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A96523 Three decads of sermons lately preached to the Vniversity at St Mary's Church in Oxford: by Henry Wilkinson D.D. principall of Magdalen Hall. Wilkinson, Henry, 1616-1690. 1660 (1660) Wing W2239; Thomason E1039_1; ESTC R204083 607,468 685

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God did beseech 2 Cor. 5. 20. you by us we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled to God O●r commission may be out of date to morrow Christ now waites till his locks be wet with dew now he calls sinners to repentance He hath sent me on an errand this day to invite thirsty soules to come unto him and he will give them drink to invite those that are heavy laden and he will give them rest It 's my businesse this day to tender Jesus Christ the Fountain opened to presse home the Exhortation of the Holy Ghost Let the wicked forsake his way and Isa 55. 7. the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon Now what answer shall I return unto him that sent me Suffer I beseech you Fathers and Brethren the word of exhortation not to suffer the holy Spirit to spend his sacred breath in vain You have many prizes put into your hands improve them in your several capacities to the glory of God and mutual edification one of another Let Rulers rule with diligence let Governours Tutours Masters of Families all unite their endeavours to promote the Gospel of Jesus Christ and put Joshua's resolution into practise but as for me I and my house we will serve the Lord. O that Josh 24. 15. we could be spirituall Fathers to those that are committed to our charge Governours and Tutours should look upon themselves as Pro-parents and upon the Scholars under them as children and therefore ought to have special care over them and principally to enquire how it fares with their soules what knowledge they have of Jesus Christ What a comfort will it be another day when we can say Behold Lord here we are and the children which thou hast given us Thou ●ord hast made us spiritual Fathers unto these young Pupiss Now whilst the Spirit stayes waiting upon us whilst we have time talents and opportunities vouchsafed unto us whilest we live under the sound of the Gospel and hear admonitions reproofs and many Exhortations to repentance let us not put off the Spirit with any more delatory answers but resolve with the full purpose of our hearts to cleave unto the Lord. I have two or three plain moving considerations to adde for the better setting home of my Exhortation Consider the brevity of our lives What 's our life but a bubble Consid 1. The brevity of our lives John 4. a flower a vapor a shadow By these resemblances the Holy Ghost sets forth the shortness of our lives We had need be a working while day lasteth I must work the works of him that sent me while day lasteth the night cometh when no man can work A night of death is coming wherein no man can work and we must always remember that the Spirit strives not always not during the whole course of our lives It moves when it pleaseth and on a suddain ceaseth yet at the most it moveth no longer nor striveth no longer but this little moment of time whilst we are on this side the grave After death there will be no more warnings no more admonitions no place left for repentance no Purgatory that 's a Popish dream He that dieth filthy will so remain unto all Eternity Now then my Brethren considering you have but a little time and upon this moment depends Eternity and after death there will be no further tenders of Grace and Mercy let us husband this time to the best advantage Let us prize Sermons Sabbaths and all those Evangelical Dispensations vouchsafed to us more then ever we did Let us redeem the time as we are exhorted Eph. 5. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 5. 16. buying out or making a good market of the season Every thing is beautiful in its season there 's a season acceptable and there 's a season perilous Let 's come when God calls that 's the accepted time let 's not prescribe a time of our own that 's the perillous season let 's not account time a slight matter for each minute ought to be valued A second consideration shal be drawn from the uncertainty of the Consid 2. The uncertainty of the spirits striving Nil pretiosius tempore heu nil hodie vilius invenitur Bern. Veniet tempus quo vel unam horam ad resi●iscendum redimere mirum quantum optabimus Otho Casmannus spirits strivings If the holy Spirit be rejected its uncertain whether ever he will come again The Spirit will not always bear reproaches indignities If we refuse to give God the glory of his mercy he will shew upon us the glory of his Justice and Power If we will not open when God knocks at our doors he will not open when we knock at his door Unkindness will drive away a friend from our houses When the Spirit invites himself unto us if we will open he will come and dine and sup with us if we refuse this Heavenly guest how shall we escape our destruction will be inevitable This Spirit is often compared to fire nothing more comforting nothing more consuming than fire If thou wilt not suffer the Spirit to purge and refine thee it will consume thee Nothing more comfortable then light warmth and witness of the Spirit Nothing more terrible then the bondage conviction and condemnation of the Spirit Therefore beware of resisting any good motions that the Spirit of God puts into thy heart this day lest if the spirit have a repulse he may go away and never return any more 3. Thirdly Consider the certainty of the day of Judgement 2 Cor. 5. 