness and fitness to be the Lord our righteousness and our Fountain of grace and holiness Joh. 17.4 Eph 4.8 the Son finisheth his work ascends up on high receiveth gifts for men sends the holy spirit the sanctifier and comforter as his Vice-Roy to dwell in us and abide with us for ever and not only to dwell in us as our heavenly companion and comforter Joh 14 16 17. but also to work in us as our Sanctifier and therefore called The Spirit of holiness Rom. 1.4 Joh. 16 14. He shall glorifie me saith Christ for he shal receive of mine He receives from the Son wisdome righteousness holiness all gifts and graces wherewith Christ was annointed and bestows them upon the Saints annoints them with this Unction implants in them these gifts and graces imprints vpon them the Divine Nature and therewith sanctifies them which very impression of the Divine Nature or likeness of Christ on the soul of man by the energy of the spirit I conceive to be the very formality of sanctification For the better explication and dilucidation of this Argument give me leave to shew what it is to sanctifie The word Sanctifie hath many acceptions the most famous are these two 1. To set apart 2. To cleanse In each of which we suppose something privative and something positive 1. When it signifies to set apart we must conceive not only a setting a thing or a person apart from a common or prophane use but also it s or his actual dedication to holy uses or setting apart for God which is the proper notion of it 2. When it signifies to cleanse you must not only conceive a purgation from filthiness but also a plantation of the seed of grace called the seed of God The abolition of natural corruption is the privative part the renovation of Gods Image is the positive part of Sanctification 1. To sanctifie is to set apart and dedicate Thus Gods people are set apart and dedicated by God and for God 1. Before time 2. In time 1. Before time Psa 1.4 They are set apart by Gods Decree to be an holy seed to himself in and by Chr st separate from the reprobate and perishing world to be Vessels of Honor whereas the Reprobates are called Vessels of wrath and dishonour M. Burroughs in his Saints Treasury Psa 1.4 Him that is godly God hath set apart for himself i. e. as a good man saith Not only actually set apart in vocation but vertually set apart by God from eternity in Election Ephes 1.4 Having chosen us in him before the foundation of the world c. 2. In time They are regenerated called or actually sanctified or set apart to be Vessels of Honour sanctified and meet for the Masters service Wollebius in his Body of Divinity 2 Tim. 2.21 Sanctification is an actual Election by which we are set apart from the miserable and vain world to act for God by Jesus Christ and to seek the things that make for his glory Thus by Regeneration we are called his First-fruits which under the Law were the Lords portion Jam. 1.18 Of his own will begat he us by the word of truth that we should be a kind of the first fruits of his new creatures Joh. 3.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as they are born from above so they are born for above they have heavenly affections and heavenly conversations and shall have
there is an infusion of grace a new disposition and frame of soul called a new heart and a new spirit Ezek. 36.25 26 27. i. e. a new mind new apprehensions a new will new desires new affections from whence there follows newness of life and conversation 1. There is a new heart that is conformity to Gods Nature when the heart of man is like the heart of God as David is said to be a man after Gods own heart 2 Pet. 1.4 Conformity to the Divine Nature is this new heart The Nature of God is the pattern of that Sanctification which is wrought in the heart of man 2. There is a new life that is our conformity to Gods Law or revealed Will whose will is our Sanctification 1 Thes 4.3 An holy heart breathes and breaks out into an heavenly conversation Phil. 3.20 Our conversation is in heaven The first is our habitual holiness the second is our actual The sum is this our habitual conformity to the Nature or Image of God and our actual conformity to the Will of God thereon depending is formally our Sanctification Thus I have shewed what it is to sanctifie and have opened the more eminent acceptations of it We come now to the fifth thing propounded 5. The Spi it of Christ is the efficient cause of our Sanctification The work of Creation is commonly ascribed to God the Father the work of Redemption to God the Son and the work of Sanctification to God the Holy Spirit yet Sanctification being a work ad extra is common to all the persons 1. It is ascribed to God the Father Jude 1. to them which are called and sanctified of God the Father 1 Pet. 1.3 Blessed be God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope c. 2. Christ is said to sanctifie us He is made of God to us Sanctification 1 Cor. 1.2 To the Church of God which is at Corinth to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus Heb. 13.12 Wherefore Jesus that he might sanctifie the people with his own blood suffered without the gate 3. The Spirit is said to sanctifie Hence these phrases the sanctification of the Spirit 1 Pet. 1.2 2 Thes 2.13 14. and the Spirit of holiness Rom. 1.4 The Sanctification of the Spirit is as necessary as the mercy of the Father or the sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ by the redundancy of his Merit hath impetrated and obtained the Spirit of the Father to sanctifie those whom he means to save to purifie and make them meet for glory whom he died for and justified by his blood The Inchoation is from the Father the Dispensation is by the Son the Consummation by the Spirit 'T is from the love of the Father and by vertue of the Merit of the Son that we are sanctified but 't is properly the Office and the distinct personal operation of the spirit of holiness to sanctifie and it must be the mighty power of the eternal spirit that converts or sanctifies because 't is such a power as is commensurate and proportionate to the raising of the dead Ephes 1.19 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Supereminens magnitudo Montan. called the exceeding greatness of his power c. We are not sanctified or converted as the Papists and Arminians say by a moral suasion or by the bare improvement of our own free will nor by the accession of some additional help to Nature but by the most strong and yet most sweet efficacy of the Almighty Spirit Psa 110.3 Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power or as some render it in the day of thy Armies 't is therefore called a Regeneration In die Copiarum So M. Ainsworth a begetting a soul again 't is a new Creation 't is a Vivification or quickning a man before dead in sins and trespasses not languishing and declining but in a moral sense stark dead nay 't is a Resurrection a rising out of the grave of sin and death All these works of wonder or rather this one mysterious work of Sanctification illustrated by these Metaphors bespeaks no less than the Almighty power of a God Phil. 3.21 who is able to subdue all things to himself 1. 'T is a Regeneration or a begetting again 1 Pet. 1.3 Jam. 1.18 2. 'T is a Creation Ephes 2.10 We are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus to good works 2 Cor. 5.17 He that is in Christ is a new creature Behold saith Christ I make all things new 3. 'T is a vivification or quickning Eph. 2.1 You hath he quickned who were dead in sins and trespasses A natural man is both legally and morally dead till the Spirit of Life breaths upon him and quickens him Joh. 5.25 That promise is still in fulfilling now that the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear shall live 4. 'T is a Resurrection Col. 3.1 If ye then be risen with Christ seek the things that are above yea 't is more a kind of con-session or sitting together with Christ Eph. 2.6 And hath raised us up together and made us sit together in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus If we live to God we l ve the life of heaven Now to regenerate to create to make all things new to revive a man dead to raise up a man out of the grave as Lazarus both dead and buried all these are the Acts of Omnipotency the works of a God and all those works are done in this one work by the invincible efficiency of the Spirit 6. The word and faith are the Ministring and Instrumental causes of our Sanctification The Spirit is called the Spirit of Faith Aristotle calls the hand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the instrument of instruments Faith being the gift of God and wrought by the operation of the Spirit unites the soul to Christ the Fountain of Holiness and Head of Influence and having united the soul to him continually receives supplies from him 'T is the hand of the soul that useful instrument whereby we apprehend Christ and whereby we draw down vertue from Christ Hence as an Organ or Instrument it is said to purifie Acts 15.9 Having purified their hearts by faith As Faith hath the Noblest Objects so Faith for its use and office here is the Noblest grace Faith indeed infused and created in us by the Spirit See Dr. Owens death of death p. 126. Simile is commonly called the Mother grace and is it self formally a great part of our sanctification As the woman sick of the Bloody Issue put forth her hand and touching the Hem of Christs garment drew vertue from him and was healed So that soul to whom Christ hath given the hand of Faith doth put it forth make application of the Merits and mediation of Jesus Christ for his Purification and doth in truth draw in vertue by that application 1 Joh. 3.3 He that hath
serve for Tryals of your estate What are the precious Fruits that grow upon this Tree of Sanctification You may also call them the inseparable Concomitants and Adjuncts of Sanctification if you please 1. If you have received the spirit of Sanctification ye have also received the spirit of Supplication Zech. 12.10 The Spirit is entitled both the spirit of Grace and the spirit of Supplication where he is the former there he is the other also where he dwels as the spirit of holinesse there he dwels as the spirit of prayer Every sanctified heart is an Harp or Cymbal to sound forth Gods praises an habitation of God through the Spirit Ephes 2. ult and the Temple of the Holy Ghost The Temple of old was an holy place a place of relative and Typical holiness and an house of Prayer Every gracious heart like Gods Altar offers up to God the sweet sacrifice and incense of praises and Prayers Every new-born Babe for the most part comes into the world crying The word Abba signifieth Fa her in the Syriack tongue which the Apostle here reteineth which also young Children retein almost in all Languages Annotat. I am sure every spiritual new-born Babe cryes Abba Father Rom. 8.15 Gal. 4.6 And because ye are sons God hath sent the spirit of his Son into your hearts crying Abba Father Now if ye are Prayer-less persons ye are graceless persons persons without Prayer 'T was the saying of an old Disciple A man of much prayer is a man of much Grace are persons without Holiness or though ye pray yet if ye pray not in the Spirit according to the caution Ephes 6.18 i. e. in Faith in fervency with the vigor and intension of the Spirit or inner-man if it be not Jam. 5.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If ye have no Communion ravishing have yee Communion sanctifying an inwrought prayer as the phrase is if yee wrestle not with God in the strength of God as Jacob did if ye have no holy boldness or Confidence at Gods Throne if ye never feel the sweet melting quickening warming moving breathings of the Spirit in your souls In a word if ye find no growing conformity in your hearts to the divine Nature by Duty no sweet sanctifying refreshing communion with God in Duty 't is an evident sign to me the Spirit of holiness dwels not in yee and consequently if ye have not the spirit of Christ ye are none of his Rom. 8.9 But as for such as pray in the Spirit as make conscience of this Duty and of the spiritual performance of it and find the rellish of God and Heaven in private prayer 't is one happy sign and symptome of their translation from death to life from a state of Nature to a state of Grace There are diversities of Gifts but the same Spirit 1 Cor. 1● 4 Secondly If the spirit of Sanctification dwels in thee the same Spirit as a spirit of Illumination dwels in thee If Jesus Christ be thy sanctification he is thy wisdome also as thy holiness to sanctifie thee so thy wisdome to instruct thee It is the godly or holy man that feels the vertue and influence of that blessed Promise I will instruct then and teach thee in the way that thou shouldst go I will guide thee by mine eye Psalm 32.6 8. verses compared together That Text is famous for this purpose * Non acumine proprii sensus rectè s●pere homines sed illuminatione Spiritus Buling in loc What Unction is per unctionem Gratiam So. S. intelligit Beza in loc 1 Joh. 2.20 Ye have received an Unction from the Holy One and ye know all things By this Unction or annointing is meant the gracious operation of the holy Spiri● whereby they that are regenerate or sanctified are also enlightened with the saving Knowledge of Christ This is compared to the p●uring out of costly Ointment Psalm 45.8 and 137.2 Unction properly signifies the separation and consecration of a person to the Lord tog ther with the gifts of Wisdome Knowledge Faith Love c. Wherefore it must follow that a person annointed consecrated unto God is also illuminated by God if his person be sanctified his eyes are opened annointed with Eye-salve if anno●nted with Grace then instructed in Knowledge 2 Cor. 1.21 Rev. 3.18 if a V ssel full of Grace then a Vessel full of oyl a burning lamp and shining light For in Vnction sanctification and illumination are both together inseparably and indivisibly as light and heat in the Sun-beams The holy oyl of Grace casts a sweet perfume and splendid light in the hearts and lives of the annointed By vertue of this Unction Darkness is now in a great measure scattered and the man is made light in the Lord Ephes 5.8 An enlightned soul admires how foolish he was and ignorant even bruitish in his knowledge before Conversion he neither knew God nor himself he neither knew his present danger nor his future misery he neither saw sin as a vicious or as a Penal evil neither the evil in it nor the evil after it but went on like a Fool to the stocks like an Oxe to the slaughter and ran like a mad man toward the Gulf of Ruine Before sanct●fication he neither saw his want of Christ nor knew the worth of Christ The glory of Christs Person the beauty of his wayes the merits of his Blood the benefits of his Offices the comforts of his Spirit the sweetness of his Fellowship the savour of his Ointments the blessings of his Kingdome All these before Conversion were hid from his eyes for the God of this world had blinded him 2 Cor. 4.4 Besides the natural Veil of darkness he brought into the world with him he is blinded by another viz. a diabolical but in and by Conversion comes in illumination in turning from Satan to God his eyes are opened and his understanding turns from darknesse to light Acts 26.18 Now the eyes of his understanding being enlightned by the spirit of Wisdome and Revelation Ephes 1.17 18. He comes to know what is the hope of his Calling and the riches of the glory of his Inheritance in the Saints Every word is a word of weight 1 John 5.20 Phil. 1.9 10. he hath now a visive faculty an understanding given him to know things that are excellent he hath now a new spiritual clear affectionate knowledge of and a more distinct piercing knowledge in the Mysteries of the Gospel than ever he had before An enlightned head and a sanctified heart go both together This is the second effect or rather sweet Concomitant of Sanctification viz. Illumination 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id est eandem fidem ex ejusdem spiritus affl●tu dono Beza 3. The third Effect or rather Concomitant or Adjunct of our Sanctification is Faith hee that hath the spirit of Holiness hath also the spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4.13 wee having the same spirit of Faith the spirit of
