Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n law_n life_n power_n 7,129 5 5.5274 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A29748 Christ the way and the truth and the life, or, A short discourse pointing forth the way of making use of Christ for justification and especially and more particularly for sanctification in all its parts, from Johan. XIV, vers. VI : wherein several cases of conscience are briefly answered, chiefly touching sanctification / by John Brown. Brown, John, 1610?-1679. 1677 (1677) Wing B5028; ESTC R27232 262,893 482

There are 16 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

might compend the account to be given shortly and give it most exactly yet trueln in these few words As the most undoubted deviation from and perfect opposition unto the whole contriveance of salvation and the conveyance of it unto the souls of men as revealed in this gospel which brings life and immortality to light that fighters against the grace of God in its value and vertue can forge stretching their blind reason to the overthrow of true religion and ruine of the souls of men for to this height these Masters of reason have in their blind rage risen up against the Lord and against his Anointed this is the dreadful period of that path wherein we are perswaded to walk yea Hectored if we would not forfeit the repute of men by these grand Sophies who arrogat to themselves the name and thing of knowledge as if wisdome were to dy with them The deep mysteries of salvation which Angels desire to look into and onely satisfy themselves with admiration at must appeare as respondents at their bar and if they decline the judge and court as incompetent they flee out and flout at subjecting this blinde mole mans reason to the revelation of faith in a mystery The manifold wisdome of God and the manifold grace of God must either condescend to their unfoldings and be content to speak in their dialect or else these wits these Athenian dictators will give the deep things of God because beyond their diveings the same entertainment which that great gospel preacher Paul met with from men of the same mould kidney and complexion because he preached unto them Jesus what would this babler say said they The Spirit of wisdom and revelation they know not they have not they acknowledge not nay they despise him in his saveing and soul ascertaining illuminations and the workings of that mighty power to them ward who beleeve is to the men of this new mould because they have not found it an insufferable fansy to be exploded with a disdain and indignation which discovers what Spirit acts them in this opposition But what do they say that will found this charge and free us from casting iniquity upon them They are of age and can speake for themselves when they have vomit out their gall against the imputed righteousnesse of Christ and the new birth and that holinesse which is imparted to the real members of Christ with a scoffeing petulancy they then make a great noise of holinesse as who but t●…ey the thing they plead for and perswade unto is a kinde of holinesse educed out of natural abilities wherein Christ the Spirit and the Gospel of the grace of God is permitted no greater interest nor allowed a more effectual adjuvancy then to concurre by way of precept motive and example Thi●… is now that admired and applauded Diana morality It is true they will sometime chirt thorow their teeth for what ever Christ the Spirit and Gospel gets of our Moralists it is against the hair and they are hard put to it ere they give it a tepid acknowledgement that the gospel doth afford men some special help and is of singular use and advantage in shewing the way and rule with greater clearnesse and guiding and directing how to walk in it with a plain perspicuity and exciting by noble examples and some do also adde some faint and frigid motions of the holy ghost in the dispensation of this truth put forth to make men more foreward but all this salvo jure of the great Diana so much and no more is yeelded to the gospel then to shew men with clearnesse how they may exert and put forth their proper and innat power it affords them some special help in holding the candle or rather snufing it that so they may with more promptitud see how to operat and by the motives it adduceth and examples it brings have a special provocation to the exercise of these vertues commanded the gospel with all it brings and doth does no more but hold the candle till these artists weave their web shape and shew their garment and then let them see how to put it on and being put on perswade them to weare it as the highest beauty and chief ornament of the soul this is all the provision they lay up for eternity and in this dresse and garb of guilded morality they mind to addresse themselves to God and appeare before his tribunal with confidence of acceptation they will beare their own charges to heaven and carry a summe with them to purchase the possession of the saints in light with a little abatement which a mercy of their own moulding for God mercy it is not must make and thus they make all sure But what is all this noise that these vain talkers make about holinesse they heap up words which weep to be so abused about vertue love to God mortification c. But they have really taken away our Lord Jesus Christ and will not tell us where they have laid him for feare we should go seek him and foresake them What are these rotten and loathsome raggs where with they would cloath us that the shame of our nakednesse may not appeare to that holinesse whereto we are predestinat before the foundation of the world and whereto in order to the obtaining of that salvation even the glory of the Lord Jesus Christ to which we are chosen we are created againe in Christ Jesus and made meet to be possessed of by sanctification of the Spirit and beleife of the truth What is all this tattle of theirs to the new birth the saveing work of regeneration without which a man cannot enter into the kingdome of God the new creature the new heart haveing the law written in it the Spirit which he puts within us causeing us to walk in his wayes that noble principle of spiritual life whereby we are quickened raised from the dead made alive unto God through Christ Jesus disposed enclined and enabled to live to God and walk before him to all pleasing Nay according to the imposeings of these new dogmatists beware of dogs says the Apostle of the same size and sort of men in stead of that principle implanted and that power produced in us by the effectual operation of the H. G. working in us mightily according to the workings of that mighty power which was wrought in Christ when raised from the dead we must be content with some what which was liveing though lazie and dormant in the natural powers of our own soul now awakened out of its sopor and educed into act by the meer application of external means in a word in stead of all that which is purchased and procured unto us by the death of Jesus Christ wrought in us by his Spirit who takes of his and shews it unto us whereby our conformity to Jesus Christ is begun and carried on we must be content with this morality good Lord prevent such madnesse whose Principle is natural
where they must continually fight the souldier is here under command and therefore must be quiet and take his lot so must the Christian reverence the Lords dispensa●…tions in ordering matters so as they shall never ●…ave one houres quietnesse whileas others have more rest and peace and stand at their post fig●…ting resolving never to yeeld but rather to cover the ground with their dead bodyes till the Commander in chief think good to relieve them Su●…●… am as the only wise God hath distributed to eve●…y member of the body as He hath thought good so it is the duty of every member to endeavour this holy submission to Him as to the measure of gra●… considered as His free gift bestow●…d on them ●…nd to be humbled for the grudgings of his heart 〈◊〉 God hath not given him moe talents 〈◊〉 sure I am though this submission make no 〈◊〉 ●…oise in th●… world yet really this is one of 〈◊〉 ●…ghest degrees of grace attaineable here and 〈◊〉 a●… ornament of a m●…ek and quiet Spirit 〈◊〉 it in 〈◊〉 sight of God of great price So that who ever hath 〈◊〉 to this have the very grace they seem to 〈◊〉 and more Yet le●…t this should be 〈◊〉 l●… me adde a word or two of c●…ution to 〈◊〉 this submission 1. There must be with it an 〈◊〉 pri●…ing even of that degree of grace which they want 2. There must be a panting after grace as it is God's image and a conformity to Him and that with so much singlness as they may be in ●…ase to say without the reproachings of their heart they do not so much love holiness for heaven a●… heaven for holiness 3. There must be an uncessantness in useing all meanes whereby the grouth o●… grace may be promoved to this end that they may be comformed to His image rather than that they may be comforted 4. There must be also a deep humiliation for the want of that degree of grace they would have as it importet●… the want of so much conformity to Him to whose image they are praedestinated to be conforme which will very well consist with this submission we are speaking of●… 13. It would be remembered that there may be a great progress even when it is not observed when 1. Hereby the man is made to ly in the dust to loath himself and cry behold I am vile 2. Hereby his indignation against the body of death is the more increased 3. Hereby his esteem of a Saviou●… an●… of the blessed contrivance of Salvation is the 〈◊〉 hi●…ghtned that he seeth he is thereby brough●… to make mention of His righteousness even o●… 〈◊〉 only 4. Hereby his longing after 〈◊〉 fr●…ition is increased where all these complain●… shall cease 5. And hereby he is put to 〈◊〉 that much slighted duty of holding fast the rejoy●…ing of his hope firme unto the end looking 〈◊〉 longing for the grace that shall be brought unto him at the revelation of Iesus Christ when he shall be presented without spot and made meet to be ●… partaker of the inheritance of the saints in light CHAP. VI. How Christ is to be made use of in reference to th●… k●…lling and crucifying of the old man HAving thus shortly pointed out something●… in generall serving to the clearing and opening up the way of our usemaking of Christ for sanctification we come now more particularly to the clearing up of this business In sanctification we must consider First the renewing and changeing of our nature and frame and next the washing and purging away of our dayly contracted spots The first of these is commonly divided into two parts viz. 1. The mortification killing and crucifying of the old man of sin and corruption which i●… within and 2. The vivification renewing quickening and strengthening of the new man of grace and this is a grouth in grace and in fruitfulnesse holinesse As to the first of these viz the mortification 〈◊〉 crucifying of the old man we would know th●… there is such a principle of wickednesse and enmi●… against God in man by nature now since the fall whereby the man is inclined to evil and only to evil This is called the old man as being like the body made up of so many parts joynts and members that is so many lusts corruptions and evill inclinations which together make up a corpus and they are f●…st joyned and compacted together as the members of the body each usefull and serviceable to another and all of them concurring and contributing their utmost to the carrying on of the work of sin and so it is the man of sin and it is also called the old man as ha●…ing first possession of the soul before it is by grace renewed and is ●… dying more and more dayly Thus it is called the old man and the body of sin Rom. 6 6. This old man hath his members in our members fa●…cultyes so that none of them are free understanding will affections and the members of our body are all servants of unrighteousnesse to this body of sin and old man So we read of the motions of sin Rom 7 5. which work in our members to bring for●… fruit unto death and of the lusts of the flesh Rom. 13 14. Gal. 5 16 24. and the lusts of sin Rom. 6 12. So we hear of the desires of the flesh and of the minde Ephes. 2 3. and of affections and lusts Gal. 5 24. And the old man is said to be corrupt according to the deceitfull lust●… Ephes. 4 22. all which lusts and affections are as so many members of this body of sin and of this old man And further there is herein considerable a power force and efficacy which this old man hath in us to carry us away and as it were command us o●… constraine us as by a forcible law Hence we read of the law of sin and death Rom. 8 2 which only the law of the Spirit of life in Christ doth make 〈◊〉 free from It is also called a law in our mem●…rs warring against the law of our minde Rom. 7 23. and bringing us into captivity to the law of sin which is in our members So it is said to lust against the Spirit and to warre Gal. 5 17 All which point out the strength activity and dominion of sin in the soul so that it is as the husband over the wife Rom. 7 1. yea it hath a domineering and constraineing power where its horns are not held in by gr●…e And as its power is great so its nature is wicked malicious for it is pure enmity against God Rom. ●… 7. so that it neither is nor can be reconciled 〈◊〉 therefore must be put off and abolished Ephes. 2 15. killed crucified Rom. 6 6. Now herein lyeth the work of a beleever to be killing mortifying and crucifying this enemy or rather enmity and delivering himself from under this bondage and slavery that he may be Christ's free man and that