10. For we must all appear before the judgement seat of Consid 3. The day of Iudgement Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad Then there will be an account to be given for all the Sermons which we have heard for all the Sabbaths we have enjoyed for all the motions of the Spirit for all the admonitions reproofs Gospel opportunities and advantages that we have received we should therefore hear a Sermon now as for ought we know we may be presently summon'd by death to appear before the Judgement-seat of Jesus Christ Let us imagine that now we hear this day as if it might be our last day We hear for Eternity Preachers and Hearers shall be called to an account at the great Assise The Lord grant that we may all give up our accounts with joy The third Use shall be for reprehension of those who resist or Use 3. For reprehension stifle the strivings and the sweet motions of the holy Spirit To come to particulars 1. How sad is their condition who are contemners of the sweet motions of Gods Spirit Let them read Rom. 8. 9. If any man hath not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Such
consecrated unto the Lord And if the first fruits be holy the whole lump will be sanctified Pub. Scipio first went into the Senate to pray before he went into the Capitol to consult Christ was at prayer a great while before day Mark 1. 35. David prevented the night watches The Jewes divided the day into three parts the first was for prayer the second for the study of the Law the third for worke I have read that King Alfred the founder of the ancientest Colledge in our University divided the day into three parts eight houres for prayer study and writing 8 houres for eating drinking and sleeping and eight houres in the affaires of the estate My Brethren let 's all make it our business to serve the Lord with all our hearts Le ts in good earnest with all the members of our bodies and faculties of our souls give up our selves to God Let 's offer all we are and have even a whole burnt offering unto the Lord. Let 's give God the best of the best Let 's not sleep away a morning Sermon and be in our beds when we ought to be in the publicke Congregation Cannot we rise early enough for our secular interest and shall we neglect in the mean time the eternal good of our immortal soules The Queen of Sheba came from the uttermost parts of the earth and the wise men came from the East c. And shal any be so lazy as not to step over their thresholds to hear a Sermon Will men loose this Manna for want of gathering it Men ought to labour more to be good then to bee great and to be more careful to discharge their places of preferment then sollicitous to procure them What seeking riding solliciting undermining what scandalizing supplanting perfidious dealings are every where to be found These waies of unbrotherly dealings are very frequently practiced in these evil daies These things my brethren ought not so to be I fear those times and practises are revived now a daies against which the Prophet Micah complains chap. 7. 3. That they hunt every man his brother with a net Thence an exhortation is inferred v. 5. Trust not in a friend put not confidence in a guide But here lies our duty to doe all we can to promote the honour of God to lay out our selves Interests and all to advance the Gospel of Jesus Christ We seek our selves every where our own honour ease and Interest How greedy are many to get more riches how sollicitous of increaseing their substance But how careless are men of doing their duties and discharging the great trust reposed in them Wherefore the other part of my Use shall in an especial manner be directed to two sorts of Persons viz. Magistrates and Ministers 1. Let Magistrates doe their best in their capacity to promote 1. To Magistrates the glory of God They have great advantages put into their hands and let them remember that they bear not the sword in vaine A Magistrate in Gods cause should be like Levi who knew neither Father nor Mother nor Brother nor Sister Of all others a Magistrate should be a man of zeale and courage he should bring the wheel upon the wicked Be they honourable or worshipful he should not spare them in their wickedness Swearers Drunkards Whoremongers Sabbath-breakers these should be punished and Blasphemers who are as bad as the worst For their abomination is never the less because they have so many to plead for them It 's an old Moral Law never yet repealed that he that blasphemeth the name of the Lord should be put to death Lev. 24. 