precious life to spill his precious blood for you Gal. 2.20 Christ by the merit of his blood the price of your Sanctification hath impetrated and obtained of the Father the holy Spirit with all the gifts and graces of the same for your sanctification and salvation see John 16.7 13. John 14.16 17. 3. Consider the infinite power and efficacy of the Spirit The same Spirit that raised Christ from the dead called the Spirit of Holiness Rom. 1.4 quickens the Saints to a new life and dwelleth in them Rom. 8.11 This new life of holiness which is in Christ Jesus is by the Spirit of life imparted to you Rom. 8.2 For the Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus Rom. 8. 2 hath made me free from the law of sin and death Holiness in us is the fruit of Christs Purchase the product of his merit the sprinkling of his Unction a parcel of his Fulness and a measure of his Spirit we have as great need of his Spirit to sanctifie us as of his blood to justifie us yea the Eternal Spirit was indispensibly needful to sanctifie and dignifie the blessed Sacrifice of Christs Humane Nature upon the Cross or else I must profess my Ignorance of that Text Heb. 9.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Supe eminens magnitudo virtutis ejus So Montanus 'T is not only the power but the exceeding greatness of the Spirits power to raise up a person morally dead to an estate of newness of life 't is a work proportionate to that power God wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead and set him at his own right hand in the Heavenly places Eph. 1.19 20. Notwithstanding the Fathers E●ection and the Sons Redemption yet without the Spirits Efficacy we had all at this day lain rotting ●ike stinking Carrion in the Grave of sin and death Gods Mercy Christs Merit and the ●pirits efficacy It is very observable that all the three Persons challenge an equal share in the working of holiness in the creature it being such a part of Gods G●orie Mr. Burroughs Saints Treasury p. 16. must have their distinct glory The Father is said to sanctifie the Son to Sanctifie the Spirit to sanctifie but with their distinct Idioms or Characters our sanctification is from the Father in the Son and by the Spirit the Inchoation is from the Father he is the prime ●●i●inal the Dispensation is by the Son he is the way of Communication the Application and Consummation is by the Spirit he receives of the Father and the Son and shows it unto us that is he works grace or holiness in us Thus all the persons work jointly and yet distinctly the love of the Father makes way for the Mediatorship of the Son and the Mediatorship of the Son for the Office of the Spirit The Sanctification of the Spir t is as necessary as the blood of Jesus you may see 1 Pet. 1.2 how all the persons have their distinct operations Communion with the Spirit is as sweet and choice a priviledge as the Grace of our Lord Jesus or the Love of God the Father 2 Cor. 13.14 Thus sanctifie the Name of God give Glory to the Father Son and Spirit to the Triuni Deo the three one God three in Persons one in Essence and Nature for your Sanctification I● Jesus Christ be made of God Sanctification Use 2 to us the Procuring Meritorious and Moral cause of our Sanctification then primarily and principally let your thoughts ascend to God the Father as the supreme original of your Sanctification let not your thoughts stop or stay till they center in him 'T is the Father who of his own will hath begotten us by the Word of Truth Jam. 1.18 't is God the Father of our Lord Jesus who of his aboundant Mercy hath begotten us again c. 1 Pet. 1.3 Therefore we ought to bless and exalt his aboundant Mercy as the Apostle doth 'T is the Father the Heavenly Husbandman that purgeth the Branches John 15.1 2. that they might bring forth fruit As we ought to believe in Christ the Mediatour so in God as the first Fountain and Authour of Grace and as the ultimate end of our happiness 1. As the Fountain of all Grace John 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave c. Ephes 2.4 5. God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith he loved us when we were dead in sins Ephes 2.4 5. Rom. 4.24 hath quickened us together with Christ We must believe in him that raised our Lord Jesus from the dead He that believeth in me So Dr. M ●ton Expounds it in his Commentary on Jude believeth not in me but in him that sent me there not is not negative but corrective not only in me but his thoughts must ascend to the Father also who manifests himself in me for God was in Christ reconciling the World to himself c. 2 Cor. 5.19 2. You must believe in God as the ultimate end of your happiness Christ suffered for sins 1 Pet. 3.18 the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God When the Mediatour brings the Soul into peace with God by Justification and into the likeness and fellowship of God by Sanctification he hath attained the utmost end of his Mediatourship and the Soul hath attained its chiefest good and utmost happiness therefore is it said that the Saints by Christ do believe in God 1 Pet. 1.21 c. I would not wittingly or willingly speak a word for a world to detract any thing from the honour of my blessed Saviour or from the glory of the sacred Comforter but to rectifie your understandings and to heighten your apprehensions of the Fathers love because many Christians carry all things in the Name of Christ and of the Spirit being more apprehensive of the Sons love and of the Spirit 's grace than of the Fathers aboundant mercy Give me therefore leave to subjoin these four weighty Reasons Reas 1. Because all grace begins with the Father he is the first in order of Being and the first in order of Working the Fountain of the Trinity as we may conceive 't is the Father that floweth out to us in Christ by the Spirit he is the Father of lights Jam. 1.17 And the Text tells ye we are of God in Christ Jesus 't is true Christ as the second Person is coequal with the Father in power and glory but Christ as Mediatour must be considered as the Fathers Servant Isa 42.1 as his elect or chosen Instrument Reas 2. Glorifie the Father for whatsoever good Christ hath done for you or in you all is done with respect to the Fathers love and grant 2 Tim. 1.9 Joh. 17.2 God hath saved us according to his own Purpose and Grace given us in Christ Jesus God gave Christ power over all Flesh that he should give eternal life to those God had given him Righteousness Holiness Heaven
another new way to Heaven nor proclaim another Gospel for you nor for any Creatures breathing If Christ be not your sanctification as is held forth in this Treatise sin will be your condemnation you will perish and die eternally if there be a necessity of your salvation there is as absolute a necessity of your sanctification If the Lord hath reve●viled Christ to ye as the Lord your Righteousnesse he hath also revealed Christ to ye and i● in ye as the Principle and Prince of your Life as the High Priest your holinesse and ye must look up daily to Jesus Christ for both and receive of his fulnesse John 1.16 You see there is an indispensible need of Holinesse and whence and in whom all your springs and supplies are against the guilt punishment dominion and filth of sin viz. in your Mediatour Christ Jesus 2. Holinesse is most excellent Col. 1.19 most excellent in 1. It s Authour 2. It s Nature 3. It s End 1. T is excellent in its Authour it hath a divine Origination Isa 57.15 Ephes 2.10 The High and lofty One that inhabiteth Eternity his Name is Holy he that is the Creatour and former of all things is the former and Creatour of the new Birth 2. 'T is excellent in its Nature more precious than Rubies than the Topaz of Ae●●opia than the Treasures of the Indies or any sublunary excellency whatsoever it hath the Image and Life of the Authour in it it hath the Name and Glory of God upon it 't is divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 Therefore most excellent because divinely Excellent 3. 'T is excellent in its end salvation 1 Pet 1.9 Finis Coronat opus We use to say that is well which ends well for the end Crowns the work If Holiness be implanted in ye it will not only march about the world with ye in all conditions and estates of Life and be your Companion in labours but it will also follow ye yea go along out of the World with ye and be your Companion in Glory Revel 14.13 1 Sam. 16.13 as Samuel annointed Saul aforehand for the Kingdome so the Holy Oyl of Grace sets ye apart aforehand for the fruition of Glory it never leaves ye till it hath placed ye on Thrones arrayed ye with Robes put Palmes into your hands and incircled your heads with a Crown of Life and immortality The perfection of Grace is Glory 3. The Doctrine of Sanctification or Holiness is very Comfortable There are two Rivers of joy springing or having their Well-head in the precious side and heart of Christ 1. The Blood for Justification 2. The Water for Sanctification Both streaming from one Fountain equally cheering Psalm 46. refreshing and making glad the City of God and nourishing up the Believer to eternal life Amongst my Acquaintance I have observed two sorts of dejected souls as also two sorts of Causes of their dejection and two sorts of means or helps for their Cure and recovery 1. Some trembling hearts do much despond and droop for want of the sense of pardon their justification is dark unto them they know not whether God hath pardoned them The children of Light may sometime walk in darkness And then they would give millions of worlds did they possess them for God the fathers face to shine upon them Isa 50.10 and for the holy Spirit the Comforter to pronounce peace and proclaim pardon to them 2. Other deserted souls mourn sore like Doves for want of holinesse Comparing their hearts wih the perfect nature of God and their lives with the pure shining Law of God they are alwayes complaining for their defects and decays of Grace for the stre●gth and prevalence of corruption and for the manifold spots and staines of their conversations Wherefore they are afraid their spot is not the spot of Gods Children Deu● 32.5 and that such deadness dulnesse vanity of thoughts and disorders of spirit and life cannot be consistent with saving grace And hereupon they wander in Meanders of perplexities and disquietments The Indies if they had them they would freely part with for the plentifull effusion and influence of Christs Unction and to see him clearly to be made of God sanctification to them But O yee Bruised reeds and smoaking flax the Captain of your Salvation will bring forth judgement unto Victory and perfect your Grace in Glory There is Balm in Gilead there is a Physitian there Christ is a Saviour and a Sanctifier to the uttermost Heb. 7.25 The Plaister is as bread as the soar the blood of Christ is both 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the price of our Redemption and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Laver of Regeneration also 1. Let the first sort Trust in the Name of the Lord and stay themse ves upon their God Isa 50.10 See Dr. Goodwins Childe of Light Trust in the name of the Lord that is the infinite mercy of God through the merit of Christ God is rich in Mercy P●e●●ous in Redemption abundan ●● goodnesse and Truth the mercy of God is the Name of God yea the very first letter of his Name Exod. 34.6 Mercy leads the chorum in that Catalogue of the Divine Attributes Exo. 34.6 2. Trust in the infinite Merit and Righteousnesse of Jesus Christ for this is his Name the Lord our Righteousnesse Jer. 23.6 Let Faith drive thee quite out of self and thy own righteousnesse and lay fast hold on Christs Righteousnesse Know that Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse to every one that believeth Phil. 3.8 9 Consider him that hath satisfied Justice Rom. 10.4 fulfilled all righteousness in his own Person and brought in everlasting righteousnesse for thee who loved thee and gave himself for thee Dan. 9.24 And so let faith grow up unto Assurance Gal. 2.20 for this Righteousnesse is revealed from Faith to Faith called the Righteousnesse of God Rom. 1.17 because 't is the righteousnesse of God as well as man and which God appointeth and accepteth for thy justification This divine Righteousness thou must live upon as thy daily food and bread of life 2. Let the second sort of disconsolate souls consider these Particulars 1. That an enlightned soul that communes with his own heart seeth more vileness filthiness and contrariety in himself to the holy nature and Law of God than such as are in a state of gross darkness who are strangers to God and in this sense perfect strangers to their own hearts 2. Let such consider a Christian state in this world is militant there must be warring and wrastling Eph. 6.12 not only with flesh and blood but also with Principalities and Powers i. e. with the Devils of hell and the corruptions of the world every day Shall any say because I fight I am a Coward because I f●de a law in my members warring against the law of my minde a double interest flesh and spirit lusting in