commanded duties are full measure heaped up shaken together and runing over And though he who hath much hath nothing over yet he 〈◊〉 hath little hath no inl●…ke for he abounds towards us in 〈◊〉 wisdome I say therefore againe unto thee take heart let not thine hands fall down essay nothing thou would have well done or easily done in thine own strength but yet how difficult so ever the duty be approach it as haveing no confidence in the flesh but with an eye to thy stoc●… that rich store house of all furniture and it shall be with thee as it was with the priests before whom jordan recoiled so soon as their foot entered within the 〈◊〉 God shall make thy difficulties evanish and by the 〈◊〉 the Spirit of power and might from Jesus Christ depended upon shall so strengthen thee that thy duty is made easy to admiration and becomes the delight of thy souli 〈◊〉 I have exceeded the just limits of an Epistle pray for the continuance of the life of the Author who by his assiduous working for Christ hath been often neir unto death not reguarding his own life to supply the lake of other meus service 〈◊〉 the interest Church of God let him be comforted for this piece of travel undertaken for thy soul's m●…erest by hearing thou dost improve it to thy advantage for which it is so exactly calculat And withall I beg thy fervent earnest intercessions for grace more grace to him who is Thy poor yet souls well wisher and servant for Christ's sake R. Mc. W. The Author to the Reader Christian Reader AFter the foregoing adress I need not put thee to much more trouble only I shall say That he must needs be a great stranger in our Israel or sadly smitten with that epidemick plague of indifferency which hath infected many of this Generation to a benumming of them and rendering them insensible and unconcearned in the matters of God and of their own souls and sunck deep into the gulfe of dreadful inconsideration who seeth not or taketh no notice of nor is troubled at the manifest and terrible appearances of the unexpressibly great hazard our all as Christians in this life is this day into I meane the mystery of the Gospel of the grace of God wherein the exceeding riches of His grace in his kindness towards us through Christ Jesus hath been shoune VVe have enjoyed for a considerable time a clear and powerful dispensation hereof in great purity and plenty but Alas is it not manifest to all that will not wilfully shut their eyes that this Mercy and Goodness of God hath been wickedly abused and the pure administration of His Grace Love perfidiously sinned away by this Apostate Generation Are our spots this day the spots of his children Are there fruits answerable to the Lord's paines and labour about us to be seen even among the greatest of Professours Is there that gospel holiness tenderness watchfulness growing in grace and in the knowledge of Jesus Christ that growing up 〈◊〉 Christ in all things that heavenly mindedness that followshipe with the Father and with his Son Christ Iesus and that conversation in heaven that the dispensation of grace we have been favoured with beyond many and have been long living under did call for at our hands Alas our grapes are but wilde and stincking VVherefore and who can think it strange if it be so the Lord seemeth to be about to contend with us by covering our horizon with Egyptian darkness many who would not receive the love of the Truth that they might be saved being already given up to strong delusion that they should beleeve a lie and many moe in hazard to be drawn aside to crooked pathes by men of corrupt mindes who have been and are still busie to vent and spread abroad with no little petulancy and confidence damnable doctrines to the perverting of the doctrine of the Gospel of Iesus Christ and to the subverting and overturning of the very foundations of our Hope Assurance and that in such a way and by such meanes and stratagems as seem to have wrath written upon them in legible letters for the more plausible and taking a corrupt doctrine be it is the more dangerous judgment-like and moe are thereby in hazard to be deluded and drawn away Nay which is yet more terrible and dreadful it is to be feared that the jealous God in his holy and righteous judgment hath given a providential commission to speak so unto the seduceing Spirit to perswade and prevail for is not this the clear language of the present holy and righteous dispensations of God and of the stupenduously indifferent frame and disposition of the generality of men called Christians not only provoking God to spew them out of his mouth but disposeing them also unto a receiving of whatsoever men lying in waite to deceive shall propose and obtrude Alas the clouds are not now a gathering but our horizon is covered over with blakness and great drops are a falling that presage a terrible overflowing deluge of errour and Apostasie from the Truth and Profession of the Gospel of Iesus Christ to be at hand if the Lord wonderfully prevent it not And behold O wonderful the generality of Professours are sleeping in security apprehending no danger Satan is more cunning now than to drive men to Popery by rage and cruelty and yet what he may be permitted to do after this manner who can tell or by openly pleading in his emissaries for this abomination and yet even thus is he already prevailing with not a few or to send forth his agents for Arminianisme and Socinianisme though even this way too he is too much prevailing But his maine work now seemeth to be to bring in another Gospel and yet there is not another or rather an Antievangelick and Antichristian delusory dream overturning at once the whole Gospel of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ and for this end he inployeth the Quakers one the one hand Men of desperat and antievangelick principles the very sinke of all abominations old and late as I shall show if the Lord will continue health and strength in an examination of their doctrine and principles lately emitted by one Robert Barclay and on the other hand Men or Moralists if you will call them so pleading for and crying up an antievangelick holiness a meer shadow without substance or reality and that in place of Christ himself And in order to the carrying on of this desperat designe The old dragon is imploying men of seeming different principles and wayes whom though their faces seem to look to contrary a●…rths yet he holdeth notwithstanding fast tyed by their tails as Samson's foxes were that thereby if the Lord permit it he may by the fire of enmity to the pure Gospel of the grace of God burning in their tails cause a confl●…gration of that Truth wherein lyeth all our hope for this new model of Religion
and death And beside this slight and cunning it hath strength and power to draw by lusts into destruction and perdition 1 Tim. 4 9. and to carry the soul headlong So that it makes the mans case miserable Rom. 7 24. All which would say that the beleever should call in other help than his owne and remember that through the Spirit he must mortifie the deeds of the body Rom. 8 13. 7. And therefore the beleever must lay aside all his carnall weapons in dealing with this adversary and look out for divine help assistance even for the promised Spirit through which alone he can be instructed inabled for this great work for of himself he can do nothing not so much as think a good thought as of himself 2 Cor. 3 5. fa●… lesse will he be able to oppose such a mightie adversary that hath so great many advantages and therefore all his carnall meanes purposes vowes fightings in himself will but render himself weaker a readyer prey unto this adversary which gaineth ground while he is so opposed It is Christ alone and his Spirit that can destroy the works of the devil and kill or crucify this enmity 8. So that the beleever must have his recourse for help and succour here unto Iesus the Captaine of salvation and must follow Him and fight under his b●…nner make use of his weapons which are spiritu●…ll fight according to his counsell and conduct taking Him as a leader commander lying open for his orders instructions waiting for the motions of his Spirit following them and th●…s oppose fight against this deadly enemie with an eye alwayes on Christ by ●…aith depending on Him for light to the minde resolution to the will and grace to the whole soul to stand in the battel and to withstand all assaults and never engadge in a disput with this enemie or any lust or member of this body without Christ the Principall that is the soul would dispaire in it self and be strong in Him and in the power of his might by faith gripping to Him as Head Captaine and Commander in chiefe resolving to fight in his strength and to oppose through the helpe of his Spirit 9. And for this cause the beleever would eye the covenant of Redemption the basis of all our hope and consolation wherein finall and full victory is promised to Christ as head of the elect viz that He shall bruise the serpents head and so that in Him all his followers and members of his mysticall body shall lift up the head and get full victory at length over both sin and death Now it is God th●…t giveth us the victory through our Lord Iesus Christ 1 Cor. 15 57. The b●…leever would also eye by faith the covenant of Grace where in particularly this same victory is promi●…ed to the beleever in and through Jesus Rom. 16 20 the God of peace shall br●…ise Satan under your feet shortly and Sin shall not have dominion over you for yee are not under the law but under grace Rom. 6 14. The beleever I say would look out by faith unto and lay hold on these and the like promises and thereby get strength conveyed to him self whereby he may strive lawfully and fight valiently and oppose with courage and resolution 10. Further the beleever would eye Christ as a fountaine of Furniture as a full and compleat magazine standing open ready for every one of his honest souldiers to run to for new supply of what they want so that whatever they finde wanting in their Christian armour they must run away to the open magazine Christs fulnesse that standeth ready for them and by faith take put on what they want stand in need of in their warfare If their girdle of truth be slacked loosed or weakened and they be meeting with temptations anent their hypocrisie and Satan objecting to them their double dealing of purpose to discourage them and to make them fainte give over the fight they must away to Him who is the Truth that He may binde on that girdle better and make their hearts more upright before God in all they do And if their breast plate of righteousnesse be weakened Satan there seem to get advantage by casting up to them their unrighteous dealings towards God or Men they must flee to Him who only can help here and beg pardon through his blood for 〈◊〉 failings and set to againe a fresh to the battel If their resolution which is understood by the preparation of the gospell of peace grow weak it must be renewed in Christs armory and the feet of new be shode therewith If their shield of faith beginne to fail the●… away must they get to Him who is the Author finisher of faith Heb 12 2. And if their helmet of hope beginne to fail them In this armory alone can that be supplied And if their sword be blunted in their hand or they unable to weild it aright the Spirit of Jesus can only teach their hands to fight and instruct them how to mannage that usefull weapon with advantage Thus must the beleever be strong in Him and in the power of his might Ephes. 6 10. He is their God that girdeth them with strength and maketh their way perfect He maketh their feet like hindes feet setteth them upon their high places He teacheth their hands to war so that a bow of steal is brocken by their armes He giveth them the shield of Salvation His right hand upholdeth them He girdeth with strength unto the battell c. Psal. 18 vers 32 33 34 35 39. c. 11. For the further strengthening of their Hope Faith Confidence beleevers would eye Christ as hanging on the crosse and overcomeing by death Death and him that had the power of death the Devill so as meritoriously purchaseing this redemtion from the slavery of sin and Satan and particulary from the slavery of that body of death and of the law of sin death for the Apostle tells us Rom. 8 2 that the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Iesus doth make us free from the law of sin and death and that because as he sayeth further vers 3 4. what the law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his owne son in the likenesse of sinfull flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh That the rig●… teousnesse of the law might be fulfilled in us So that the beleever may now look upon that enemy how fearfull so ever it appear as condemned and killed in the death of Christ. He having laid downe the price of Redemption hath bought this freedom from the chaines fetters with which he was held in captivity faith then on the death of Jesus satifying justice for the poor captive may should support and strengthen the hope confidence of the beleever that he shall obtaine victory at length 12. And it will