16. What abundance of good may Magistrates doe How many prizes have they put into their hands to serve God in their places Let none be afraid to be good Let them have this Motto or Monitor in their serious thoughts Those that honour God he will honour but as for those that despise him they shall be lightly esteemed 2. To Ministers 2. Here 's one word to Ministers and so for the present I shall conclude Must God have the best then let Ministers offer to God their prayers studies best paines Luther used to say that prayer Meditation and Tentation makes a Preacher And Bernard used to say Bene orasse est bene studuisse Let all Ministers pray much let them first study their own hearts and then study their sermons which they preach to their Auditors The Preacher studied acceptable words A Minister must be an Interpreter one of a thousand Gods mouth to distinguish the pretious from the vile He must have the tongue of the learned to speak a word in due season I have often thought of Davids resolution to Araunah that he would not offer to the Lord that which should cost him nothing Questionless transcriptions Extemporary effusions vain fancies forced Allegories Wire-drawne Expositions are unbecomeing a Pulpit There 's a curse upon all those that doe the work of the Lord negligently Let 's all endeavour to approve our selves workemen that neednot to be ashamed Thanks be to God There 's a choice company of young men who usually supply this lecture Their spirits are serious and their language savory and they preach solid Orthodox and soule-saving Doctrines I must admire and can neuer enough bless God for the same The saying is no more common than true that the hope of our Church is in our young men I will make no comparisons I wish from my heart that we were all better that we would preach more solidly and more frequently And sor mine own part I am of opinion that those who preach most frequently haveing a single eye at Gods glory these are the best and most profitable Preachers and doe most good to poore soules Let none of us hide our talents in a Napkin Let 's not hide our Candle under a Bushel But let 's imploy frequently this sword of the spirit and draw it out lest Ducentas octoginta sex Conciones quotannis habuit Calvinus ad Popu'ū Lectiones vero centum octoginta sex praeter Epist●las Disputationes c. Beza in vita Calvin● by keeping it in the scabbard it grow rusty for want of using When we read of Chrysostomes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I saith he preacht yesterday and to day And of Calvins indefatigable paines as * Beza writes in his life we may be ashamed that we do no more Let not any ordained Minister especially stand idle in the market place and say none hath hired me There are many pulpits empty both here in adjacent Parishes Yo● have places enough to visit were you but of the rare spirit of Amaziah the son of Zichri who did willingly offer himself unto the service of the Lord. Brethren I am jealous over you with a godly jealousy And in love to your soules I am your remembrancer of these things Liberavi animam And so for the present I conclude heartily desireing that what hath been spoken may abide by you
not be bitternesse in the end but where God is the most bitter pill of affliction is sweet and pleasant St Bernard hath a speciall Bernard Orat de bonis deserendis observation in a declamation de bonis deserendis non Isaac sed aries morietur c. If you be willing to sacrifice your Isaac which signifies laughter i. e. your pleasure your Isaac your pleasure shall not dye it is the Ramme the stubbornesse of spirit which shall dye but your Isaac shall live you shall have pleasure still Wherefore cast downe all your joyes comforts and pleasures at Gods feet in an humble submission saying Lord here they are do with me and them what seemes good in thine eyes When the heart is thus took of the world it 's in a fit temper and is best qualified for the comforts of God and over and above when thy spirit is in this frame of resignation of all unto God he in mercy may vouchsafe unto thee the comfortable fruition of them Thus you have heard what Demonstrations I have propounded for the evincing of this pretious Doctrine that all joy and comfort amidst the greatest discomforts is to be found in God Now that I may presse what hath been said home unto your Applicat practice 1. I shall inferre something by way of comfort unto those that make the Lord the joy of their soules 2. In the next place I shall exhort you unto so excellent and necessary duty 3. In the last place I shall lay downe some Directions how this sacred duty of rejoycing in God ought to be exexercised within these limits I shall confine my ensueing Application In the first place this discovers unto us the comfortable condition Vse 1. For Comfort of the Children of God O blessed men whose hope and comfort the Lord is comfort yee comfort yee my people saith the Lord to these comfort appertaines as their peculiar right and interest let them amidst greatest calamities lift up their heads for their redemption draweth nigh All the sufferings of Christ his sweating of drops of blood were for them Christ wept that they might rejoyce he drunk a cup of gall and vinegar that they might drink a cup of new wine in the Kingdome of Heaven and he wore a Crowne of Thornes that they might weare a Crowne of Glory Oh! be not dismayed at any evill tydings and mourne not as men with out hope notwithstanding the confusion and troubles of the Land of our Nativity Let faith hope and patience be exercised Hope is the propp of the righteous that stayes the soule from falling were it not for hope the heart would breake in these conflicting daies of sin where there are such sad thoughts of heart for the afflictions of Joseph and for the divisions of Reuben We know not what to do we have no strength of our selves but let me tell you as Nehemiah did the Jewes Neh. 8. 