Lord most unfit for so honourable and high a Calling as the Ministry of the Gospel must reckon my self a debtor both to the wise and unwise to the learned and unlearned as well to the more acute and perspicacious as to the less judicious and enquiring Christian And therefore as in duty bound must cast in my Mite into the Saints Treasury and imploy my Talent though but one and a small one as for the information of the more ignorant so also for the satisfaction of the more ingenious and learned Reader For his satisfaction therefore or at leastwise for an Essay thereunto I think it neither unnecessary nor inexpedient before I come to the words themselves to preface the subsequent Discourse with these I think convenient Prolegomena THE PROLEGOMENA TO THE Ensuing Discourse ALl I have to say in the Proem to the Text I shall reduce to these Heads following I shall endeavour to shew 1. By whom this Epistle was written 2. To whom it was written 3. Vpon what occasion the Apostle wrote this Epistle 4. What is the Argument of this Epistle 5. At what time and where this Epistle was written 1. By whom this Epistle was written The Apostle Paul a * Act. 9.15 chosen Vessel of God was the Author of this Epistle a man that was caught up to the third heaven where he heard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Montanus and the Vulgar translate arcana verba But Beza ineffabilia verba unspeakable words as our English Translators do well render such words † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id est quae sando explicari à quoquam homine non possint Beza which no man can explain by speaking A man inspired with the Spirit of God as he testifies of himself in this Epistle 1 Cor. 7.40 Therefore by the inspiration of the Spirit of God he wrote this Epistle Paul and all other holy men of old that wrote the Canonical and Divine Scriptures were but Amanuenses Penmen or Secretaries to the Spirit the Spirit was the immediate Author Inditer and Composer of the Scriptures All Scripture is of Divine Inspiration * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Tim. 3.16 1 Pet. 1.21 For the Prophesie came not in old time or rather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aliquando at any time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 acti inspirati acted or moved by the Holy Ghost † D Owen expounding this Text in his Divine Original of the Scripture p. 25. One of our Worthies hath an excellent gloss upon this Text. When the Word came or rather was brought 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the holy men that wrote the Scriptures it was not left to their understandings wisdomes minds memories to order dispose and give it out but they were born acted carried out by the Holy Ghost to speak deliver and write all that and nothing but that to every tittle that was so brought to them they invented not words themselves suited to the things they had learned but only expressed the words that they received And a little after he saith Not only the Doctrine they taught was the Word of Truth Truth its self Joh. 17.17 but the words whereby they taught it were words of truth from God himself c. Thus this Epistle and other sacred Scriptures being of Divine Authority and thereupon of uncontroulable Soveraignty and of Eternal Verity ought to be received and entertained of us with holy respect and reverence to be heard and read as the Oracles of God 2. To whom this Epistle was written together with a Description of Corinth This Epistle was written to the men of Corinth but more specifically the Apostle himself tells ye 1 Cor. 1.2 Unto the Church of God which is at Corinth to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus called to be Saints with all that in every place call upon the Name of Jesus Christ our Lord both theirs and ours The Corinthians were Achaians Corinthii Achaici fuerunt Corinth was a famous and rich City of Achaia not only one of the chi f but the Metropolitan or chiefest of that Region it was a City placed in an Isthmus or narrow streight going into Peloponnesus now called Morea and being scituate between * Both Poets and Geographers use to call her Corinthus Bi-maris Corinthus Achaiae Metroplis olim erat ob portuum commoditatem Emporium totius Asiae tum celeberrimum tum opulentissimum Marl. two Seas the A●gean and Ionian having fair Havens towards these two Seas a great concourse of people from many Countries resorted thither whereupon it was called Nobilissimum Emporium opibus abundans a most Noble Mart-Town overflowing with a confluence of wealth and worldly prosperity yea so famous and flourishing was this City that the Romans themselves began to suspect her greatness but the Corinthians were as insolent as the Romans were suspitious for they uncivilly abused the Roman Embassadors and cast Urine upon their heads as they passed through the † So Cicero relates it City Upon this disgrace the Romans sent Lucius Mummius then Consul who burnt the City and made it level with the ground In the burning of it so many rich and costly Images of sundry sorts of mettal were melted that thereof was found a very precious Brass called Aes Corinthium more esteemed than Silver among the Romans At last it was say some re-edified by Julius Caesar say others by Augustus Caesar because of the excellent fitness and scituation of the place it quickly encreased to its former wealth and splendour It was a place famous for the profession of Christianity but of late it fell into the hands of Turks and Infidels Anno Ch. 1451. and by them it is at this day called Corinto and Coranto To this City the Apostle Paul came from Athens Act. 18. ● where he converted to the Faith of Christ Crispus and Sosthenes two chief Rulers of the Jewish Synagogue Act. 18.8.17 and many of the Corinthians hearing believed and were baptized for the Lord had by a Vision in the night told him he had much people in that City and withall for his encouragement to preach there uncessantly and to abide there patiently The Lord bids him be not afraid 〈◊〉 8.9 but speak and hold not thy peace These words were Pillars of Support and Cordials of Comfort to his fainting heart Gods words are not empty or aiery Dictates like Vox praete●ca nihil mans a voice and no more but creating corroborating comforting soul-renewing and soul-quickning and soul-restoring and reviving precepts where when He up●●●●eth all thing by the Word o● his 〈◊〉 H●b 1.3 and in whom he pleaseth for his word is the word of his power and therefore a word with power The words that I speak s i th Christ they are spirit and they are life Joh. 6.63 Again the Lord promiseth to be with Paul for I am with thee Act.
that is by his Blood and Spirit whereof the washing of water in Baptisme is a sign and seal and withall the means whereby the Spirit of Christ doth more and more strengthen this cleansing The sum whereof is this Christ by the will of God and our Father gave himself to death for his Church The Blood of Christ is the meritorious cause the Spirit of Christ is the efficient cause Instrumenta in divinis operantur acs●no● operantur the Word and Ordinances are as subservient causes they work as Instruments in the hands of Christ for the Churches sanctification all the vertue that is in them or flows out to the Saints from them they receive from the efficiency of Jesus Christ These Pipes receive the Golden Oyl from this Candlestick Lastly the end of all is this that he might present her to himself a glorious Church without spot or wrinkle c. Thus the Church must be prepared by the Bridegrooms grace and so fitted for the Bridegrooms glory As the Virgins in Esther were to be purified with Oyl of Myrrhe Esther 2.12 and sweet Odours before they entred into the Kings Palace or stood in the Kings presence So all the Virgins and followers of the Lamb are to be purified and refined by the Spirit and grace of the Lamb and perfectly sanctified compleatly glorified at the Marriage Supper of the Lamb Rev. 19.7.9 Christians your blessed Saviour is made of God both righteousness and sanctification to ye he hath both a glorious Robe of justification to impute and a glorious Robe of sanctification to impart to all believers and this without controversie is the white Linnen of the Saints which render them truly glorious which commends them to God to good men to the holy Angels which garment of glory and beauty they shall wear for ever in their Fathers presence The believing Corinthians called to be Saints are said to be sanctified in Christ Jesus 1 Cor. 1 2. The Church considered in her Inherent Grace is but fair as the Moon hath many spots in her but in her Relation to Christ so she is clear as the Sun c. Wherefore though the Church in her self may be said to be poor forlorn deformed needy yet by Union with Christ being implanted into him * Ecclesia omnem suam sanctitatem venustatem pulchritudinem omnia sua bona in genere à Christo Jesu sponso suo accip●re habere dicitur P. Mart. she is rich with her Husbands riches holy with his holiness comely with his comeliness illustrious with his glory replenisht with his fulness He that is in Christ is a new creature 2 Cor. 5.17 When by faith unfeigned we are united ingrafted into Christ the true Vine We really partake of spiritual life and sensation from him we are sanctified in him and by him Wherefore speaks a worthy † Sanctificamur ergo dum in Christi corpus inserimur extra quod non nisi pollutio est nec aliunde etitiam nobis confertur spiritus quam à Christo per quem Deo adhaeremus in quo simus nova creaturae Calv. Author we are then sanctified when we are ingrafted into Christs body out of which instead of sanctification there is nothing else but pollution and no other way but from and by Christ is the Spirit of Holiness conferr'd upon us c. Christ in his most heavenly prayer solemnly confesseth that his Father sent him into the world for the sake of true believers Joh. 17.18 and that for their sakes he did sanctifie himself i. e. dedicate and give up himself for an holy Sacrifice that they viz. believers might be sanctified by the truth that is as most render it might receive remission of sins and sanctification of the Spirit and in fine the salvation of their souls as evidently appears from Heb. 10.10 Through the which will we are sanctified through the offering of the Body of Jesus Christ once for all And v. 14. For by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified All which Scriptures seem to a judicious ear to joyn in Consort and speak one voice and language with the Text and point in hand That Jesus Christ is given of God the Father for our Sanctification Thus much for the first thing promised viz. the proof of the point We come to the second general 2. How or in what sense Jesus Christ may be said to be our Sanctification or made ordained constituted or given of God to be our Sanctification I conceive Christ may be said to be our Sanctification in Scripture sense these four wayes 1. By Imputation 2. By Vnion 3. By Assimilation 4. By Influence and Communication 1. By Imputation 'T is the saying of a Reverend man now with God That the perfect purity of Christs Humane Nature is reckoned unto believers by free imputation of faith M. Wilson in his Christian Dictionary Christ is made unto us Sanctification this is saith he Sanctification imputed Jesus Christ being consecrated and set apart of God to be the Messiah and Mediator for mankind and having for that purpose all the bounty and fulness of the Father poured on him being truly God and truly Man and as Man being conceived of the Holy Ghost without sin ordained to be a Sacrifice for sin and to sanctifie and make his people holy is worthily in Scripture called That Holy One Psa 16.10 Act. 3 1● Joh. 1.2.20 Also he is termed the Holy of Holies or most Holy Dan. 9.24 And to annoint the most Holy The poor imperfect Church of Christ notwithstanding all her blots and spots Uxor illuce scit radiis mariti Qui justificantur sanctificantur hae gratiae individuo nexu cohaerent Calv. blains and blemishes contracted by original and actual sins is reputed as a glorious Church without spot or wrinkle or any such thing as she shines by the rayes of the Sun of righteousness through the sanctification or perfect holiness of her Bridegroom Jesus Christ Jesus Christ is a believers righteousness for Justification and his holiness for sanctification also These two are Twins inseparable The Lamb of God without spot was slain 1 Pet. 1.18 to purge us from the guilt of sin for without shedding of blood there could be no remission Heb. 9.22 And it must be a Lamb without spot and blemish and offered up to God by the Eternal Spirit This Lamb must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God-man or else your pollutions had never been removed your Natures never sanctified your consciences never purged from dead works Heb. 9.14 But Christ by the Hypostatical union is eminently qualified to be both vertually and efficiently your sanctification As the benefits of Redemption accrue to us by the Kingly Office of Christ so the benefits of Justification and Sanctification do accrue to us by the Priestly Office of Christ as Pareus notes Such an High-Priest it became us who is holy harmless separate from sinners Heb. 7.26 And such an
Lord take his counsel and endeavours vows and resolutions as it comes flowing to them from their closing with Christ and union with him There may be saith he a great deal of striving and endeavouring that may be utterly ineffectual for want of having recourse to Christ as the Spring and Well-head of all grace and holiness Thus Jesus Christ is our Sanctification by union with him we are sanctified in him and daily receive supplies of grace from him 3. Jesus Christ may be said to be our Sanctification and to be given of God for our Sanctification in regard of Assimilation 1 Christ is the pattern of our Sanctification 1. As Christ is the Author so Christ is the Rule and Pattern of our Sanctification formal and compleat Sanctification consists in a souls conformity to Jesus Christ as the Exemplar or Pattern of his obedience Heb. 12.3 Consider him that endured c. i. e. consider him as the Pattern and President of your obedience both active and passive Wherefore ye shall find that Christ propounds his own example as the pattern of our obedience Ioh. 13.15 I have given you an example i. e. of meekness and humility that you should do as I have done to you So Mat. 11.29 Learn of me for I am meek and lowly Again Phil. 2.5 Let the same mind be in you as was in Christ i. e. the same opinion judgement affections compassions Once more 1 Pet. 1.15 As he who hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of conversation Christ throughout his whole life was a standing rule a walking Bible a visible Commentary on Gods Law whose ordinary communicable works and duties are recorded for our imitation 2. Holiness is the Image of Christ 2. Holiness is the Image of Christ Now as the face is both the fountain of that Image or Species which is shed upon the glass and likewise it is the exact pattern and example of it too so Jesus Christ is both the principle of holiness by whom it is wrought and the pattern to which it is conforme Now in an Image there are two things 1. Proportion 2. Deduction 1. Proportion A similitude of one thing to another 2. Deduction A derivation or impression of similitude upon the one from the other and with relation thereunto Now our Renovation is after the Image of Christ 1 Cor. 15.49 As we have born the Image of the earthly so we shall bear the Image of the heavenly Adam begat a Son in his own likeness i. e. his Son was like him in corruption and mortality so in the Regeneration Christ begets children to himself in his own likeness i. e. like him in grace and holiness in spirituality and immortality for the seed of which we are begotten is incorruptible 1 Pet. 1.23 When man had lost that glorious Image of God wherein he was created he became an ugly and a miserable creature presently ugly because he had lost his holiness miserable because full of guilt and horror he durst no more draw neer to the most holy inaccessible Majesty than stubble before the flames No man can see his face 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deficiuntur and live We all by sin are come short of Gods glory Rom. 3.23 both of the glory of his Image and of the glory of his Kingdome Now unless the Lord be pleased to exhibit this Image to us through some glass or veil we must be for ever both desolate and destitute And this the Lord hath graciously been pleased to do by the veil of Christs flesh he is God manifest in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 The glory of God now shines in upon us and before us in and from the face of Iesus Christ Col. 1.15 2 Cor. 4.6 Christ is the Image of the invisible God and he that hath seen him hath seen the Father So that now by the Incarnation of the Son there is a Vision of Gods glory and a restauration of Gods Image Ioh. 