further confirme the hope and faith of the beleever to look to Christ hinging on the crosse and there vanquishing and evercomeing this 〈◊〉 as a publick person representing the elect who died in him and virtually and legally did in him overcome that Jailour and break his fetters and the soul now beleeving may yea should reckon it self in Christ dying as it were upon the crosse and there overcomeing all those spirituall enemies likewise sayeth the Apostle Rom. 6 11. Reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin From hence even while fighting the beleever may account himself a conquerour yea more then a conquerour through Him that loved him Rom. 8 37. Now faith acting thus on Christ as a publick person dying and overcomeing death and sin the beleever may not only inferte the certainty of victory knowing that our old man is crucified with Christ Rom 6 6. but also from the crosse of Christ draw strength to stand fight against the struglings of this vanquished and killed enemy They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections lusts Gal. 5 24. But how even by the crosse of Christ for thereby is the world crucified unto me sayeth the Apostle Gal. 6 14. I unto the world your old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed Rom. 6 6. 13. The beleever being dead indeed unto sin through the crosse of Christ is to look upon himself as legally freed from that yock of bondage under sin death The law hath dominion over a man so long as he liveth Rom. 7 1. but by the body of Christ beleevers are become dead to the law vers ●… That law of sin death which hath dominion over a man that liveth still in nature and is not yet by fai●…h planted in the likenesse of Christs death no●… buryed with him by baptisme into death Rom. 6 4 5. hath not that dominion over beleevers it had once for the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Iesus hath made them free from the law of sin death Rom. 8 2. So that now the beleever is free from that tyranny and that tyrant can exerce no lawfull jurisdiction or authority over him and therefore he may with the greater courage repell the insolencies of that tyrant that contrare to all right and equity seeketh to Lord it over him still They are no lawfull subjects to that cruell and rageing Prince or to that spirituall wickednesse 14. So that the beleever renunceing that jurisdiction under which he was formerly and being under a new husband and under a new law even the law of the Spirit of li●…e in Christ Iesus is to look upon all the motions of sin as illegall and as treasonable acts of a tyrant The old man being crucified with Christ that the body of sin might be destroyed the beleever is not any more to serve sin Rom. 6 6. And being now dead they are freed from sin vers 7. and are married to another even to Him who is raised from the dead so they should not serve sin but bring forth fruit unto God Rom. 7 4. therefore look upon all motions of the flesh and all the inclinations and stirrings of the old law of sin as acts of treachery and rebellion against the right and jurisdiction of the beleevers new Lord Husband and are therefore obliged to lay hold on this old man this body of death and all the members of it as traitours to the rightfull King Husband and to take them prisoners to the King that He may give out sentence and execute the same against them as enemies to his kingdome and interest in the soul They being now no more servants of sin but of righteousnesse Rom. 6 18. they ought no more to yeeld their members servants to uncleannesse iniquity un●…o iniquity vers 19. and being debters no more to the flesh to live after the flesh Rom. 8 12. they are to mortifie the deeds of the body through the Spirit vers 13. and to crucify the flesh with the affections lusts Gal. 5 24. that is by bringing them to the crosse of Christ where first they were condemned and crucified in their full body and power that a new sentence as it were may goe out against them as parts of that condemned Tyrant and as belonging to that crucified body 15. So that the beleever that would carry faithfully in this matter and fight lawfully in this warfare and hope to obtaine the victory through Jesus Christ must bring these Traitours that appeare in their sinfull motions and lusts in the soul working rebellion against the lust authority and equitable lawes of the lawfull Prince Iesus before the tribunal of Him who hath now gote all power and authority in heaven and earth Mat. 28 18. and hath all judgment committed to Him Ioh. 5 22. And to this end both died and rose revived that he might be Lord both of the dead and living Rom. 14 9. that He may execute justice upon the T●…aitor head and members that He may tr●…mple these devils under and bruise the head of these serpents within us The beleever then is by faith in prayer to carry these open enemies to Christ and declare and witnesse against them as Traitours by what mischief they have done in the soul by their hindering the righteous lawes of the king to be obeyed and constraining forceing what by arguments or allurements and what by forceable inclinations and pousings to disobedience and a counteracting of Christ and he should urge and plead upon the fundamentall lawes of the land viz the articles of agreement betwixt the Father and the Son and the faithfull promises of the Covenant of grace and upon Christs office as King and Governour and his undertaking as Mediator upon the merites of his death and sufferings upon his dying as a common person upon the constitution of the gospell whereby they are in law repute as dying in him and so free from the law of sin and death and upon their relation to Him as their new Lord Head Husband King Commander c. Upon these arguments I say to plead for justice against the rebell that is now brought to the barre and so by faith leave the prisoner in His hand that He may in his own time and way give a second blow unto the neck of this implacable and rageing enemy that he may no●… rise up to disturbe the peace of the soul as before or to trouble impede and molest the soul in paying the homage and obedience due to his lawfull Master and Soveraigne King Jesus Cautions Directions For furder clearing of the premises I would propose a few particulars for caution direction as 1. This work of laying the burthen of this businesse on Christ by faith would be gone about with much singlenesse of heart aimeing at the glory of God and the carying on of his work in the soul and not for
hence we are said to be chosen in him before the fundation of the world that we should be holy c. Ephes. ●… 4. and a●… dying for them●… for He gave himself son the church that He might sancti●…y cleanse it that He might present it to himself a glorious church that it should be holy Ephes. 5 25 26 27. He hath reconciled them in the body of his flesh through death to present them holy Col. 1 21 22. So that the noble 〈◊〉 of Redemption may found the 〈◊〉 hope and expectation of the beleever upon ●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 First upon the account of the Fathers faithfulnesse who promised a seed to Iesus Viz. such as should be his children and so be sanctified through Him and that the pleasure of the Lord which in p●…rt i●… th●… work of sanctification should prosper in his hand And next upon the account of Christs undertaking and engaging as is said to b●…ing his son●… and daughters to glory which must be through sanctification for without holinesse no man shall see God And they must look like himself who is a holy Head a holy Husband a holy Captane and therefore they must be holy members a holy spouse holy souldiers So that He standeth engaged to sanctifie them by his Spirit and word and therefore is called the Sanctifier Heb. 2 11. for both he that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one Yea their union with Christ layeth the foundation of this for being joyned to the Lord they become one Spirit 1 Cor. 6 17. and are animated and quickened by one the same Spirit of life and grace and therefore must be sanctified by that Spirit 10. The beleever likewise would act faith upon the promises of the new Covenant of grace strength life c whereby they shall walk in his wayes have Gods lawes put into their mindes and write into their hearts Heb. 8 10. Ier. 31 33. and of the new heart and new spirit and the heart of flesh and the Spirit within them to cause them walk in his wayes or statutes and keep his judgments and do them Ezech. 36 26 27. and the like wherewith the scripture aboundeth Because these are all given over to the beleever by way of Testament and legacy Christ becoming the mediator of the new Testament that by meanes of death for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternall inheritance Heb. 9 15. No●… Christ by his death hath confirmed this Testament for where a Testament is there must also of necessity be the death ' of the testatour for a Testament is of force after men are dead vers 16 17. Christ then dying to make the Testament of force hath made the legacy of the promises sure unto the beleever so that now all the promises are yea and amen in Christ 2 Cor. 1 20. He was made a minister of circumcision to confirme the promises made to the Fathers Rom. 15 8. That the eyeing of these promises by faith is a noble meane to sanctification is cleare by what the Apostle sayeth 2 Cor. 7 1. Having therefore these promises let us cleanse ourselves perfecting holinesse in the feare of God And it is by faith that those promises must be received Heb. 11 33. So that the beleever that would grow in grace would eye Christ the fundamentall promise the Testatour establishing the Testament and the excutor or dispensator of the covenant and exspect the good things through Him and from Him through the conduite and channell of the promises 11. Yet further beleevers would eye Christ i●… his Resurrection as a publick person and so look on themselves and reckon themselves as riseing virtually in and with Him and take the resurrection of Christ as a certane paune and pledge of their sanctification for so reasoneth the Apostle Rom. 6 4 5 11 13. we are buryed say●…s He with him by baptisme into death that likeas Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so we also should 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 of life for we shall ●…e 〈◊〉 also in the likenesse of his resurrection and if we 〈◊〉 dead with Christ we beleeve that we shall also live with him therefore reckon ye also yourselves to be alive unto God through Iesus Christ our Lord and yeeld yourselves unto God as these that are alive from the dead and your members as instruments of righteousnesse unto God The right improving of this ground would be of noble advantage unto the student of holinesse for thence he might with strong confidence conclude that the work of sanctification should prosper in his hand for he may now look upon himself as quickened together with Christ Epes 2 5. Christ dying and riseing as a publick person and he by faith being now joyned with him and united to him 12. Moreover this Resurrection of Christ may yeeld us another ground of hope and confidence in this work for there is mention made of the power of his resurrection Phil. 3 10. So that by faith we may draw strength and vertue from Christ as an arisen and quickened Head whereby we also may live unto God and bring forth fruit unto him and serve no more in the oldnesse of the letter but in the newnesse of Spirit Rom. 7 4 6. He was quickened as an Head and when the head is quickened the members cannot but look for some communication of life therefrom and to live in the strength of the life of the head See Col. 3 1 2. 13. Faith may and should also look to Christ as an intercessor with the Father for this particular Iohn 17 17. Sanctifie them through thy truth thy word is truth and this will adde to their confidence that the work shall go on for Christ was alwayes heard of the Father Iohn 11 41 42. and so will be in this prayer which was not put up for these few disciples alone The beleever then would eye Christ as engadging to the Father to begin and perfect this work a●… dying to purchase the good things promised and to confirme the same as quickened and riseing a●… head and a publick person to ensure this work and to bestow and actually conferre the graces requisite and as praying also for the Fathers concurrence and cast the burden of the work on Him by faith knowing that He standeth obliged by his place and relation to his people to beare all their burthens to work all their works in them to perfect his owne work that He hath begun in them to present them to himself at last a holy bride to give them the Spirit to dwel in them Rom 8 9 11 and ●…o quicken their mortall bodyes vers 11. and to lead them vers 14. till at length they be crowned and brought forward to glory This is to live by faith when Christ liveth acteth and worketh in us by his Spirit Gal. 2 20. Thus Christ dwelleth in the