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son who is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him The glittering beamings of the Invisible and Eternal Glory did and do shine most resplendently through the transparent medium of Christs Humane Nature which seen and taken in by the eye of Faith do strangely irradiate and enlighten beautifie and glorifie the soul of man Ephes 4.23 24. and renew it according to the Image of God in righteousness and true holiness 4ly and lastly Jesus Christ is our Sanctification by way of influence and communication This is more general and hath some connexion with and dependance upon the former Ye have received an Vnction from the Holy One i. e. Christ c. Ioh. 1.2.20 This Unction is like that oyntment that ran down from the head of Aaron unto the skirts of his garments to note the plentiful effusion of the Spirit on Christ and from Christ unto his lowest members 1. The Spirit of holiness was Christs right jure proprio by vertue of the personal union so that Christ had a plenitude or fulness of the spirit in him like the fulness of a fountain but to us the spirit belongs by an inferiour union through Christ our Head So Bishop Down●m in his Justification by way of influence from Christ our Head from the grace of the Spirit is derived in such proportion as Christ is pleased to communicate yet 't is the same holiness for truth and substance Simile As it is the same light which breaketh forth in the dawning of the day with that which inhereth in the body of the Sun shining in his strength 't is in Christ in fulness in us in measure The Apostle tells us 2 Cor. 3.18 We are changed into the same likeness with Christ by the Spirit of the Lord. 2. Of this fulness of the Spirit which is in Christ believers do receive and grace for grace Ioh. 1.16 As the Child receives member for member from the Father and as the paper receiveth letter for letter from the Press c. so a sanctified soul receives grace for grace i. e. all manner of grace exactly and proportionably from Jesus Christ The glorious Image of Gods holiness in Christ fashioneth and produceth it self in the hearts of the faithful Simile as an Image or species of light shining on a glass doth from thence fashion it self upon a wall by reflexion As the head communicates real influences to the body so Iesus Christ who is both an head of eminence and of influence communicates his spirit grace light life comfort to his Body the Church for he that sanctifieth and they that are sanctified are both of one As they are one in Nature so one in Spirit and in spiritual likeness also For the farther explication and illustration of this deep and illustrious truth viz. That Jesus Christ is our Sanctification Before I come to the definition of Sanctification Causa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
this hope doth purifie himself even as he is pure Faith exerts the office of all the senses and if all the members 't is the eye the hand the mouth the foot of the Soul c. as might be proved easily if I should exspatiate As Christ is all in all to the soul in the sanctification of it so Fai h of all graces is all in all in the out-going of the soul to Christ and in the Incomes of grace from him 2. As Faith is the Instrumental Causa Administra Evangelium est medium ce● instrumentum quo Spiritus sanctus efficaciam suam exerit fidem conversionem operatur Syntag Polan so the Word is the ministring cause or medium of sanctification Psa 19.7 The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the Soul the Law in all its Exhortations Commands Consolations Prohibitions Comminations and Promises is a perfect Law serving as a perfect means for conversion But the Promissory and Consolatory part ●h reof is p●incipally more purifying Having these promises let us cleanse our selves c. 2 Cor. 7.1 2 Pet. 1.4 The Gospel or Law of Faith is vehiculum spiritus the Chariot in which the spirit rides to give your souls a gracious visit Gal. 3.2 Received ye the spirit by the works of the Law Fides quae creditur He that makes the Clouds his Chariots mak●s also his Word his Ordinances and his Ministers his Chariots wherein he ●●des down into these lower parts to give the world a meeting Mr. Al●ens Heaven Opened p. 172. or by the hearing of faith i. e. by the hearing of the Gospel which is the doctrine of faith The sanctifying spirit accompanying the holy Word then the Word is sanctifying Joh. 17.17 Sanctifie them by thy truth thy Word is truth When the Gospel is spoken and heard in the evidence and demonstration of the Spirit and of Power then is the Arm of the Lord revealed Isa 53.1 then the Word of God works and grows mightily for sanctification and salvation then the blind eyes are opened then are the captives released then are the dead raised then are the lepers cleansed then are the devils dispossessed then are filthy souls washed unholy souls sanctified 7. Causa Exemplaris The Exemplar or Pattern to which our Sanctification in the two parts of it viz. our mortification and vivification is conformable is the Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ by vertue of the force and energy whereof through the operation and application of the spirit of faith our sanctification is effected The Apostle Paul holds forth a clear Analogy or proportion between our dying to sin and Christs dying for sin and between our newness of life or vivification and Christs Resurrection Rom. 6.4 5 6 7 8. where ye may see at large the parallel between them And the Apostle Peter tells us We are begotten again unto a lively hope by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead 8ly and lastly The glory of Gods Grace in the Consecration and Salvation of a sinful creature is the supreme end or final cause of our Sanctification there is a mutual intimate coherence and relation of these three to o●e another 1. The glory of Gods Grace is the Supreme end as of our Election in Christ so of our Sanctification by him All the Acts of Gods love in Christ whether immanent or transient they are all for the praise of the glory of his grace both in this and in the other world Eph. 1.4.6 And specifically Sanctification hath a direct tendency unto and termination in the glory of God When we keep our bodies and spirits chaste and holy we are then said to glorifie God 1 Cor. 6.20 Glorifie God in your bodies and in your spirits which are Gods 2. Consecration This is finis qui the end for which quoad nos we are sanctified and necessary necessitate medii to our Salvation Jam. 1.18 We are begotten by the Will of God that we might be a kind of the first fruits of his creatures that is as Beza Polanus and others observe that we might be consecrated and devoted to the Lord separated from the common lump of mankind as an holy offering at the first fruits under the Law were presented to the Lord as an holy Offering as the Lords own portion 3. Salvation This is our ultimate end the Apostle Peter acquaints us 1 Pet. 1.3 We are begotten again unto a lively hope by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ c. What is that lively hope we are begotten and born to in Regeneration he tells ye in ver 4. Even to an inheritance incorruptible und●filed that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for you This incomparable Inheritance See Dr. Owens Death of Death p. 119 120 121 122 c. dignified with all these transcendent Epithets is comprehended in one word Salvation 2 Thes 2.13 14. God hath from the beginning chosen us to Salvation that is the end through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth that is the way and means Thus having cleared our way now we come to the plain and full definition of Sanctification Sanctification in the sense of the Text and of this Tract is a new inward habitual frame of grace infused by the power of the Eternal Spirit into the heart of a justified person united to Christ whereby he is renewed after the Image of Christ in knowledge righteousness and true holiness and thereby enabled to die to sin and to live to God for the praise of Gods glorious grace in his Consecration and Salvation This definition is the sum of the former discourse every part and branch of this description hath been already proved in the aforegoing particulars therefore I shall not actum agere do over the same things again only give me leave to acquaint you Holiness is not any single grace alone but a Constellations conjunction of all graces together in the Soul our Sanctification or Inherent Holiness consists in these two things 1. In the infusing of holy principles divine qualities or supernatural graces into the soul such as the Apostle mentions in Gal. 5.22 23. But the fruit of the spirit is love joy peace long-suffering gentleness goodness faith meekness temperance against such there is no Law These habits of grace which are severally distinguished by the names of faith love hope meekness patience temperance c. are nothing else but the new nature the new creature the new man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness Ephes 4.24 1 Joh. 3.9 2 Cor. 1.21 1 Joh. 2.27 These seeds of holiness these habits of grace are those sweet oyntments wherewith all must be annointed that ever expect to be glorified Though men may talk much of God and brag much of their Interest in heaven and happiness yet without these habits and seeds of holiness I am sure they shall never reap a crop of blessedness 2. Holiness lies in the use and lively exercise of those
61.10 is imputed to them and put upon them by the Sun of righteousness their Elder Brother who wove this garment of Sun-beams for them out of his own Mediatorial holiness both in life and death Thus you have had some representation or Adumbration something shadowed out of the difference between Justification and Sanctification Our knowledge of these mysteries ought to be distinct and clear and not intricate and confused for the clearer our knowledge is the stronger and greater will our comfort be The great Apostle handles these two great Doctrines viz. Justification and Sanctification distinctly and in order First he begins with Justification and treats on that Argument throughout the 3 4 and 5th Chap. to the Romans Then he falls upon the Doctrine of Sanctification and insists on that necessary argument throughout the 6 7 and 8th Chap. to the Romans Pareus as a German Divine well observes And in this method since I have pitcht upon this Text I have endeavoured or made an Essay to handle them beginning with Justification first expressed by its Synonima in the Text righteousness and then proceeded to sanctification afterwards Let thus much suffice for the critical differences between Justification and Sanctification We now come in the next place to the next general propounded to be spoken to viz. to the excellency of Sanctification illustrated by the high and Honourable Enc●miums wherewith we find it dignified in the Scriptures in which as in a glass 〈◊〉 Mirror you may behold the incomparable beauty and worth of holiness 1. Holiness is the N me of God Isa 57.15 Thus saith the High and lofty One that inhabiteth Eternity whose name is Holy I dwell in the high and holy place c. Gods Name is holy Psa 111.9 Holy and Reverend is his Name How often is he called Holy One and the Holy One of Israel in the Scriptures His holiness is himself when he swears by his Holiness as Psa 89.35 Once have I sworn by my holiness Quicquid est in Deo Deus est that I will not lie unto David he swears by himself for whatsoever is in God is God God is essentially infinitely and primitively holy the Saints only by participation of his holiness they are called godly from God Christians from Christ and Saints from the sanctification of the Holy Spirit The chosen Generation are an holy Nation 1 Pet. 2.9 they partake of Gods Name Holiness 2. It is called the Seed of God 1 Joh. 3.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 peccatum non operatur or peccato non dat operam As Beza i. e. doth not make sin his work and business 1 Pet. 1.3 whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin for his seed remaineth in him c. And this seed viz. the Word of God i. e. of which we are begotten and born again is incorruptible or immortal 1 Pet. 1.23 Jam. 1.18 Sanctification by these Texts and elsewhere is held out by the Metaphor of Generation God the Father of Spirits is the Spiritual Father that begets a soul to himself in Christ the Word is the Seed of God of which the soul is begotten again ●he Ordinances are the Bed wherein the soul is begotten Can. 1.16 also our Bed is green viz. flourishing Ordinances Holiness is a Divine Seed 3. Holiness is the Will and Word of God or rather the Will of God revealed in his Word The word of God is the signification of his will and 't is the Royal Mandatory will of God that we should be holy 1 Thes 4.3 This is the will of God even your sanctification 1 Pet. 1.15 16. As he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of conversation for it is written be ye holy because I am holy 'T was the great Honour of King David that he served his Generation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fa●●et omnes vol●●tates meas according to the will of God Acts 13.22 yea he fulfilled all Gods wills for the Greek is plural So 't is the highest honour of any creature as well as duty whether of Angel or man to fulfill the wills of God the whole pleasure of his will especially his main design and great command in being holy 4. Holiness is the work of God All Gods works as in Creation and Providence are like himself honorable and glorious so the Psalmist cals them Ps 111.2 3. and 't is our bounden duty to consider and admire them But here that old rule holds good Operari sequitar esse the work is like unto the worke● next to the highest of all Gods works viz. the Incarnation of the Son of God the second person in the Trinity the work of sanctification without controversie is the most great and glorious as appears by these Scriptures 2 Cor. 5.5 He that hath wrought us for the self-same thing is God This is called by way of eminency Gods workmanship Ephes 2.10 We are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works c. Holiness is the special peculiar work of the holy God 5. Holiness is the very Image of God and this is more than all the former The s ul as a spirit may be said in a sense to b●th● mage of God but the soul as qualifie wi h grace or adorned with knowledge wisdome righteousness holiness Col 3.10 Eph 4.24 in which the Image of God omisteth is the most lively likeness and Image of God in the world By these graces we should shew forth Gods vertues 1 Pet. 2.9 'T is in the Greek vertues and not prai●es Now note 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 virtutes An Image represents a thing in its highest excellency an image doth not represent the legs feet or inferiou● parts of a man but his countenance head face breast the most Noble parts So our sanctification or inherent righ●eousness represents God in his chiefest ●x●elency as he is glorious in holiness Exod. 15.11 In the works of Creation and Providence we see the footsteps at most the back-parts of the Almighty but in the Saints we see his face or Image though not perfectly drawn and to the life An holy soul represents God in the most lively way Simile as the Image of a man in his child is more lively seen than in a piece of wood or stone so the Image of God is more lively seen and more gloriously drawn in the hearts of his Saints next to Christ Col. 1.15 Heb. 1.3 who is the Image of the Invisible God c. than in all the creatures in the world besides 6. Holiness is the life of God and this is m re a man may see his Image but no man can see his life Grace is called the life of God Ephes 4.18 Being alienated from the life of God N w w at is G ds ●i●e and w●at is a Saints life Go s life consists in this in willing himself th● chiefest and high●st good and in acting for his own glory as them ●m●te