Christ the Way and the Truth and the Life OR A Short Discourse Pointing forth the way of making use of Christ for justification and especially and more particularly for Sanctification in all its parts from JOHAN XIV Vers. VI. Wherein several cases of conscience are briefly answered chiefly touching Sanctification By JOHN BROWN Preacher of the Gospel ROTTERDAM Printed by H. G. for Iohn Cairns book seller in Edinburgh and are to be sold there 1677. THE EPISTLE DEDICATORY TO The Right Honourable and Religious Lady The Lady STRATHNAVER MADAM IEsus Christ himself being the cheife corner stone in whom all the building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy temple in the Lord as it ought to be the principal concearne of all who have not sitten down on this side of Iordan to satisfy their souls once created for and in their owne nature requireing in order to satifaction Spiritual immortal and incorruptible substance with husks prepared for beasts to be built in and upon this corner stone for an habitation of God through the Spirit So it ought to be the maine designe and work of such as would be approven of God as faithful labourers and co-workers with God to be following the example of him who determined not to know any thing among those he wrote unto save Iesus Christ and him crucified O! this noble heart-ravishing soul-satisfying mysterious theme Iesus Christ crucified the short compend of that uncontrovertibly great mysterie of godliness God manifest in the flesh justified in the Spirit seen of Angels preached unto the Gentiles beleeved on in the world received up into glory wherein are things the Angels desire to look into or with vehement desire bend as it were their necks and bow down their heads to look and peep into as the word used 1 Pet. 1 12. importeth is a Subject for angelical heads to prie into for the most indefatigable industrious Spirits to be occupyed about The searching into and studying of this one Truth in reference to a closeing with it as our life is an infallible mark of a soul divinely enlightened and endued with spiritual and heavenly wisdom for though it be unto the jewes a stumbling block unto the Greeks foolishness yet unto them who are called it is Christ the power of God the wisdom of God because the foolishness of God is wiser then men the weakness of God is stronger then men O! what depths of the manifold wisdom of God are there in this mysterie The more it is preached known beleeved aright the more is it understood to be beyond understanding to be what it is a mysterie Did ever any Preacher or beleever get a broad look of this boundless ocean wherein infinite Wisdom Love that passeth all understanding Grace without all dimensions justice that is admirable and tremenduous and God in his glorious Properties Condescensions high and noble Designes and in all his Perfections and Vertues flow over all banks or were they ever admitted to a prospect hereof in the face of Iesus Christ were not made to cry out O the depth and height the breadth and length O the inconceivable and incomprehensible boundlesness of all infinitly transcendent perfections Did ever any with serious diligence as knowing their life lay in it study this mysterious Theme and were not in full conviction of soul made to say the more they promoved in this study and the more they descended in their diveings into this depth or soared upward in their mounting speculations in this height they found it the more an unsearchable mystery The study of other Themes which Alas many who think it below them to be happy are too much occupyed in when it hath wasted the spirits wearyed the minde worne the body and rarified the braine to the next degree unto a distraction what satisfaction can it give as to what is attained or encouragement as to future attainments And when as to both these something is had and the poor soul puft up with an aery and fancyful apprehension of having obtained some great thing but in truth a great Nothing or a Nothing pregnant with Vanity and vexation of Spirit foolish twines causing no gladness to the Father for he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow Eccles. 1 18. what peace can all yeeld to a soul reflecting on posting-away time now near the last point and looking forward to endless Eternity Oh! the thoughts of time wasted with and faire opportunities of good lost by the vehement pursueings and huntings after shadowes and vanities will torment the soul by assaulting it with pierceing convictions of madness and folly in forsaking All to overtake Nothing with dreadful and soul-terrifying discoveries of the saddest of disappointments and with the horrour of an everlastingly irrecoverable losse And what hath the laborious Spirit than reaped of all the travail of his soul when he hath lost it But on the other hand O with what calmness of minde serenity of soul and peace of conscience because of the peace of God which passeth all understanding will that poor soul look back when standing on the border of Eternity on the bygone dayes o●… houres it spent in s●…eking after praying ●…seing all appointed meanes for some saying acquantance with and interest in this only soul up making and soul satisfying Mystery and upon its yeelding up it self through the effica●…ious operations of the Spirit of grace wholly without disputing unto the powerful workings of this mystery within and in becoming crucified with Christ and living through●… crucified Christ's living in it by his Spirit and power and with what rejoyceing of heart and gloriou singing of soul will it look forward to Eternity and its everlasting abode in the prepared mansions remembering that there it s begun study will be everlastingly continued its capacity to understand that unsearchable mystery will be inconceivably greater and the spiritual heavenly and glorious joy which it will have in that practical reading its divinity without book of ordinances will be its life and felicity for ever And what peace joy in the holy Ghost what inward and inexpressible quiet and contentment of minde will the soul enjoy in dwelling on these thoughts when it shall have withall the inward and well grounded perswasion of its right through Jesus Christ to the full possession of that All which now it cannot conceive let be comprehend the foretastes whereof filleth it with joy unspeakable and full of glory and the hope of shortly landing there where it shall see and enjoy wonder praise and rest in this endless and restless felicitating work making it to sing while passing thorow the valley of the shadow of death O if this were beleeved O that we were not drunk to a distraction and madness with the adulterous love of vaine and aery speculations to the postponing if not utter neglecting of this maine and only upmaking work of getting real acquaintance with and a begun possession of this
in me a soul animating my body as the principle of all my vital and natural actions I have Jesus Christ animating my soul and by the impulse and communicat vertue and strength of an indwelling Christ I am made to run the wayes of his commandements wherein I take so great delight that I am found of no duty as of my enemy Secondly This gospel holinesse respects Jesus Christ as its patern It proposeth no lower patern for imitation then to be conforme to his image he that is begotten againe unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Christ from the dead girds up the loins of his minde wh●…ch are the affections of his soul lest by falling flat upon the earth he be hindered in runing the race set before him as looking to the foreruner his patern in this girdle of hope that he may be holy in all manner of conversation keeping his eye upon the precept and paterne that his practice may be conforme It is written saith he Be ye holy for I am holy the hope of seeing God and being ever with him imposeth a necessity upon him who hath it to look no lower then at him who is glorious in holinesse and therefore he is said to purify himself even as he is pure and knowing that this is the end of their being quickened together with Christ that they may walk even as he walked they in their working and walking aime at no lesse then to be like him and therefore never sit down upon any attained measure as if they were already perfect the spotlesse purity of God expressed in his laws is that whereto they study assimilation therefore they are still in motion towards this mark and are changed from one degree of glorious grace into another into the same image even as by the Spirit of the Lord who never gives over his putting them to cleanse from all filthinesse of the flesh and of the Spirit till that be true in the truest sense thou art all fair my love there is no spot in thee And knowing that perfect fruition of him cannot be without perfect conformity to him herein do they exercise themselves to grow in grace and to be still advanceing towards some more likenesse to his image forgetting all their attainments as things that are behind and by their reachings forth unto that which is before make it evident that they make every begun degree of grace and conformity to God a prevenient capacity for a new degree which yet they have not attained I know our maralists look upon themselves as matchlesse in talkeing of following his steps as he hath left us an example in this they make a flourish with flanting effrontry but for all their boasting of wisdom such a poor simple man as I am made to wonder at their folly who proposeing as they say the purity of Christ for their paterne are not even thence convinced that in order to a conformity thereto there is a simple absolute necessity of the mighty operations of that Spirit of God whereby this end can be reached but while they flout at the Spirits working as a melancholy fancy whereby the soul is garnished with the beauty of holinesse and made an habitation for God I doubt not to say of these great sayers that they understand neither what they say nor whereof they affirme nay doth not their talking of the one not only without seeing the necessity of the other but speaking against it say in the heart of every one who hath not the heart of a beast that they have never yet got a sight of the holinesse of that paterne nor of their own pollutions and impotency for if they had they would give themselves up to Jesus Christ to be washed by him without which they can have no part with him O there will be a ●…ast difference at the latter day betwixt them who have given their blake souls to Jesus Christ to bletch when he shall present them without spot not onely cloathed with wrought gold but all glorious within and these who have never dipped yea who have despised to dip their defiled souls in any other fountain save in the impure pudle of their own performances this will make them loathsome in his sight and cause his soul abhorre those whō have done this despite unto the Spirit of grace as to slight that bl●…ssed fountaine opened for sin for uncleannesse let them pretend as high as they will to look to him as a paterne while because the plague sore i●… got up in their eye they look not to him as a price no●… to the grace of Jesus Christ as that which can onely principle any acceptable performance of duety he will plunge them in the ditch and it Will cost them their souls for rejecting the counsel of God against themselves in not making use of him who came by water as well as by blood Thirdly This gospel holinesse respects Christ as the Altar It is in him and for him that his soul is well pleased with our performance this is the Altar upon which thou must lay thy gift leave it without which thy labour is lost and whatsoever thou dost is loathed as a corrupt thing As beleevers draw all their strength from him so they expect acceptation onely through him and for him they do not look for it but in the beloved they dare not draw near to God in duty but by him this is the new and liveing way which is consecrat for them and if such who offer to come to God do no enter in hereat in stead of being admitted to a familiar converse with God they shall finde him a consumeing fire when the saints have greatest liberty in prayer and so of all other performances when their hearts are most lifted up in the wayes of the Lord they abhorre at thinking their prayer can any otherwise be set forth before him as incense or the lifting up of their hands as the evening sacrifice but as presented by the great intercessor and perfumed by the merit of his oblation If they could weep out the marrow of their bones and the moisture of their body in mourning over sin yet they durst not think of having what comes from so impure a spring and runs thorow so polluted a channel presented to God but by Jesus Christ in order to acceptation for as they look to the exalted Saviour to get their repentance from him so when by the pourings out upon them the Spirit of grace and supplication he hath made them pour out their hearts before him and hath melted them into true tendernesse so that their mourning is a great mourning they carry backe these teares to be washen and bathed in his blood as knowing without this of how little worth and value with God their salt water is but when they are thus washed he puts them in his bottle and then pours them out again to them in the wine of strong consolation thus are they made
perish O Lord. How to make the whole more useful for thee for whose advantage it s mainly intended I leave to the Author 's own direction onely this I must say his method and mould wherein he casts this sweet matter and his way of handling this so seasonable a subject it so accommodat to each case and brought home to the conscience and down to the capacity of the meanest Christian which was his aim that the feeble in this day might be as David that howbeit many worthy men have not onely hinted but enlarged upon the same matter yet thou canst not but see some heart-endeareing singularity in his way of improveing and handleing this great gospel truth Next I must tell thee that as I my self read it with much satisfaction though Alas I dar not say I have by reading reaped the designed advantage so that thou mayest be blushed into a peruseal thereof and profiting thereby I must likewise tell thee I say it hath been turned into dutch and that it hath not onely met with great acceptation amongst all the serious and Godly in these parts who have seen it but is much sought after and they professe themselves singularly thereby edified and set a going after God by its efficatious perswasivenesse with a singing alacrity and if it have not the same effect upon thee and me they and it will rise up against us in judgment Up therefore Christians and be doing listen to such a teacher who lest thou tire in thy race or turne bake teacheth thee a certaine and sweet way of singular proficiency and progresse in the wayes of God It may be it is not thy work nor mine to writ books against these soul murthering however magnified methods of takeing men off Jesus Christ but our pe●…ury of parts for that should 1. Put us to seek plenty of teares that we may weep to see our Master so wounded by the piercing pens of those who to patronize their mock religion wrest the Scriptures and with wicked hands wring the word of the Lord till it weep blood this I say should provoke thee and me to weep upon Him till He appeare and beat the pens of such deceivers out of their hand by a blow of his 2. It should provoke us to know the truth that we may contend earnestly for the faith delivered to the saints and to have these contradicted truths so impressed in their life upon our souls that the pen of the most subtile pleader for this perversion of the gospel may neither delet th●…se nor be able to stagger us but we may from the efficacious workings of these have the witnesse in our selves and know the men who teach otherwayes not to be of God 3. It should be our ambition when the all of religion is cryed down and a painted shadow a putrid however perfumed nothing put in its place to make it appeare by our practise that Religion is an elevation of the soul above the sphere and activity of dead morality and that it is no lesse or lower principle that acts us than Christ dwelling in us and walking in us how can the love of God of Christ of the Spirit be in us if these perverse pratters against the power of godlinesse provoke us not to emit a practical declaration to the world extort a Testimony to his grace by our way from the enemies thereof Improve therefore this his special help to that purpose which in a most sensonable time is brought to thy hand But to sum up all shortly there are but three things which make religion an heavy burden First the blindnesse of the minde here thou art taught to make use of that eye-salve whereby the eyes of the blind see out of obscurity and out of darkenesse he who formerly erred in Spirit by the light held forth in these lines may see a surpasseing beauty in the wayes of God Secondly That aversion and unwillingnesse which is in the minde whereby the sweet easy yoke of his commands i●… spurned at as heavy in order to the removing thereof that thou mayest be among his willing people here thou hast Christ held forth in his conquering beauty displaying his banner of love over souls so that thou canst not look upon him as held forth but ●…ith will bow thy neck to take on his yoke because it sees it is lined with the love of Christ then this love that line the yoke shed abroad in the heart will constraine to a bearing of it O it must be an easy yoke because itis love tender love that imposeth it and it must be easy delightful to the bearer because itis the nature of love to think the greatest difficulties easy if thereby an evidence of loves reality may be given to the party beloved now if Christ thought the greatest burden easy even that which with its weight wrung these words from him now is my soul troubled c. to perswade souls of the reality and riches of his love to them Then the soul can think nothing heavy that he imposeth since he will interpret the bearing of it an evidence of its love to him none of his commandments can be grievous to the man now since he hath saide This is the love of God that yee keep his commandments Now there is a readinesse of minde to do all things without disputings murmurings as love knowes no lyon in its way so it is no murmuring disputant when this question is cleared Lord what wilt thou have me to do then love hath no moe questions its greatest difficulty is solved But Thirdly when the Spirit is willing there remains yet much weaknesse love kindled in the heart conquers the mind into a compliance with his will and a complacency in his commands but it s greatest strength is often to weep over a withered hand now that thy hands which fall down may be made strong for labour and thou mayest be girded with strength and have grace for grace yea all grace to make thee abound unto every good word and work The Author leads thee up unto the sull fountaine of all Gospel furniture and strength and teacheth thee how to make use of Jesus Christ as thy sufficiency for working all thy works in thee and for thee Take heart therefore unto thee when thy looking unto du●…y may make thee dispair of performance lift up thine eyes to him who is here set before thee look till every new look upward bring light and life inward and capacitat thee for makeing a new louse foreward in the power of 〈◊〉 might ●…he was but a wicked servant who said I 〈◊〉 thou art a hard master No it is false That religion which gives ease must be an easy religion and truely such 〈◊〉 Gospel holinesse not onely in regaird that it is the liberation of the soul from the basest bondage but in regaird that he who is thy Master will be served of his own the allowed supplies for all
willing in the day of his power Psal. 110. So he taketh away the enmitie that is in us Col. 2 20 21. and reconcileth us to God and to His wayes that our hearts do sweetly comply with them and we become most willing and glade to walk in them yea to run the way of his commandements through his enlarging of our hearts Psal. 119 32. 5. He likewise taketh away that desire and willingnesse which we have to lie still in our naturall condition by convinceing us of the dreadfull hazard thereof through the Spirit of conviction whereby he convinceth the world of in Iohn 16 8. and circumciseth their care to hear maketh them willing to hearken to the counsel of God 6. As for the power Dominion of Satan he breaketh that by leading captivity captive Ephes. 4 8. Psal. 68 18. and spoiling the strong Mans house for he is come to destroy the works of the devil 1 Iohn 3 8. and He spoileth principalities powers Col. 2 15. Thus as captaine of salvation he leadeth them out as a conquerour having payed the price he delivereth also by power and authoritie from the hand of this Jailour And thus we see how he answereth our case and necessitie and is a fit way for us and though this be not questioned yet little is it beleeved and considered and lesse put in practise And as for the Third particular That He alone is this way and answereth our case herein it needeth not be much spoken to since it is clear and manifest confirmed by the experience of all generations and the disappointments of fools who have been seeking other wayes Angels in heaven cannot do our businesse They cannot satisfy justice for 〈◊〉 nor have they any power over our heart to turne it as they will nay they are not acquanted with our secret thoughts that cabinet is keept closse from them and reserved as the peculiar privilege of God alone The blood of bulls and goats can not do it for the Apostle tells us that it is impossible that that should take away sin Heb. 10 4. That blood shed according to the law did cleanse ceremonially but it is only the blood of Iesus typified by that which cleanseth really so that we are sanctified through the offerring of the body of Jes●… Christ once for all Heb. 10 10. No paines or labour of ours can avail here The Lord will not be pleased with thousands of rams or with ten thousands of rivers of oil He will not take our first borne for our transgression nor the Son of our body for the sin of our soul Micah 6 7. Ordinances and meanes will not do it nor any invention of our owne No man can by any meanes redeem his brother or give to God a ransome for him for the redemption of the soul is precious ceaseth for ever Psal. 49 7. 8. He alone hath laid downe the price all our sufferings prayers teares labours pennances and the like signifie nothing here they cannot satisfie justice for one sin As to the fourth particular viz the singularity of this way Those things make it manifest and apparent 1. This is such a way as can discover it self and make it self known unto the erring traveller Christ Iesus is such a way as can say to the wandering soul This is the way walk in it Esa. 30 25. No way can do this This is comfortable 2. This way can not only discover it self to the wandering traveller but also it can bring folk into it Christ can bring souls unto himself when they are runnig on in their wandering condition He can move their heart to turne in to the right way put grace in their soul for this end beginne resolutions in them and sow the seed of faith and so stay their course which they were violently pursueing and make them look about and consider what they are doing as the former was good newes to poor blinde and witlesse creatures that were wandering and knew not whither they were going so this is good newes to poor souls that finde their heart inclineing to wander and loving to goe astray 3. This way can cause us walk in it If we be rebellious and obstinate He can command with authoritie for he is given for a leader and a commander Esa. 55 4. How sweet should this be to the soul that is weighted with a stubborn untractable and unperswadable heart that He as a King Governour Commander can with authoritie draw or drive and cause us follow and run 4. This way is Truth as well as the Way So that the soul that once entereth in here is saife for ever no wandering here The wayfareing men though fooles shall not erre in this way Esa. 35 8. He will bring the blinde by a way that they knew not and lead them in paths that they have not knowne he will make darknesse light before them and crooked things streight those things will he do unto them and not forsake them Esai 42 16. 5. This way is also Life and so can revive the fainting and weary travailer He giveth power to the faint and to them that have no might he Increaseth strength Yea he renowes their strength and makes them mount up with wings as eagles and run and not be weary and walk and not faint Esa. 40 29 31. and so he giveth legs to the traveller yea he carryeth the lambs in his bosome Esa. 40 11. O! who would not walk in this way what can discourage the man that walketh here what can he feare no way can quicken or refresh the weary man This way can do it yea it can quicken one that is as dead and cause him march on with fresh alacrity and vigour 6 From all these it followeth that this way is a most pleasant hartsome desireable and comfortable way The man is saife here and he may sing in the wayes of the Lord Psal. 138 5 for wisdomes wayes are wayes of pleasantnesse and all her paths are peace Prov. 3 17. He is a Way that is Food Physick cordials and all that the poor traveller standeth in need of till he come home From all which ●…re we come to particulars we shall in generall shortly point out those dutyes which natively result thence by way of use 1. O! what cause is there here for all of us to fall on wondering both that God should ever have condescended to have appointed a way how sinners and rebells that had wickedly departed from him and deserved to be cast out of his presence and favour for ever might come back againe and enjoy happinesse and felicity in the friendshipe and favour of that God that could have gote the glory of his justice in our destruction and stood in no need of us or of any thing we could do as also that he appointed such a way That Iesus Christ his only Son should to speak so lie as a bridge betwixt God and sinfull rebells and as a high-way that they might