Light and Darkness between Christ and Belial It was an old saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 between an holy God and an impure sinner God is Light in the abstract 1 Joh. 1.5 and an impure sinner is darkness in the abstract Ephes 5. Holinesse is the principle of Union and Communion between God and man Ephes 2.13 when we are converted sanctified 1 Cor 6.17 He that is joined to the Lord is one Spirit the soul is made nigh to God who before was afar off and is now joined to the Lord in the Spirit As a man cannot have communion with the Beasts because they live not the same life nor the Beasts with the Plants because they live a contrary life no more can a natural man have communion with God because he lives not the same life but the Saints through sanctification of the Spirit live a spiritual life the life of God and are therefore fitted for Communion with him and for the communications of his goodnesse to them 12. Sanctification turns moral Vertues into Graces Some persons are naturally meek patient As 't was said of Augustus Caesar He turned brick into Marble sober temperate c. Some natural persons are morally just and righteous in their dealing and Conversation in the World honest Dealers good Pay-masters make their word their deed All this a man may be and do yet perish for ever but when once Wisdome enters into thy heart whence once Sanctification in the power of it comes into thy soul there is a great change wrought The new soul acts and works in natural and moral Actions from inward renewed principles The principle of Grace the true Elixir turns moral Vertues into Graces and dignifies a mans natural Endowments and moral actions with a tincture of holinesse which makes a sweet perfume in Gods Nostrils hee now acts from God and for God in all he doth whether he eats or drinks or buys or sels 1 Cor. 10.31 all is for the glory of God As carnal hearts are alwayes carnal in spiritual performances for the streams never run higher than the Head so on the contrary gracious hearts are spiritual in natural and moral actions The reason is the new man hath a new principle to act from and a new End to act for and aim at but before he was sanctified he had neither 13. Another excellency of Sanctification is this That the righteousnesse of Sanctification next to the righteousnesse of Christ for justification will be of the greatest worth and value support and comfort at death and judgment At Death and Judgment the rich mans Riches the wise mans wisdome the ambitious mans honours the voluptuous mans pleasures the hypocrites formality the civil mans civility and the moral mans morality These Lying Idols and rotten sticks which unholy persons have made their hope their stay and the Rock of their Confidence shall then all fail them and sink quite under them but then shall the pure in heart see God Mar. 5.8 Mat. 13.43 then shall the Righteous lift up their heads like Princes and shine as the Sun in the presence of their Father a dram of saving Grace will be then more valuable and more comfortable th●n mountains of Gold than millions of Worlds This was a River of comfort flowing in upon Ezekiahs heart as he lay upon his sick-bed for ought he then knew upon his death-bed viz. the review of his sanctified heart life Isa 38.3 Remember O Lord how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart c. Beloved There will be a great Cry at midnight the Bridegroom comes go forth to meet him Matth. 25.6 The coming of Christ to Judgment will be very sudden and very terrible to secure sinners if you with the foolish Virgins have only oyl in your Lamps a blaze of profession without and not with the wise oyl in your Vessels the true stock and treasure of grace in your hearts Mat. 25.12 Mat. 7.22.23 Read those words and Tremble you will cry most dolefully and shriek most dreadfully at that day but Christ will not hear you hee will take no notice of you The King of glory will enter his Presence-chamber with all his Saints and shut the door against you ver 10. And the door was shut then knock never so hard Grace is the Bridegrooms favour by which they are admitted into his Chamber of Glory cry never so loud the door is shut there 's no hope of entrance the Lord will Answer I know you not vers 12. Then your sop will be sorrow weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth for madnesse and anguish will be y●ur portion no grace no glory Wherefore Si●s for the Lords sake and for your own souls-sake look about you the coming of the Lord draweth nigh If ever ye hope in earnest to be saved be sure you are truly and throughly sanctified for there is no hope of salvation without sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the Truth 2 Thes 2.13 14. 14. And lastly To name no more Sanctification is the early dawning of Salvation the very beginning of Heaven In that golden Chain Rom. 8.30 there is mention made of Calling Justification and of Glorification but nothing of Sanctification to note that sanctification is Heaven begun already it is not only the way to Heaven but 't is Heaven it self the more holy thou art the more thou dost live the life of God and the more thou dost anticipate the life of Heaven that Glorious life which the Angels of God and the blessed spirits of just men made perfect live there Heb 12.22.23 Thus through the assistance of God wee have hinted something of the transcendent excellency of Sanctification which we have in by and from our Lord Jesus who is made of God or given of the Father to be our Sanctification Holinesse is the Name of God the Seed of God the Will and Word of God it is the Work of God 't is the very Image of God it is the Life of God 't is the Nature of God 't is the Glory of God Again Sanctification renders one man far m●re excellent than another 't is one grand Attainment of the death of Chr st 't is the principal of Union and Communion with God Sanctification turns moral Vertues into Graces 'T is the second best Cordial of Comfort at De●th and Judgment Lastly 't is the dawning of Salvation the Aurora of Glory THat Christ is given of the Father to be our Sanctification we have proved how Christ may be said to be our Sanctification we have shewed what are the several Causes concurring to our Sanctification we have explained The definition of Sanctification wee have given Something of its glory and excellency we shadowed forth in the last Discourse and now are arrived at the last Stage the last General in the doctrinal part propounded viz. what are the sweet streams that issue from this Fountain They may also
special effect and evidence of thy spiritual Circumcision or Sanctification In Sanctification as the understanding is enlightned to know God so the will and affections are renewed changed rightly ordered and enclined to love God as his chiefest good and as his utmost End Corn and Wine and Oyl and all the world is then counted nothing to the light of Gods countenance Psalm 4.6 7. Ca●t 5. ●0 All other Beloveds are no body to Jesus Christ the chiefest of ten thousands A sanctified soul exactly viewing and well weighing the glittering pomp and splendor of this world all natural and moral excellencies on the one hand and Jesus Christ on the other cryes out with the Martyr Lambert Foxes Acti and Monuments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 propter eminentiam cognitionis Christi Iesu Mont. None but Christ none but Christ Counts all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dogs-meat garbage to the excellency of the Knowledge of Jesus Christ Phil. 3.8 A Christian loves himself his Relations and worldly comforts with a common love but God and Jesus Christ with a special love He loves his temporal Enjoiments secondarily and subordinately but he loves God and Christ primarily intensively and superlatively yea so highly intensive is his love to God his Father to Christ his Saviour to the holy Spirit his souls Comforter to Heaven and heavenly things his only Treasure that his love to other things comparatively may be called an Hatred i. e. a much inferiour a far more remiss love See Luke 14.26 more distinctly First Amore d●sideris A sanctified heart loves God with a love of desire The strength of the heart goeth out in love this is called the breathing thirsting and panting of the heart after God Psalm 42.1 2. The soul that loves God above all things desires God above all things both intensivè with the greatest vigor and Adequatè as its Adequate and compleat Object Whom have I in Heaven but thee and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee 2. A sanctified heart loves God with a love of Union Amore unionis as the heart of Shechem clave to Dinah Gen. 34.3 So an holy soul cleaves unto God in Christ Barnabas exhorted the Disciples that with purpose of heart they would cleave to the Lord Acts 11.23 As the soul of Jonathan was knit with the soul of David 1 Sam. 1.18 So this Love is as it were a knitting of the soul with God Faith makes a mystical union of Persons Love makes a moral union of affections This is the very essence of Gospel-love Amor non est nisi donum amantis in amatum God bestows himself on us and we freely surrender our selves to God Thirdly A sanctified heart loves God with a love of good will or Benevolence we wish and will Amore Benevolentiae give and ascribe all honour and praise all glory and dominion unto him This is the genuine product of his love in Christ to us as Revel 1.5 6. Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen Lord saith an holy soul Cant 2.16 let all thine be mine and let all mine be thine and let thine be for thy glory let every person and creature and thing in Heaven above and in earth beneath be a shril Trumpet a loud Cymbal to sound forth thy praises Amore complacentiae acquiescentiae Fourthly A sanctified heart loves God with a love of Complacence and Rest Where we love the eye of the soul the mind is fixed with a delightful stay ubi amor ibi oculus the Object dwels in the eye we are still looking where we love Anima plu● est ubi amat quàm ubi animat When I awake saith the Psalmist I am still with thee in my contemplations and affections My meditation of him shall be sweet I will be glad in the Lord Psalm 104. 34. Love goeth forth upon the feet of Desire and rests in the bosome of Delight There is an holy acquiescence of the heart in God God saith of his Saints This is my Rest for ever here will I dwell the Saint saith of God Psal 132.14 Psal 116.7 Psal 91 9● Ephes 2 ult Return to thy rest O my soul A Saint makes God the most High his Habitation and a Saints heart is the Habitation of God through the Spirit Here lyes the sweetness of holiness the marrow and fatness of Religion This World would be a Dungeon and Heaven it self a melancholly shade without the love of God 't is this that makes Heaven and Earth sweet unto the sanctified Heaven would be no Heaven God could not be the joy if he were not the love of Saints Psal 16. ult but there both love and joy shall be full But whilst the Saints are solacing themselves with Heaven and delighting themselves in God other men are following after other Lovers The covetous man makes Mammon his God the voluptuous man makes Pleasure his God the Ambitious man makes Honour his God the Formalist and Hypocrite makes Common grace self-righteousness a bare profession or the meer externals of Devotion his God and Saviour because every one of these make some of these their only Treasure and Happiness They dote upon them addict themselves to them trust to them and in them and love them more than God But a Saint that knows God makes Jehovah his God he hath but one the living and true God to honour love Psal 36.9 Psal 87.7 Col. 3.3 and serve who is the fountain of his life and blessedness in whom all his springs are in whom with Jesus Christ all his Comforts live and from whom by Jesus Christ all his felicity is conveyed to make him happy in both worlds The new creature hath a new heart according to that full and free Promise Ezek. 36.26 A new heart will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you which new heart I take to bee the Genus of all the following graces And where there is this new heart there will bee new Affections new longings and earnest breathings of soul after God Christ Heaven and Immortality for behold saith Christ I make all things new Rev. 21.5 Love of the Brethren an evidence of Regeneration Secondly As a sanctified person loves his God so also he loves his Brother this is made one great evidence of our happy and new Translation 1 John 3.14 We know that we have passed from death to life because we love the Brethren he that loveth not his Brother abideth in death Qui diligit fratrem magis novit d lectionem quâ diligit quam fratrem quem diligit Aug de Trinit Many a be-nighted soul I have read and heard upon the plank of this evidence have been kept from sinking down into the Whirl-pool of despair it