unto death he beare the sin of many made intercession for the transgressours Esa. 53 4 5 8 10 11 12. So that what the law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his owne Son in the likenesse of sinfull flesh for sin or by a sacrifice for sin condemned sin in the flesh Rom. 8 3. that the righteousnesse of the law might be fulfilled in us vers 4. Thus he made him sin or a sacrifice for sin that we might become righteous 2 Cor. 5 20. and he was once offered to beare the sinnes of many Heb. 9 28. and he through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot to God vers 14. and his owne self bear our sins in his owne body on the tree 1 Pet. 2 24. There must I say be some knowledge of and acquantance with this great mysterie of the gospell wherein is declared the manifold wisdome of God Ephes. 3 10. and with the noble designe of God in sending his Son after this manner to die the death that condemned sinners might live and returne to the bosome of God as redeemed not with gold or silver or corruptible things but with the precious blood of Christ as of a lamb without blemish without spot 1 ●…et 1 18. and being so redeemed by blood to become kings priests unto God 1 Pet. 2 2 Revel 5 9 10. The man must not be ignorant of this else all will be in vaine I do not determine how destinct and full this knowledge must be but sure there must be so much knowledg of it as will give the soul ground of hope and in exspectation of salvation by this way cause it turne its back upon all other wayes and to account it self happy if it could once win here 6. There must be a perswasion of the sufficiency compleatnesse satisfactorynesse of the way of salvation through this crucified Mediator el●…e the soul will not be induced to leave its other courses and betake it self to this alone He must be sure that salvation is only to be had this way And that undoubtedly it will be had this way that so with confidence he may cast himself over on this way and sweetly sing in hope of a noble outgate And therefore he must beleeve that Christ is really God as well as Man and a true Man as well as God that he is fully furnished for the work of Redemption having the spirit given to him without measure and endued fully and richly with all qualifications fitting him for all our necessiries inabling him to save to the uttermost all that come unto God by him Heb. 7. 25 that He is made of God to us wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 1 〈◊〉 1 30. That all power in heaven earth is given unto Him Mat. 28 18. That all things are put under his feet and that He is given to be the head over all things to the Church Ephes. 1 22. That in him dwelleth all fulnesse Col. 1 19. That in him are hid all the treasures of wisdom knowledge Col. 2 3 yea that in him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the god-head bodyly so that we are compleat in him who is the head of all principality power vers 9 10. 7. The soul must know that He is not only an able alsufficient mediator but that also he is willing and ready to redeem save all that will come for all the preceeding particulars will but increase his sorrow and torment him more so long as he supposeth through ignorance the suggestion of Satan that he hath no part in that redemption no accesse to it no ground of hope of salvation by it Therefore it is necessary that the soul conceive not only a possibility but also a probability of helpe this way and that the dispensation of the gospell of grace and the promulgation and offer of those good newes to him speake out so much that the patience of God waiting long and his goodnesse renewing the offers confirmeth this that his serious pressing his strong motives on the one hand and his sharpe threatnings on the other his reiterated comands his ingeminated obtestations his expressed sorrow grief over such as would not come to him his upbraidings objurgations of such as do obstinately refuse and the like put his willingnesse to save such as will come to him out of all question yea●… his obviating of objections and takeing all excuses out of their mouth make●… the case plaine and manifest so that such as will no●… come are left without excuse and have no impediment lying in the way but their owne unwillingnesse 8. The man must know upon what tearmes conditions Christ offereth himself in the gospell viz. upon condition of accepting of Him beleeving in him and resting upon him and that no other way can we be made partakers of the good things purchased by Christ but by accepting of Him as he is offered in the gospell that is to say freely without price or money Esa. 55 1. absolutely without reservation wholly for all ends c. for till this be known there will be no closeing with Christ and till there be a closeing with Christ there is no advantage to be had by him The soul must be marryed to him as an husband fixed to him as the branches to the tree united to him as the members to the head become one with him one Spirit 1. Cor. 6. 17. See Iohn 15 5. Ephes. 5 30. The soul must close with him for all things adhere to him upon all hazards take him and the sharpest crosse that followeth him now I say the soul must be acquanted with these conditions for it must act deliberatly rationally here Covenanting with Christ is a grave businesse requireth deliberation posednesse of soul rationall resolution full purpose of heart satisfaction of soul and therefore the man must be acquanted with the conditions of the new covenant 9. There must be a satisfaction with the tearmes of the gospel and the heart must actually close with Christ as h●…s offered in the gospel The heart must open to him and take him in Revel 3 20. The soul must imbrace and receive him Ioh. 1 12. The man must take him as his Lord and Master King Priest Prophet must give up himself to him as his Leader and Commander and resolve to follow him in all things and thus close a bargain with him for till this be done there is no union with Christ and till there be an union with Christ there is no partaking of the frutes of his redemption as to Iustification no pardon no acceptance no accesse to the favour of God nor peace nor joy in the holy ghost no getting of the conscience sprinkled nor no intimation of love or favour from God c. 10. There must be a leanning to and resting upon him and on his perfect sacrifice The soul must sit downe here as satisfied and
self ends and carnal by 〈◊〉 respects lest thereby we marre all 2. It would be carryed on without partiality against all and every one of the lusts and motions of the Old man for if there be a complyance with and a spareing of any one known lust the whole work may be marred they may meet with a disappointment as to the particular lust they a●… desireing victory over and the lust they are harbouring though it may seem little may open a door to many stronger and so occasion sad dayes to the man ere he be aware 3. As they would bring the particular lust or lusts unto Christ as chiefe Lord justice so they would alwayes lay the axe to the root of the tree and crave justice against the maine body that yet lieth within the soul and these particular corruptions and affections that are as members of that body of sin should put them in minde of the old man for they should crucifie the flesh with the affections and lusts thereof Gal. 5 24. the body and the members these lusts are the lusts of sin or of that Head-sin which hath a law or the force and impulse of a law in the soul and therefore their maine designe would be against this root where lyeth the strength and body of the enemy and which acteth in those members this is the capitall enmity and should be mainely opposed and the following of this course would prove more succesfull than that which many a time we take out nibling at or wreastling against this or that member of the body of death is but of little advantage so long as the maine body of sin the bitter root of wickednesse the carnall minde this innate enmity is miskent and not opposed but on the contrary strick at this we strick at all 4. This would be the beleevers constant work to be crucifying the flesh with the lusts thereof to be mortifying their members wherein the members of the old man quarter and lodge Colos. 3 5. to be spiritually minded and to minde the things of the spirit Rom 8 5 6. for this carnall minde is enmity against God Rom. 8 7. and so is not subject to the law of God neither indeed can be It is not only an enemy which may be reconciled but enmity in the abstract which never can be reconciled and this enmity will never be idle for it c●…nnot till it be fully and finally destroyed the flesh is alwayes lusting against the Spirit Gal. 5. 17. for they are contrary one to the other So that though to our sense it may sometimes appear as sleeping in regaird that it doth not by some particular lust so molest and perplexe the soul as formerly it did yet it is restlesse and may be more active in another lust and so by changeing weapons upon us deceive us Here then is much spirituall wisdome and vigilancy required when they think they have gotten one lust subdued they must not think the war is at an end but after all their particular victories watch and pray that they enter not into temptation 5. This way of laying the weight of the matter on Christ should and will keep them humble and teach them not to ascribe the glory of any good that is done unto themselves but to give Him all the glory who is jealous of his glory and will not give it to another that the crowne may alone floorish on his head who is the Captane of their salvation and who by his Spirit worket●… all their workes in them 6. Nor would this way of carrying the matter to Christ and putting it over on Him cause the beleever become negligent in commanded dutyes reading hearing prayer c. for it is there he must exspect to meet with Christ there must he seek Him and there must he waite for Him and his Spirit to do the work desired for though He hath not limited himself to these meanes so as He cannot or will not any other way helpe yet He hath bound us to them and it is our duty to waite there where He hath commanded us ●…o waite though He should sometime ●…hink good to come another way for the manifestation of the soveraignity of hi●… grace 7. Yet while we are about the meanes we would guaird against a le●…ning to them lest in stead of getting victory over corruption we be brought more in bondage thereunto another way we must not think that our Prayers or our Hearing or Reading c. will bring downe the body of death or subdue any one corruption for that were but an yeelding to corruption and opening a back door to the carnal minde and to another deadly lust and a beating corruption with a sword of straw This is not to mortifie the deeds of the body through the Spirit but through the flesh and a fleshly weapon will never draw blood of this spirituall wickednesse or old man or of any corrupt lust or affection thereof and yet how many times doth our deceitfull heart by as us thi●… way Our work would be as is said to use the ordinances a●… meanc●… whereby we may get the businesse laid on Christ and help from Christ to do the b●…sinesse We must go to the meanes with our prisoner to finde Christ there at his court and a●…ifes that He may take course with the Traitor 8. In all this there would be a looking to and dependance on Christ for helpe and grace because of our selves as of our selves we can not do this much we cannot complean aright of corruptions nor take them away to Christ not ask for justice against them a●… constable●… and other officers must carry malefactores to the courts of justice u●…on publick charges so Christ will not have us doing or attempting this m●…ch on our own charges for He giveth noble allowance 9. In following of this course we would not think alwayes to come speed at the first Sometimes the Lord for the encourageing of his children may give them a speedy hearing and deliver them from the tyranny of some particular lust or other that hath troubled them that for some time at least it sh●…ll not so trouble them as it did Yet He will not do so alwayes but may think it good to keep them waiting on Him and hanging on his courts for so●…e considerable time that He may thereby exercise their Faith Patience 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Diligenc●… So that it should not seem strange to us if we be not admitted a●… the first and get not our answer at the first cry 10. When the Lord thinketh good to delay the answer to our desires and the execution of justice on the Malefactor Traitour or to deliver us from his tyranny and trouble we would beware of thinking to capitulat with the enemy for our peace and quiet or to enter into a ce●…lation of armes with him that is our ●…mity against him should never abate nor should our desire after the mortification and crucifixion of this lust grow lesse