world Be ye holy in all manner of conversations as he is holy 1 Pet. 1.15 Mat. 5.16 〈◊〉 demum est vera religio imitari Deum quem Colis Lactan. Let your light so shine before men that they seeing your good-works c. That is true Religion when we imitate God whom we worship 'T is impossible God should set his love upon a person altogether unlike himself similitude is the ground of Fellowship can two walk together except they are agreed for what communion hath light with darkness or Christ with Belial Surely none at all 3. Why doth the Lord many times correct his people but that they might be holy this is the sweet fruit that grows upon the sowre tree of affliction this is all the fruit to take away their sin Isa 27.9 and more expresly Heb. 12.10 To make them partakers of his Holiness We are Threshed that our husks may fly off Winnowed that we may be purged Tried in the Furnace that our Graces may be brightned and our dross our lusts consumed God never afflicts his people but for their profit Though we may not yet God many times seeth we have great need of affliction 1 Pet. 1.6 because we have need of sanctification many times the Saints get such deep spots in their Consciences and stains in their Garments that nothing but the Salt and Vinegar of afflition will rub them out God had rather see his people in a suffering than in a sinful state he had rather hear them cry than see them filthy and better a thousandfold to be preserved in Brine than to rot in Honey 2. Sanctification is absolutely needful for the honour of God the Son least his members should be deformed and polluted head and members must be proportionate like to one another Dan. 2.31 32 33 it were monstruous that Christ should have such a strange body as Nebuchadnezars Image which he saw in his Dream the head of Gold the arms and breasts of Silver the thighs of Brasse the feet of Iron and Clay so strange and odd it is that Christ should have such a mis-shapen Body altogether unlike himself 't is not for Christs honour to be the head either of a monstrous or ulcerous body by how much we retain of sin by so much we dishonour our Redeemer and put him to shame therefore all Christs aim is to make us holy Christ pitched on Sanctification as the fittest blessing to bestow upon us to make us holy and so to make us in and with himself honourable Every distinct society must have some distinct honour now Christ hath set apart his Church as a distinct society to himself He bestows not on her worldly pomp or splendour other societies have enough of that but he beautifies her with holiness the best Ornament For holiness becometh thine House O Lord for ever Psal 93.5 This is a farre greater gift than any outward greatness for moral excellencies do far transcend civil or natural Rom. 10.12 Eph. 2.4 Rom. 11.33 Exod. 24.6 God is said to be rich in Mercy plentious in Redemption aboundant in Goodness and Truth infinite in Power unsearchable in Counsel but he is glorious in Holiness Exod. 15.11 Gods Goodness is his Treasure but his Holiness is his Glory Again Christ in giving us Sanctification did not onely respect its Excellency but also our want of it Christ came into the world to repair and make up the ruines of the Fall in the Fall we lost not onely Gods Love but also Gods Image therefore that the Plaister might be as broad as the sore he died not onely to reconcile us but also to sanctifie us that he might sanctifie the people with his own blood he suffered without the Gate Heb. 13.12 Exod. 30.17 18 19 20 21 His blood was not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Price but also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Laver wherein to wash us and make us clean as under the Law there was both a Laver and an Altar to shew that we must bee sanctified as well as justified Christ came into the world not only to abolish the guilt of sin The Son of God appeared 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut dissolvat opera Diaboli Si hodie quoque in Helvetiis Thermae Taberien ses c. valetudinarios ●eflituunt id quidem divinae tribuendam est b●nignitati nam nullae res Terrenae vim in se habent saluta●em homin ●us nisi effi●aces r●d dantur per po ea●iam omnipotentis B●ling in Joh. 5.4 Numb 35 6 25. which makes against our Interest Peace and Comfort but also to destroy the power of sin and cleanse us of the filth of sin which makes against Christs Glory Christ dyed that the Gospel and all the precious Ordinances and Promises of the same might be under a blessing and conduce to the advancement of holiness Ephes 5.26 That he might Sanctifie us by the washing of water through the Word Christ hath procured a Treasure of Grace to be conveyed to the Church by the spiritual use of Ord●nances John 17.19 I Sanctifie my self for their sakes saith Christ that they might be Sanctified through the Truth That prophane Wretch Celsus decries Christianity as though it were a Nursery of wickedness and a Seminary of all looseness such abom●nable thoughts he had of the Doctrine of Free-Grace Origen wise y answers him The Gospel is not an Invitation of a Thief to debauch men but the Invitation of a Physitian to cure men of their enormities 'T is an Hospital to heal them of their Diseases a Fountain to cleanse them of their Filthiness When ever ye come to hear the Wo d or to the use of any Ordinance expect then to re●p th fruits of Christs purchase look upon the Ordinances as sprinkled by Christs blood as influenced by Christs Spirit When ye come to this Pool of Bethesda there wait and wait earnestly for the Angels stirring of the waters as the impotent folk did John 5.2 3 4. the Angel of the Covenant Christ in his Prophetical Office must stir in these waters of the Sanctuary manifest his Power and Presence in them and stir in thy heart also Open thy immortal Gates move and melt thy bowels for thee if ever they are effectual 'T is very observable that under the Law all the Cities of Refuge were Cities of Levites and Schools of Instruction And there the Man-Slayer must stay till the death of the High-Priest So in like manner if yee flie from the Pa●s●er of Blood the Law and Wrath of God to Jesus Christ for Refuse for Reconciliation for Justification as your High-Priest you must come to Christ also for teaching as your Prophet ye must learn the Trade of holiness in Christs School as well as look for reconciliation by Christs Crosse To conclude Your Head is holy so must the members be or else ye exceedingly dishonour your Head and disgrace his Glorie 3. 'T is for the honour of God the holy Spirit the Father
and the Son have committed the Saints to the Spirits charge to this very end and purpose that they might be sanctified Sanctification is made the Spirits personal operation 2 Thes 2.14 1 Pet. 1.2 The Spirit is to shape and fashion all the Vessels of Mercy and prepare them for Glory he is to deck the Spouse of Christ with the jewels of the Covenant 'T is the great advantage the Saints have in the Oeconomy or dispensation of Grace that they have the Father to purpose it the Son to purchase it and the Spirit to work it the Father Word and Spirit are all one and agree in one for our sanctification Now 't is a great grief to the Spirit when the work of Grace doth not go on and prosper in the soul for 't is he that worketh us to this very thing and therefore is called the Spirit of holinesse 'T is not for the Spirits honour that Gods Nursery or Plantation committed to his care and charge should not thrive and flourish 'T is not for the Spirits honour to dwell in defiled Temples nor to let the people go naked without their Ornaments 'T is not for the Spirits honour that any committed by the Father and the Son to his charge should perish or miscarry should fall away either totally from all Grace finally for all time for ever to miss of heaven in the end The Father hath left the Son in charge to be the Captain of our salvation Heb. 2. and to bring many children to Glory The Son hath left the Spirit in charge with all his Fathers children to gu●de them by his Counsel and to bring them to his Glory When Christ as man left earth and went to Heaven he comforts his Disciples by sending another Comforter and who he is Christ tels ye even the Spirit of truth to guide his people into all truth for he shall not speak from himself but whatsoever he shall hear that shall he speak and he will shew you things to come he shall glorifie me for he shall receive of mine and shall shew it unto you all things that the Father hath are mine therefore said I that he shall take of mine and shall shew it unto you John 16.13 14 15. The Spirit of Christ is Christs Pro-rex or Viceroy by Comm ssion from his Father and himself to rule and govern the affairs of his providential Kingdom Ezek. 1.20 21. The spirit of the living creature was in the wheels The Spirit acts the Angels called living Creatures and the living creatures or Angels act and move the wheels that is the Transactions of divine Providence in the world and Christ by the Spirit governs and guides his Subjects in his spiritual Kingdome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aux viae vobis erit in omnem veritatem So Beza in John 16.13 the Spirit is Dux viae the Captain of the way to lead his people into all truth their Glorious Guest to dwell with them and to abide with them for ever John 14.16 17. and by his inhabitation and constant influence and operation to perfect his own work in them and ripen their souls for Heaven Thus our sanctification is absolutely necessary for the honour of the Father Son and Spirit 2. Our sanctification is absolutely and indispensibly needfull as for the honour of God so also for our attainment of true happiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the masculine ●rticles must be refered to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Holi● is N●gat que●q●am poss videre D●●m sine sanctimon a ● moniam am 〈◊〉 oculis 〈◊〉 deb●mus Deum quam qui reformati fuerint ad ejus imaginem Calv. Grace and Glory holiness and happiness sanctification and salvation individuo nexu cohaerent These are tyed and twisted together with a knot inseparable and indissoluble There is no going to Heaven without holiness no man shall see the Lord Heb. 12.14 Some there are which ignorantly and fondly do restrein the word Saints to the Saints departed the Saints in Heaven but we must be Saints here or else can never expect to be Saints hereafter The Apostle denyes saith Calvin that any one can see God without holiness because he shall see God with no other eyes than those which shall be renewed according to his Image the Image of God is b● begun on earth 't is perfectly and compleatly drawn by the Vision of God in Heaven Be sure you are real Saints sanctified in Christ Jesus and not only nominal and notional as too many are your Saintship is all the evidence you have to shew for your inheritance be sure then you keep your evidence fair and clear without blots and blurs Unless ye are begotten again unto a lively hope what have ye to do with that inheritance gilded with so many glorious Epithets 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Math. 5.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 1.2 3. How can they see God that have not a pure heart nor a pure eye indeed the pure heart is the pure eye The Degree of Vision will be according to the degree of sanctification the more gracious we are in this the more glorious wee shall be in the other world The Apostle tels us Col. 1.12 we must be made meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light What should a carnal heart do with Heaven that knows no other heaven but to eat drink and wallow in sensual delights as the Glutton at a feast cryed There 's no heaven like to this We must not look for a Turkish Paradise in Heaven but for a pure sin-less state not to bathe our souls in carnal pleasures but to be Consorts of the immaculate Lamb and Competitioners with the Angels Perfection of Grace As one saith Consortes Agni Angellorum Candidati and fulness of joy in the presence of Gods Glory is the Saints heaven Swine know not what to do with Pearls nor carnal creatures with the life and joyes above Suppose that which is not to be supposed were it possible an unsanctified person should go to heaven that holy place and holy Company would be an hell to him Coelum est altera Gehenna damnatorum he would be as weary of heaven as ever water was of running according to the Proverb If the faint Image of God in his Saints if the glympse of Gods presence in his Ordinances be so irksome and unpleasant to an unholy soul here Oh how terrible and contrary to his spirit would the most glorious Presence of God in heaven be where the Seraphims cry continually Holy holy holy Lord God of Sabaoth c. where God displayes his holiness in the greatest splendor and glory God is perfect light Isa 6.3 Revel 4 8. 1 Joh. 1.5 the man is darkness they could never agree together An unsanctified person indeed may desire Heaven as a disproportionate good as a place better to be tolerated than the torments of hell he may desire heaven as a privation of
Now you that are righteous with this inherent Righteousness 1 Cor. 1.2 hold on your way and prosper the Lord be with ye The Angel of his presence save ye The Spirit of Jesus guide ye to the Hill of holiness and help you to perfect holiness in the fear of God You are under the vertue of sure and sweet promises for your great encouragement in Heavens way The Righteous shall hold on his way and he that hath clean bands shall be stronger and stronger Job 17.9 The Lord strengthen your hearts See these Texts Isa 40. 2 last verses Phil. 1.6 Heb. 12.2 Ezek. 36.27 and quicken your speed by these powerful and precious Promises and give ye a prosperous arrival at the fair Havens of rest and peace Amen We come now to close the whole with these two uses 1. By way of Conviction 2. By way of Caution Though I know the Rules of Method and the exigence of the Subject Command me yet I shall not proceed directly by way of Examination because that hath been already done from that Text Rom. 1.7 To all that be at Rome beloved of God called to be Saints from whence the doctrine of calling hath been discussed the nature of Saintship and the signs and tryals of Sanctification have been largely shewn We shall therefore God willing proceed to the next in order viz. the Use of Conviction Use 8. This Doctrine of Sanctification we have so long insisted on serveth for Conviction If those that are Gods and Christs are sanctified in Christ Jesus if God the Father hath given them Christ his Son for their sanctification to make them holy Then this Point brings doleful news sad tidings in the mouth of it to three sorts of Persons To the Prophane To the Persecutors To the Scorners 1. The profane who mock at sin and slight holiness 1. The prophane are hereby convicted and condemned God hath no Birthright for such profane Esaus The people who are the Lords portion are an holy Nation washed from their filthinesse If ye are converted ye are washed and sanctified in the name and by the spirit of the Lord Jesus 1 Cor. 6.11 but prophane ones have a spot upon them which is not the spot of Gods Children Deut. 32.5 see what St. John speaketh of such kinde of persons as wallow in their filthiness 1 John 3.8 He that committeth sin is of the Devil for the Devil sinneth from the beginning he that tradeth in sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qui operam dat peccato So Beza and maketh sin his constant businesse work or practise as a workman doth his calling and followeth the same daily and deliberately A godly man may slip into sin through humane frailty and in the hurry of temptation may be overtaken with a fault But it is the profane man that is a trader in sin and a constant worker of iniquity Though such men may presume that they belong to God yet our Saviour expresly speaks they are the Devils Children John 8.44 Ye are of your father the Devil for his works ye do c. These men have not the least pretence of a claim to Heaven they come exceeding short of Hypocrites who pretend to holiness and seem to be so but the prophane are neither civil nor moral Such gross sinners are called Dogs and Swine They are weltring in the gall of bitterness and bound fast with the bond of iniquity as Peter told Simon Magus Acts 8.23 All that such kinde of sinners have to say for the most part for themselves is this 1. That God is merciful 2. That their hearts are better than their lives To the first I answer that God is holy and just as well as mercifull and gracious The Lamb will turn a Lion the Saviour of the world will come as a terrible Judge in flaming fire to render vengeance to the ignorant and disobedient 2 Thes 1.8 And if the righteous scarcely be saved where shall the wicked and ungodly appear 1 Pet. 4.18 They shall appear indeed but like as chaffe before the Whirl-wind and as stubble before the flames All the Attributes of God as justice mercy c. do run in the channel of his Holiness Sinners do little think that Gods mercy is an holy mercy which in a saving manner he will dispence to none out of Christ Sinners do err exceedingly to think that God is prodigal either of his own mercy or of his Sons Blood 't is only the sanctified in Christ Jesus exclusively who shall be the objects of his saving mercy the mercy of God and the merit of Christ are most sacred and precious things 1 Pet. 1.18 The former is bestowed on none the latter is spilt for none but an holy and a peculiar people Justice must be satisfied 1 Pet. 2.9 else mercy can be never dispensed if the merit of Christ be thine then the mercy of the Father is thine otherwise though the Ocean of Gods pardoning mercy be boundless and bottomless thou shalt not taste one drop of it Well then wouldst thou know that God will be mercifull to thy soul at the last day it highly concerns thee to know Christ in the power of his Resurrection and in the fellowship of his sufferings in this thy Day Phil. 3.10 2. To the other Plea That their hearts are better than their lives I answer This is to appeal to a witness that cannot be found to a witness that is as to us invisible 't is as if a man should lay claim to another mans Land and pretend he hath lost the evidences the guilt of the prophane is written in Capital legible letters upon the frontispiece of his Conversation every eye may see it Vita est index animi index futuri index aterni See Mat. 12. from 34 to v. 37. Cor instar Promptuarit est bonorum malorum Pareus As a good tree brings forth good fruit so a bad tree brings forth bad fruit Men do not gather grapes of thorns nor figs of thistles As a good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things so an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart bringeth forth evil things A good man speaks good words and doth good works and the Apostle tels us Rom. 2.6 God will reward every man according to his deeds Your hearts can never be good when your tongues and lives be bad Your Lord Christ speaks expresly out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh The doom of the prophane is dreadful to instance but in two particulars 1. The unclean shall not enter into or pass over the way of holiness Isa 35.8 And an high way shall be there and a way and it shall be called the way of holiness See the Dutch Annotat on the place the unclean shall not pass over it c. The meaning of that place is this The true Church shall be no barren Wildernesse or untrodden Desart but in it
shall be shewed the true way to salvation by faith in Jesus Christ who cleanseth us from all our sins and giveth us his holy Spirit to regenerate and renew us to an holy life but the unclean or prophane shall not pass in this high way of Holiness The dogs shall be without out of the pale of the true Church Revel 22.15 2. The unclean shall not enter into the new Jerusalem That most holy place and blessed state is an heavenly Mansion and preferment for Doves not for Vultures for sheep not for Goats or Swine not for the unclean but for the holy Regnum coelosum clausum est incredul●s blasphemis execratis iis qui secundum carnem ambu●ant sed idem apertum est electis vocatis sanctis Pignet No Anathema must be there Revel 21.27 And there shall in no wise enter into it any thing that defileth neither whatsoever worketh abomination or maketh a lye but they which are written in the Lambs book of life The inheritance above is a possession for the sanctified and none else Acts 26.18 that goodly Countrey the Eternal Canadn is divided among the Saints 't is the peculiar portion of an holy p●culiar people but the Flaming Tophet the Lake that burneth with fire and brimstone is the lot of the prophane 2. This Point brings sad tidings to the persecutors that hate holy persons and holy things for the sake of holinesse 2. The Persecutors who labour to deface the Image and spiritual worship of Christ to pull down the honour and glory of God in the world and to root out holinesse from the earth Christianos ad leones Et pu●onos Deus Apostolos novissimos elegit veluti Bestiarios Tertul. John 19.12 Whatsoever these mens pretences are as 1. State-policy as Haman told King Ahasuerus when he thought to exterminate the whole Jewish Race 't is not for the Kings profit that these men should live Or 2. Fear of Rebellion these are no friends to Cesar as hath been the old Calumny these are Enemies to Government This unjust charge the Jews insinuate against Christ before Pilate If thou let this man go thou art not Cesars friend whosoever maketh himself a King speaketh against Cesar Whereas the Scepters and Crowns of Princes have no better friends under heaven than Religion and religious men Or 3. Expediency of an uniformity in all modes in Religion whereas 't is as possible for all men to come into the world with the self-same faces for figure and feature as for all men in the same Nation to agree in the same and in all the modes and circumstances of the same Religion as the Emperour wisely told that Satyrist objecting why he had so many men of so many opinions in his Army yet notwithstanding 't is the white of holinesse which they shoot at The shining lustre of the Saints spiritual worship and holy Conversation draws a Cloud over theirs and puts a check upon them therefore they hate and persecute The original moral cause of defaming the names of spoiling the goods of confiscating the estates of hating and persecuting the persons of the Saints is the inbred enmity in the seed of the Serpent against the seed of the woman Gen. 3.15 And the Apostle speaking of Isaac the Son of the Promise and of Ishmael the Son of the Bond Woman hath this expression Gal. 4.29 But as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the spirit even so it is now 'T is said of the Panther that he hates a man with such antipathy that he will run at the very picture of a man to tear it in peeces so vile ungodly wretches acted by the Divel the old murtherer John 8.44 hate the very picture of Christ whereever they see it These beloved are very far off from the blessed estate of sanctification of which we have been speaking that were it in their power they would not suffer a Saint to breath nor permit holiness to spring and blossome in the earth Oh that such poor creatures were made sensible what sad work they make what a pittiful trade they drive Persecution is 1 A very wicked practise 2 A very fruitless practise 3 A very dreadful practise 1. A very wicked practise condemned not only by Scriptures Hanc veniam petimusque damusque vicissim by the light of Nature by the Rules of common Equity but also condemned by the Ancient Fathers and Councels First we begin with Tertullian See saith he doth not this amount to the elogy of irreligiousnesse Videte ne hoc ad irreligiositatis elogium concurrat adimere libertatem Religionis interdicere optionem divinitatis ut non liceat mibi colere quod velim sed cogar colere quod nolim Tertul. Apol. cap 23. or may not we well call it a most irreligious thing to take away the liberty of my Religion and forbid me the choice of my Divinity so that it may not be lawfull for me to worship what I will but I must be forced to worship what I am unwilling to And in many other places this external compulsion he ascribes to prophaneness * Lex nova non se vindicat ultore gladio Clemens Alexand. Stromat 8. Clemens Alexander and Lactantius also consented to that Maxime of Tertullian The Law of Christ doth not right it self with a punishing sword Athanasius speaking of the Arians who at first forced men to their Heresie by prisons Atque ita seipsam quam non sic pia nec Dei cultrix manif●stat Athan in his Ep. ad Solitar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epiphan and punishments concludes of that Sect it evidently declares it self thereby to be neither pious nor to have any reverence of God Epiphanius gives this as the Character of the semi-Arrians they persecute them that teach the truth not confuting them with words but delivering them that believe aright to hatred wars and swords having now brought destruction not to one City or Countrey alone but to many Again The Councel of Sardis Ep. ad Alexand expresly affirms that they disswaded the Emperour from interposing his secular power to compel them that dissented Praecipit sancta Synodus Nemini deinceps vim inferre Cui enim vult Deus miseretur quem vult indu rat And the Councel at Toledo by one of their Canons condemned the ugly trade of persecution The holy Synod commandeth that none hereafter shall by force be compelled to the faith for God hath mercy on whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardneth These instances among many more producible I have named whereby 't is evident that persecution was long since condemned as wicked both by Fathers and Councels Ye shall ever finde it the black mark of the Beast and false Prophet to persecute the Image of Jesus 2. As it is a wicked so it is a fruitlesse Practice The silly persecutor doth but beat the air plow the sand
sit in the Throne of the persecutor Psal 1.1 and in the Chair of the Scorner are Diabolical preferments equally dreadful and damnable Indeed scorning seems to have some precedency for it makes way for persecuting First men hate and scorn the wayes of God which is the scum of Rancor and malice and then they persecute them Scorners do a sad work and they will have sad wages 1. They do a sad work when they deride men for their Holiness they deride men for that which is the express Image and Glory of God for God is Glorious in Holinesse Exod. 15 11. yea in so doing they deride God in his highest Excellency and consequently sin against him with an high hand Holy Brethren as the Saints are called Heb. 3.1 should be no more a disgrace than Holy Father as God himself 〈◊〉 John 17.11 You hate God more than his Saints if you hate them for their holiness for holiness in the Saints shineth but wi●h a faint and weak lustre Q●i f●cit 〈…〉 but GoD being the fountain of Holiness it must needs sh 〈…〉 with infinite lustre splendour Holy and reverend is thy Name Psalm 111.9 Gods Name is Reverend because holy so holiness ought to be matter of our greatest respect and reverence and not of reproach and scorn A word to Scorners Let all scorners return speedily yet there may be mercy for them The Spirit of God bewails your condition and calls upon ye to return You that are the worst sort of Sinners hear what the Spirit saith Prov. 1.22 23. How long will scorners delight in scorning and fools hate knowledge turn ye at my reproof c. Now when God calls * Cum Deus loquitur cum risu legas cum luctu if you refuse and will not regard his Counsel he will laugh at your calamity and mock when your fear cometh See Prov. 1.24 25 26 27. You that make a mock at holiness God will make a mock of you if ye turn not 2. Scorners will have sad wages if they turn not Prov. 3.34 Behold he scorneth the scorners but giveth grace to the lowly as they scorn God maliciously so behold a note of Attention God will scorn them with perfect detestation and abhorrency As 't is the greatest mercy for God to accept a mans person to receive him into Grace and Favour so 't is the greatest misery for God to refuse and scorn a mans person with indignation 3. As a Consequent of the former the scoffing Ishmaels must be cast out as scorners cast themselves out of Gods love so God will cast them out of his presence and Kingdome Without are dogs Revel 22.15 the dogs not only that tear in pieces the Saints persons but the dogs that bark at the shining splendo of the Saints holiness these are without and shall without repentance be without for ever These dogs bark not at the Moon so much as against the Sun of Righteousness Ejice Ancillam c. The son of the Bond-woman was cast out Gen. 21.9 10. he must not be an Heir with the son of Sarah the marrow of that Ejection Typical was spiritual and Eternal no more must scorners that live and die so have any co-partnership with the Saints in their inheritance So much is more than intimated in that Allegory Gal. 4.30 Oh then let none that ever intend to be sanctified or saved presume to deride the Name of Holinesse but let them honour and reverence it as the most honourable Title under Heaven yea as a Divine thing 2 Pet. 1 4. for 't is the sparkling forth of the Divine Nature Thus much for Conviction Now we are come to the last Use Lastly in the ninth and last place This Doctrine of Sanctification serveth for Caution 9th Use to prevent mistakes I shall lay it thus If Jesus Christ be given of God for our sanctification then it concerns us all to look into our sanctification let us all be sure that we are sanctified if we miscarry here we miscarry irr●coverably we miscarry everlastingly and to use the Apostles words Let us therefore fear least a Promise being left us of entring into his Rest any of us should seem to come short of it Heb. 4.1 Let us all concern our selves to know this that God hath set apart him that is godly for himself as the Psalmist speaks Psalm 4.3 he is eternally set apart in Election and actually set apart for God in Vocation As the Beasts worshippers have the Beasts mark so Gods Children have Gods seal and impress 2 Tim. 2.19 The foundation of God standeth sure having this Seal the Lord knoweth who are his and let every one that nameth the Name of the Lord depart from iniquity Gods Seal hath a double Motto and noting his peoples preservation the Lord knoweth who are his the other noting their sanctification they depart from iniquity There are many wild flowers in the Field gay and beautiful that look like right flowers in the Garden but are not the same Some Mettals as Copper and Brass burnisht look like Gold at a distance but though all Gold glisters yet all is not Gold that glisters so many things at a distance look like Sanctification Omne simile non est idem but at a nearer view and by an exacter tryal and scrutiny they appear in their colours to be quite contrary not only diversa but adversa also I might mention many but I shall name these four only inclusive of all the rest which in my reading I have received from worthy hands Civility Formality Restreining Grace Temporary or Common Grace 1. Civility which is nothing else but a fine smooth demeanour in the world Gal. 6.12 a fair shew in the flesh as the Apostle phraseth it rather heathenish strictness than Christian holiness it is something to be a Civilian but much more to be a Christian Ye may descry it by these Notes Note 1 1. Meer Civility is usually accompanied with ignorance of God and of the Mysteries of his Kingdome Men may be no Drunk●rds no Swearers no * As Alexander kept himself from Darius his Virgins and Scipio from a most beautiful Captive Lady Adulterers no rude debauched persons and yet grosly ignorant of spiritual matters as Nichodemus was John 3.10 a Ruler in Israel a strict Pharisee a civil Person but a meer Ignoramus in the new birth Now spiritual life or holinesse where-ever it is begins with Knowledge Quarta expositio eorum est qui putant allusisse Paulum ad mundi creationem c. Buling in 2 Cor. 4.6 where is Life there is Light indeed the grace of God is the Light of Life As in the old so in the new Creation the beginning of the Creation of God is Light Gen. 1.3 2 Cor. 4.6 A sanctified person called out of darkness into Gods marvellous light he sees his way and knows his Duty he hath received an Unction from the holy One And what he doth he