more constantly at the fountaine yet when we have fled to Christ and taken our filthinesse to the open and appointed fountaine we can answere the accusations of conscience in law and have peace 3. But I am apt to think will some say That if I had once taken the right way to get my sins filthinesse purged away my conscience would trouble me no more but now so long as it doggeth me thus I cannot think that the way which I have taken is the right way Ans. Though the Lord may think good to suffer conscience to trouble a man for a time though he hath taken the right way as is said for a further exercise and tryall to him yet the beleever will have no losse nor disadvantage by examineing his way and trying whether he hath laid the matter cleanly over on Christ or whether he hath laid too much weight on his own humiliation sorrow and paines and whether he beleaving the matter on Jesus and exspecting to be washen alone in his blood or looking in to himself and exspecting some helpe in the matter from self And after tryall would mourne for any failing he gets discovered and still be about that work of runing with filth to the fountaine But withall they would go to Christ for helpe because without Him they cannot come to Him they cannot come or carry their soul to the fountaine opened for sin and uncleannesse So that in all this work there would be a single dependance on Christ for understanding and strength to go about this work aright Thus have we endeavoured to cleare up Christ's being the Way to the Father first and last and how all beleevers or unbeleevers are to make use of him as the way to the Father whatever their condition be from all which we may see 1. That such are in a wreatched and forlorne condition who are still strangers to Christ and will not lay hold on Him nor come to Him and walk in Him and make use of Him They are unrighteous and unholy and dayly contracting more guilt and more filth and they know no way either for justification or sanctification but a way of self which will prove like the brooks which run dry in summer disappoint the weary travailer when he hath most need They are without Christ and so without the way the only way the saife and sure way to the Father And oh if all that is here spoken could induce them to think once of the misery of their condition and to seek out for reliefe that they might not only be saved from their state of sin and misery but brought into a state of salvation through Jesus Christ so that they might be justified before God from all that justice the devil the law or conscience could lay against them and throughly sanctified and so at length brought home to the Father faire and spotlesse 2. Upon the other hand we see the noble advantage of beleevers who through grace are entered into this way for it is a full and compleat way that shall carry them saife home they shall finde that He is able to save to the uttermost all that come to God through Him And O if they were sensible of this How would it excite them to thankfulnesse How would it encourage them to run thorow difficulties great and many 3. We see what a special duty lyeth upon beleevers to make special use of Christ in all things as the way to the Father and so march to heaven in Him as the only way march in his hands or rather be carryed in his armes and bosome This were to goe from strength to strength till at length they appeared in Zion and landed in that pleasant place of rest where the weary are at rest and yet rest not day nor night but sing praises to Him that hath redeemed them by his blood out of every kinred and tongue and people and nation saying blessing honour glory power be unto Him that sitteth upon the throne and unto the lamb forever and ever Revel 5 9 13. 4. Hence we may see the cause of the leannesse of beleevers of their wanderings of their short comings of their many defilements c. viz. their not constant making use of Christ as the way in all things according to the tenor of the gospel Oh if this were laid to heart and mourned for and if grace were sought to helpe it This one point of truth That Christ is the way well understood and ●…ghtly put into practice would do all our businesse both as to justification and sanctification and were poor sinners once entred into this way and had they grace from this way to walk in it it would prove their life and salvation for it is the marrow and substance of the whole gospel So that there needeth little more to be said yet we shall speak a little to the other particulars in the text CAP. X. The Truth Some generalls proposed THat what we are to speak for the clearing and improving of this noble piece of truth That Christ is the Truth may be the more clearly understood and edifying we shall first take notice of some generalls and then show particularly how or in what respects Christ is called the Truth and finally speak to some cases wherein we are to make use of Christ as the Truth As to the first There are foure generall things here to be noticed First This supposeth what our case by nature is and what we are all without Christ who is the Truth as Frst. It supposeth that without Christ we are in darkness mistakes errors yea we are said to be darkness it self Ephes. 5. 8. yea were sometimes darknesse c. Iohn 1 5. and of darknesse 1 Thes. 5 5. yea under the ●…ower of darknesse Col. 1 13 Iohn 12 35. 1 Iohn 2 vers 11. walking in darknesse 1 Iohn 1 vers 6. and abideing in darknesse 1 Pet. 2 9. 1 Thes. 5 4. Iohn 12 46. we wander and go astray as soon as we are borne speaking lies Psal. 58 3. yea we go astray in the greatnesse of our folly Prov. 5. last we are all gone astray Esai 53 6. See also Psal. 119 67 176. So far are we from any knowledge of or acquantance with Truth or with the way of truth Secondly it supposeth that we cannot turne-in to the right way a Spirit of errour and untruth leadeth us continually wrong like the sheep we wander still and we weary ourselves in our wandering and so spend all our labour and paines in vaine Being under the power of untruth and errour we cannot walk one step right Thridly Though all other wayes beside Him who only is the Way and the Truth be false wayes and by-wayes leading us away from the true testing place and from that Way which is the Truth yet we are prone and ready to cleave to those false and erroneous wayes to grippe to shadowes andto leane to them as if they were the wayes of truth Such
transgressions and bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was to be upon Him and by his stripes we were to be healed Esai 53 5 and so it was Rom. 4 25. 1 Cor. 15 3. 1. Pet. 2 23. His soul was to be made an offering for sin Esa. 53 10. and so it was for he offered up himself a sacrifice for sin yea all that He was to do by vertue of that covenant he did it perfectly so as he cryed out while hanging on the cross it is finished Iohn 19 30. and in his prayer Iohn 17. he told the Father vers 4. that He had glorified Him on earth and had finished the work which He gave him to do So that the Father was well pleased with Him Mat. 3 17. and 12 18 and 17 5. Mark 1 11. Luk. 3 22. Fourthly He is the Truth in respect of his Offices which He took upon him for our good for all the duties of these offices which He was to do what remaineth to be done He will perfect in due time Did He take upon him the office of a Prophet He did fully execute the same in re●…aling mediatly and immediatly the whole counsell of God Iohn 1 18. and 15 15. Ephes. 4 11 12 13. Act. 20 32. 1 Pet. 1. 10 11 12. Heb. 1 2. Did He take upon him the office of a Priest so did he fulfill the same offering up himself an expiatory sacrifice to God Heb. 9 14 28. and 2 17. and becoming a Priest living for ever to make intercession for us Heb. 7 25. And did He take on the office and function of a King so doth He execute the same calling a people to himself out of the world by his word and spirit Act. 15 14 15 16. Esa. 55. 4 5. Psal. 110. 3. erecting a visible Church a company of visible professors to professe and declare his name which as his kingdom he ruleth with his own Officers Lawes and Penalties or Censures so that the government is on his shoulders Esa. 9 6 7 who is the Head of the body the Church Ephes. 1 22 23. Col. 1 18. and this his kingdom He ruleth in a visible manner by his own officers c. Ephes. 4 11 12. 1 Cor. 12 28. Esai 33 22. Mat. ●…8 17 18. 1 Cor. 5 4 5. and further he executes this office by effectually calling the elect giving them grace Act. 5 3. rewarding the obedient Revel 22 12. and 2. 10. chastiseing the disobedient Revel 3 19. bringing his own home at length through all their temptations afflictions and overcoming all their enemies 1 Cor. 15. 25. Psal. 110. and at length He shall do the part of a king when He shall judge quick and dead at the last day 2. Thes. 1 8 9. Act. 17 31. 2. Tim. 4 1. Fiftly He is the Truth in this regaird that He fully answereth all the titles and names which he got As he was called Iesus so did He save his people from their sins Mat. 1 21. As He was called Christ so was He anoynted with the Spirit without measure Iohn 3 34 Psal. 45. 7. and separated for his work and endued with all power for that effect Iohn 6 27. Mat. 28 18 19 20 and established to be a Prophet Act 3 21 22. Luc. 4 18 21. a Priest Heb. 5 5 6. 7 and 4 14. 15. and a King Psal. 2. 6. Esa. 9 6 7. Mat. 21 5. Phil. 2 8 9 10. 11. Was He called Immanuel Esai 7 14. so was He indeed God with us being God and Man in one person for ever was he called wonderfull Esai 9 6. so was He indeed in his two distinct natures in one person at which the Angels may wonder Ephes. 3 10 11. 1 Pet. 1 12. 1. Tim. 3 16. was he called counseller so was He indeed coming out from the Fathers besome with the whole counsel of God concerning our salvation Iohn 1 14 18. and 3 13. and 5 20 and 15 15. was He called the mighty God so was He indeed Psal 110 1. Mat. 22 44. Heb. 1 13. Psal. 45 6. Heb. 1 8. Ier. 23 6. and 33 16. Mal. 3 1. Matth. 11. 10 Psal. 83 18. Luk. 1. 76. Iohn 1 1 14. 1 Iohn 5 20. Tit. 2 13. Rom. 9 5. was He called the everlasting Father so is He the father of eternity being as some interpret the word the author of eternall life which He giveth to all that beleeve in Him Ioh. 6. 39 40 47 51. and 8 51. and 10. 28. and 11 25 26. Heb. 5 9. and 7 25. was He called the Prince of peace so is He the Prince of peace indeed being our peace Mic. 5 5. Eph. 2 14. making up peace betwixt God and us Esa. 53 5. and 57 19. Eph. 2 17. Col. 1 20. Hence his gospell is the gospell of peace and his Ministers embassadours of peace Esa. 52 7. Rom. 10 15. 2 Cor. 5 19 20. Eph. 6 15. And he giveth peace to all his Zach. 9 10. Ioh. 14 27. and 16 33. Rom. 5 1. and 8 16. and 14 17. 2. Thes 3 17. was He called the Lord our righteousnesse Ier. 23 6. So is He the same indeed bringing in everlasting righteousnesse Dan. 9 24. and being made of God to us righteousnesse 1. Cor. 1 30. making us righteous 2. Cor. 5 21. Sixtly He is the Truth in reference to the promises which 1. Centre all in Him and lead to Him as the great promise 2. Are founded all upon Him who is the only Mediator of the covenant of promises 3. Are confirmed all by Him and made yea and amen in Him 2 Cor. 1 20. He confirmed the promises made to the fathers Rom. 15 8. 4. are all dispensed and given out by Him who is the executor of his own testament and the great dispensator of all that we need so that what we ask of the Father He giveth it himself Iohn 14 13 14. Seventhly He is the Truth in that He fully answereth all the hops and expectations of his people He shall not be found a liar unto them whatever Satan may suggest unto them or a misbeleeving heart may prompt them to conceive and their Iealousie may make them apprehend and whatever his dispensations may now seem to say In end they shall all finde that He is the Truth fully satisfying all their desires and granting all that ever they could hope for or expect from Him They shall at length be satisfied with his likenesse Psal. 17 15 yea aboundantly satisfied with the fatnesse of his house Psal. 36 8. and with his goodnesse Psal. 65 4. and that as with marrow and fatnesse Psal. 63 5. One sight of his glory will fully satisfy and cause them cry out enough Ieremiah is not now saying as once he did in the bitternesse of his soul through the power of corruption and temptation Cap. 15 18. will thou be altogether unto me as a liar and as waters that fail Eightly He is the Truth in opposition to all other wayes
motions of the heart and laboure for spirituality singlenesse of heart and truth in the inward parts which the Lord desireth Psal. 51 6. CHAP. XVI How to make use of Christ as the Truth when error prevaileth and the spirit of error carryeth many away THere is a time when the Spirit of error 〈◊〉 going ab●…oad and truth is questioned an many are led away with delusions for Satan can change himself into an angel of light and make many great and faire like pretensions to holinesse and under that pretext ushere-in untruthes and gaine the consent of many unto them so that in such a time of temptation many are stollen off their feet and made to depart from the right wayes of God and to imbrace error and delusions in stead of truth Now the question is how a poor beleever shall make use of Christ who is the Truth for keeping him stedfast in the truth in such a day of tryal and from imbracing the way of error how plausible soever it may appeare for satisfaction to this we shall propose those few things 1. In such a time when a Spirit of error is let loose and rageth and carrieth severall away it were good for all who would be keeped streight honest to be walking in feare It is not good to despise such a s●…ye and subtile enemy especially in the houre and power of darknesse Then all are called to be on their guaird and to stand upon their watch toure and to be jealous of their corrupt hearts that are ready enough of their own accord to drink-in errour and to receive the temptation at any time and much more then 2. They would not think that their knowledge and ability to dispute for truth will keep them stedfast if there be not more for if the temptation grow they may come to reasone and dispute themselves out of all their former knowledge and skill The father of lies is a cuning sophister and knoweth how to shake their grounds and cast all loose 3. They would renew their covenant grips of Christ and make sure that maine businesse viz. their peace and union with God in Christ and their accepting of Christ for their Head and Husband They would labour to have the fundation sure and to be united unto the chief corner stone that so blow the storme as it will they may ride saifely and that hereby they may have accesse to Christ with boldnesse in their difficulty and may with confidence seek light from Him in the houre of darknesse 4. To the end they may be keeped more watchfull and circumspect they would remember that it is a dishonourable thing to Christ for them to step aside in the least matter of truth the denying of the least point of truth is a consequentiall denying of him who is the Truth and to lose a foot in the matters of truth is very dangerous for who can tell when they who once slip a foot shall recover it againe And who can tell how many and how dreadful errors they may drink in who have once opened the door to a small errour Therefore they would beware of tampering in this matter and to admit any errour upon the account that it is a small and inconsiderable one there may be an unseen concatenation betwixt one errour and another and betwixt a small one and a greater one so as if the little one be admitted and received the greater shall follow and it may be feared that if they once dally with errour and make a gape in their consciences that God give them up to judiciall blindenesse that ere all be done they shall imbrace that opinion which sometime they seemed to hate as death 5. They would eye the promises suteing that case viz. the promises of Gods Guideing the blindely a way which 〈◊〉 know not of making darknesse light before them and crooked t●…ings streig●…s Es●… 42 16. and of guideing contin●…ally Esa. 8 〈◊〉 see also Esa. 49 10. and 57 18. and they would act faith on these and the like promises as now made sure through Jesus 6. Particularly they would fix their eye upon that principal promise of the Spirit of truth to guide into all truth Iohn 16 13. 7. With singlenesse of heart they would depend on Christ and waite for light from Him and beware of prejudice at the truth with singlenesse of heart they would lye open to his instructions and to the influences of his light and direction and receive in the beames of his divine light and thus go about duties viz. Prayer Conference Preaching Reading c. with an eye fix●…d on him and with a soul open to Him free of all sinful preingadgment and love to errour 8. With singl●…nesse of heart they would give up their souls to Christ as the Truth that He would write the truth in their souls and frame their souls unto the truth and unto that truth which is most questioned and by which they are most in hazard to be drawn away and urge and 〈◊〉 Him by prayer and supplication to do the duty of an Head an Husband guide and Commander c. unto them and that He would be a 〈◊〉 unto them in that day of darkness and not suffer them to dishonour Him or prove scandalous to others by departing from the truth and imbracing of errour A serious single-hearted dealing with Him upon the grounds of the covenant promises and his relations and engadgments might prove steadable in this case if accompanyed with a lying open to the influences of truth and to the light of information which He is pleased to send by the Spirit of truth Cautions and Directions For further clearing of this matter we shall hinte at some cautions and further directions useful here such as 1. They would beware of thinking that God should come to them with light and instruction in an extraordinary manner and reveal the truth of the question controverted somewhat immediatly for this were a manifest tempting and limit●…ing of the holy one of Israel We must be satisfied with the meanes of instruction which he hath provided and run to the Law and to the Testimony We have the Scriptures which are able to make the man of God perfect and throughly fournished unto all good works 2. Tim. 3 16 17. and to make wi●…e unto Salvation vers 15. There must we seek light and there must we waite for the breathing of his Spirit with life and coming with light to cleare up truth to us for they are the Scriptures of truth Dan. 10 21. and the law of the Lord which is perfect converting the soul and the commandement of the Lord that is pure enlightening the eyes c. Ps●…l ●…9 7 8. We have the Ministery which God hath also appointed for this end to make known to us his minde there must we waite for him and his light Thus must we waite at the posts of wisdomes doors and waite for the king of light in his own way wherein He hath
rebelliousnesse in the will irregularity disorder in the affections whereby the soul is unfit for any thing that is good prone to every thing that is evil Rom. 3 10 20. Ephes. 2 1 2 3. Rom. 5 6. 8 7 8 whence proceedeth all our actual transgressions Iam 1 14 15. And moreover sometimes the soul is given up to a reprobat minde Rom. 1 28. to strong delusions 2 Thes. 2 2. to hardnesse of heart Rom. 2 5. horror of conscience Esa. 33 14. to vile affections Rom. 1 26 and the like spiritual plagues which though the Lord inflict on some only yet all are obnoxious to the same by nature can exspect no lesse if the Lord should enter with them into judgment And finally as to what is future of this kinde they are being fuel for Tophet obnoxious to that malignant sinful blasphemous and desperat rebellion against God in hell for ever more O how lamentable upon this consideration must the condition of such be as are yet in the state of nature Oh if it were but seen and felt But alas there is this addition to all that people know no●… this they consider it not they beleeve it not they feel it not they see it not and hence it cometh to passe that 1. They cannot bewail and lament their condition nor be humbled therefore 2. They cannot nor will not seek after a remedie for the whole will not trouble themselves to seek after a physician And sure upon this account their case calleth for pity and compassion from all that know what a dreadful thing it is to be in such a condition and should stirre up all to pray for them and to do all they can to helpe them out of that state of sin and misery which is dreadful to think upon Should not the thoughts and consideration of this put us all to try and search if we be yet translated from death to life and delivered out of that terrible and dreadful state and made partakers of the first resurrection It not being my purpose to handle this point at large I shall not here insist in giving marks whereby this may be known and which are obvious in Paul's Epistles to be found handled at large in several practical pieces chiefly in Mr. Guthries Great interest I shall only desire every one to consider and examine 1. Whether or not the voice of Christ which quickeneth the dead hath been heard and welcomed in their soul This is effectual calling 2. Whether or not there be a through change wrought in their soul a change in the whole Man so as all things are become new 2 Cor. 5 vers 17 3. Whether or not there be a Principle of life within And they be led by the Spirit 4. Whether or not there be a living to the glory of the Lord Redeemer And when by impartial tryal a discovery is made of the badness of our condition should we not be alarmed to look about us and to laboure by all meanes for an outgate considering 1. How do●…lful and lamentable this condition is 2. How sad and dreadful the consequents of it are 3. How happy a thing itis to be delivered from this miserable and sinful condition and. 4. How there is a possibility of outgate Finally It may break a heart of stone to think how people that are in such a condition are so unwilling to come out of it for 1. How unwilling are they once to suspect their condition or to suppose that it may be bad and that they may be yet unconverted 2. How unwilling are they to sit down seriously to try and 〈◊〉 the matter and to lay their case to the touch-stone of the word 3. Yea how unwilling are they to heare any thing that may tend to awaken them or to discover unto them the badness of their condition 4. How ready to stiffle challenges of conscience or any common motion of the Spirit which tendeth to alarme their soul 5. How great enemies are they to such ordinances as serve to awaken sleeping consciences 6. And how do they hate such ministers as preach such doctrine as may serve to rouz th●…m up and set them a work about their own salvation Secondly We learne hence That without Christ there is no imaginable way of delivery out of this natural state of death No other name is given under heaven whereby we can be saved Act. 4 12. and angels can make no help here nor can one of us deliver another the redemption of the soul is more precious then so Psal. 49 7 8. Not is there any thing we can do for ourselves that will availe here all our prayers teares whipeings fastings vo●…es almes deeds purposes promises resolutions abstenance from some evils outward amendements good morality and civility outward religiousnesse yea and if it were possible our keeping of the whole law will not helpe us out of this pit And we may weary ourselves in such exercises in vaine for they will prove but bodylie exercises that profite little And when in this way we have spent all our time parts spirits and labour we shall at length see and say that we have spent our money for that which is not bread This should put all of us to try what itis which we leane to for life and what it is the consideration whereof giveth us peace and quietnesse when the thoughts of death judgment hell and the wrath of God come upon us and trouble us for if it be any thing beside Christ that our soul leaneth to and that we are comforted by and found all our hopes upon we will meet with a lamentable oh for ever lamentable disappointment Be sure then that our hearts renunce all other wayes and meanes of outgate out of this death beside Jesus the Resurrection and the Life else it will not be well with us Thirdly We see here That delivery out of this natural state of death is only had by Christ for He alone is the Life and the life that is in Him is suiteable and excellent Hence he is called the bread of life Iohn 6 35 48. The resurrection and the life Iohn 11 25. The water of life Revel 21 6. 22 17. The tree of life Revel 22 2 14. The Prince of life Act. 3 15. our life Col. 3 4. The word of life and life it self 1 Iohn 1 1 2. And as He is a suitable and excellent life so is He an alsufficient and perfect life able every way to helpe us and to deliver us from all the parts of our death For 1. He delivereth from the sentence of the law Rom. 5 17 18. undergoing the curse of the law and becomeing a curse for us 2 Cor. 5. last 2. He taketh away the curse and sting of all temporal plagues yea and of death it self causeing all work together for good to such as love Him Rom. 8 28. He hath killed Him that had the power of death that is the devil Heb. 2 14.