ground upon the flesh and by degrees advanceth to a Victory Now examine your hearts whether ye encrease or decrease whether ye go forward or backward whether your faith love zeal patience Rev. ● 4 heavenly-mindedness c. thrive or not If ye have left your first Love if ye have lost your care of Duty sense of sin and hungring and thirsting appetite after Christ and his Righteousness 't is a sad sign Remember therefore from whence ye are fallen and repent and do your first works be also watchful and strengthen the things which remain that are ready to dye 'T is Christs Blessed Counsel Revel 2.5 Revel 3.2 4. False grace is not humble Formalists Mark 4 are commonly proud and self-conceited persons Notare verò operae pretium est nominem spiritu esse pauperem nisi qui in nihilum apud se redactus in Dei misericordiam recumbit Calv. in Matth. 5.3 with true Grace there goeth alwayes a spiritual poverty or a sense of spiritual wants the poor in spirit are first in order of the Beatitudes Matth. 5.3 The more knowledge the Saints have the more they discern their ignorance the more faith the more they bewail their unbelief Lord I believe help thou mine unbelief Mark 9.24 The more they love him the more they blame their hearts for loving him no more they call upon their souls to love him most intensively Grace grows most and thrives best in a low and humble soyl the lowest Valleys are far more fruitful than the highest Mountains 't is a good sign when the soul is kept hungry and humble in the sense of its wants amidst the height of its enjoyments What restraining Grace is 3. The next is Restraining Grace which is nothing else but an awe put by God upon the Conscience constraining a man to forbear sin though he doth not hate it You may discern it by these signs Sign 1 1. Love is of little use and force with such spirits They are under a spirit of bondage chained up by their own fears not moved by the great Gospel Motive Rom. i2 1 viz. Mercy 'T is our Duty to serve God with Reverence and filial fear but not with a servile and distrustful fear Heb. 12 2● a servile fear hath little of Grace in it much of Torment We ought to fear God much but to love him more Love is the very life and soul of all Gospel-obedience Sign 2 2. Restraining Grace doth not destroy sin but only prohibit the acts of it Abimelechs lust was not mortified when God with-held him from Sarah Gen. 20.6 't was only suspended not subdued the heart was not renewed though the action was curbed as Israel had an adulterous heart towards other Lovers Hos 2.6 when their way was hedged up with thorns But when the Spirit of holinesse in power comes 2 Cor. 3.17 he comes as a Spirit of Liberty He frees the soul from the servitude of base lusts and mortifies them and both strongly and sweetly turns and enclines the heart to hate every false way and to run the wayes of Gods Commandments with an enlarged heart Psal 119 3● 4. The fourth thing that looks like Sanctification and yet is not is common or temporary grace This is a distinct thing from all the rest 't is higher than all the former it differs from Civility because 't is more Christian and Evangelical it differs from Formality because that is in shew only but this is a real work on the soul 'T is better than restraining grace because that avoids sin and performs Duties out of slavish fear but this seemeth to have some affection for Christ his Word and Kingdom 't is good in it self but not the best not throughly sanctifying and saving this a man may have and yet fall away and depart from God so it was with the stony and thorny ground Matth. 13. This is the nearest to true Grace of all the former of this the Apostle speaks Heb. 6.4 5. which is called an enlightning a taste of Christ and of the powers of the world to come and a partaking of the Holy Ghost i. e. of the common gifts of the Spirit abilities for holy duties great parts c. from whence I shall briefly note these three things 1. That the Light here spoken of Quam perniciosum sit inflarē notitia sine charitate in sacris legitur Prov. 26.12 P.M. is not humbling 2. The taste is not ravishing 3. Their gifts are not renewing 1. Their light is not humbling Knowledge puffeth up love edifieth 1 Cor. 8.1 Foundations sink that are not laid deep enough you can never magnifie Christ enough nor abase self enough Christ is most magnified when self is most abased Isa 2.19 This Dagon must fall down before the Ark sound humiliation brings sure and solid Consolation we must not rashly close with Christ in the pride of our hearts as they did but be sure we have depth of earth broken and contrite spirits 2. Their tast was not ravishing nor encreasing they had but loose and slight desires after happiness Glances upon the Glory of Heaven and the comforts of the Gospel and no more just as Balaam Oh that I might die the death of the Righteous c. and like that spiritual carnal Notion as a learned man phraseth it Dr. Fuller Lord evermore give us of this bread John 6.34 They were not serious desires not holy breathings after Christ proceeding from a sound principle neither were they transforming nor encreasing the Saints that have a tast groan for a full communion of Graces as well as Comforts but in temporary Believers there is a loose assent some slight affection profession for a while rejoicing in the light for a season c. But all at last like Blazing Meteors vanish and come to nothing Vocat participationem Spiritus quia is est qui unicaique distribuit prout vult quicquid est lucis ac intelligentia Calv. Heb. 6.4 3. And lastly In Heb. 6.4 it is said they were made partakers of the Holy Ghost i. e. of some gifts of the Holy Ghost yea perhaps those eminent Gifts which in the Primitive times God imparted to his Disciples 1 Cor. 12.4 There are diversities of Gifts but the same spirit Var iis do nis spiritus sancti Deus ornabat fideles in primitiva Ecclesi● ut loquerentur linguis ut prophetarent Cujusmodi enumerat Apostolus 1 Cor. 12. 14. Pareus in loc Now these gifts of the Holy Ghost that hypocrites partake of are not renewing throughly sanctifying they may have good abilites for the edification and comfort of others but in the mean time being unsanctified they themselves may become Cast-awayes 1 Cor. ● 27. Though a man could speak with the tongue of men and Angels yet having not charity true love to God he were but as sounding Brass and as a tinkling Cymbal 1 Cor. 13.1 A man may pray sweetly preach excellently
1.5 6. Rom. 5.8 9. Cum multis aliis c. Before I proceed to the fifth General propounded to be spoken to I think it not unnecessary to enquire Forma dat esse what is the form of Christs satisfaction which renders it satisfactory to God and justificatory to man I answer The infinite merit of what he did and suffered which infinite Merit stands 1. In the dignity of his Person the fulness of the God-head dwelt in him bodily Col. 2.9 14. Now for the work of a servant to be don by the Lord of all renders his active and for him to suffer as a Malefactor between Malefactors who was God blessed for evermore Renders his passive righteousness infinitely meritorious Acts 20 28. 1 Joh. 1.7 No wonder the blood of Christ cleanseth from all sin for it is the blood of God by the figure ca●led by the Ancients 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Communication of properties the blood of the Man Christ Jesus is called the blood of God And this is the reason why the righteousness of one redounds to all the Elect for the justifi●ation of life Rom. 5.18 19. The doings and sufferings of this Glorious Person the Lord our righteousnesse though for a few years were in●●●it●ly ● more value than all that all the creatu●●s in Heaven o● Earth could have done o●●uff●red to eternity Heb. 1 6. the very Man Christ Jesus is above all the Angels for he is the Man Gods fellow an high Word Zech. 13.7 And this infinite worthiness of the Redeemers Person ye have excellently described as the irradiating and infinitely exalting all he did and suff●red Consult these Texts Heb. 1.1 2 3. Phil. 2.6 7 8 9 10. 2. The righteousness of Jesus Christ is of infinite merit and a meer supererogation of an infinitely Glorious Person 1. His active Righteousness stood in his obedience to the Ceremonial and Moral Law 1. His obedience to the ceremonial Law was a meer supererogation What for the substance to comply with the shadows for the Anti-type to do homage to its own Types besides he submitted to those Ordinances the end and institution whereof supposeth Guilt what ●ore-skin of iniquity had he to be cut off by Circumcision what filth to be wash't away in Baptism Luke 1 21.2● Luk. 3.21 yet he was circumcised and baptized and his Mother offered for her purification 2. His obedience to the moral Laws Although it must be granted as man it was his duty yet it was not his duty to become man Gal. 4.4 his incarnation was a work of supererogation the Law did never command that the eternal Son of the living God should take upon him the form of a Servant keep the Law suffer and die This cond scention of his was wholly free and arbi●rary what but his own infinite love could move the eternal Word to pitch his Tent in our Nature What else could move the Lord of the World to become a servant the Antient of Dayes to become a Childe or the Son of God to be the Son of Mary And as his Active so also his passive righteousnesse was a meet supererogation What had divine Justice to do with the holy Childe Jesus Had it not been for his own eternal compact with the Father he was a sinlesse Person the Lamb of God without spot he suffered not for himself Dan. 9.26 he that knew no sin was made sin for us i. e. a sacrifice for our sins that we might be made the righteousness of God in him 2 Cor. 5.21 3. The stamp of Gods Appointment highly dignifies as to us Christs righteousness and renders it acceptable to God and meritorious for our benefit The Assignment and appointment of God the Father sets a great value on it God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself not imputing to men their trespasses 2 Cor. 5.19 the reconciliation or justification of a sinner is as much the Fathers as the Sons Act. Christ frequently declares in the Gospel of John John 6. that he came into the world to do the will of him that sent him Christ received his mission and Commission from the Father for our justification Mark that notable place Heb. 10.6 7 9 10. In burnt-offerings and sacrifices for sin thou hast had no pleasure the Lord did not delight in the blood of Bulls Goats or Calves those bruitish sacrifices vers 7. then said I the words of Christ Lo I come in the Volume of the Book it is written of me to doe Thy Will O God Mark that ver 9. Then said he lo I come to do thy will O God He taketh away the first the first sort of sacrifices that he may establish the second viz. sacrifice of his Son vers 10. by the which Will we are sanctified i. e. saved through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all Dr. Owen in his Death of Deaths and Mr. Caryl in his Lectures on Job Some of our Great Divines judiciously judge that much of the merit of Christs Passion doth arise from the eternal Compact and assignment of the Father not excluding the other considerations Now we pass on 5. To the fifth Query and that is this what are the severall causes concurring to our justification A. I answer The causes of our justification are these four chiefly 1. The Efficient 2. The Material 3. The Formal 4. The finall Cause 1. The Efficient cause and that is two-fold either principal or instrumental 1. The principal God the whole Trinity Father Son and Spirit Justification being an outward action ad extra respecting the creatures is the common Act of the whole Trinity God the whole Trinity doth justifie as Law-giver and Judge Jam. 4.12 There is one Law-giver able to save and to destroy he is the Judge of all the Earth by sin we became Gods Doctors and owed him many thousand Talents Christ our Surety payes our Debts and God dischargeth us by sin we were enemies and ungodly Christ our Mediato●● reconciles us enemies In summa nemo ad fidei justitiam perveniet nisi qui in se erit impius Calv. in Rom. 4.5 and just●fies us by Nature ungodly yea God in Christ reconciles us to himself not imputing to us our tr●spasses 2 Cor. 5.19 And this is both a gracious and a righteous Act of God 1. A gracious act Rom. 3.25 we are justified freely by his Grace 2 Tim. 1.9 Ephes 2.5 we are saved by Grace 2. A righteous act of God hereby he eminently declares his Righteousness Rom. 3.26 the Apostle brings it in with an ingemination to declare I say his righteousnesse that he might be just and the justifier of him that believeth in Jesus the righteousness of Christ making plenary yea redundant and superabundant satisfaction to offended justice his justice being satisfied yea honoured with Christs righteousness Now he is not only merciful but also faithful and just to forgive us our sins 1 John 1.7 Now there is a blessed