10. The joy of the Lord is your strength Hee 's a fountaine inexhausted though the Cisternes of the Creatures are drawne dry he continues a God of strength though all sublunary things are as weak as water when Parents forsake a man then the Lord takes pitty upon him when riches make themselves wings and flye away as an Eagle towards heaven God becomes thy riches and inricheth thee with grace and so thou gainest by thy lossesse As Joseph told Pharaoh God shall give Pharaoh an answer of peace so say I God shall answer thy doubts and let in peace and tranquility into thy soule Melchior Adamus records this observeable passage in Melchior Adamus In vita Oecolampadii the life of Oecolampadius when some of his friends askt him whether the light did not offend him Tangens pectus inquit abunde lucis est he clapt his hands upon his breast and said here 's light enough When the light of God shines in thy bosome and thou discernest Gods reconciled countenance in Christ thou hast enough Strive therefore to exterminate all thoughts of doubtting and diffidence feare not stand still and behold the salvation of the Lord. However things go with thee though clouds hang over thee and they resolve and melt thy heart into abundance of teares and sorrowes yet let my Prophets resolution set thy affections a working yet I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation 2. In the second place suffer I beseech you my brethren the Vse 2. For Exhortation word of Exhortation Oh! that I could perswade you to your duty I shall branch it out into three particulars 1. To make God your joy 2. To account him your treasure 3. To have recourse to him as your refuge 1. Make God your joy There 's no man but hath some principle Dut. 1. Make God your joy of joy or inward working motion within his own bosome and according to the variety of fansies and humours the joyes and comforts are bottom'd upon a various and different ground 1. One man fixeth his joy upon his riches A 2. Upon his honour and reputation A 3. Upon his delights and pleasures But the Godly mans honours riches pleasures are wholly terminated upon the Lord his God When the man in the Gospell had bought the field wherein he found the pearle of price he was ravisht with joy beyond expression and apprehension The grace of God revealed to the soule of man is this Gemme of superlative estimation thou must part with all thy riches pleasures and comforts nay with all the world for this and thou hereby makest the wisest bargaine that ever was made For by the losse of earth thou gainest heaven what joy possest the spirit of the Eunuch after Phillip had baptized him and brought Christ home unto him the Text saith he went away rejoycing Such is the joy of a spiritualliz'd man whose God is his joy and Consolation though troubles and miseries come thick and threefold yet his heart is fixed upon Mount Zion that it cannot be removed nay upon the God of Zion There 's some inward working principle that will swallow up all discomforts whatsoever This spirituall joy dasheth all carnall joyes This is the only true sollid joy arising from Gods reconciled countenance in Christ which makes a man rejoyce in the Holy Ghost with joy unspeakable and full of glory It 's said in Judges that the young Levites heart was glad when the children of Dan proffer'd promotion to him much more joy resides in the spirituall mans soule and conscience when he thinks of his Crownes and of the joyes of Heaven and of the sweet uninterrupted Communion with Jesus Christ unto all eternity Oh! then make God thy joy The serenity of his countenance will dissipate all these clouds the refreshings and those soule ravishing comforts of Christ will infinitely exceed the greatest discomforts in the Universe The joy of the world may be took from thee by the men of the world There are many Anabaptisticall Antiministeriall spirits
Three Decads OF SERMONS Lately Preached to the VNIVERSITY at St MARY'S Church in OXFORD BY HENRY WILKINSON D. D. Principall of Magdalen Hall Eccles 9. 10. Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do do it with thy might for there is no worke nor device nor knowledge nor wisedome in the grave whither thou goest 2 Cor. 5. 14. For the Love of Christ constraineth us ACADEMIA OXON IF SIS OXFORD Printed by H. H. for Thomas Robinson 1660. Almae Venerabili Matri ACADEMIAE OXONIENSI TRES CONCIONVM DECADES in Templo S. MARIae haud ita pridem habitarum In perennis Obsequii Gratitudinis Testimonium D. D. D. Q. L. M. Q. HENRICUS WILKINSONUS The AUTHOR'S Preface to the unprejudiced Reader BE pleased Reader with patience to take notice of and give Credence to this true though brief ensuing Information As for my part being conscious to my self of manifold Failings perhaps more then others can or will acquaint me withall I should have stood in more awe of a Press then in such a Critical Age to have exposed even the best of my Labors to publick view Had not some both eminently Godly and Judicious incouraged me much by their Approbation Amongst whom the * Dr. J. Conant Vice-Chancellor and * Dr. Edw Reynolds Dean of Christ-Church whose Judgements I highly value approved what now comes forth Likewise those several Sermons which I formerly Printed in another Language for the most part were communicated to a * Reverend and Dr. Harris President of Trinity Coll Oxon. Judicious Divine lately gone to Heaven with whom I had intimate acquaintance and always found a faithful Friend by whose Advice they were committed to the Press For Apologies and such like preliminary Discourses I purposely wave as superfluous altogether I have often thought not without great detestation of a proud vain-glorious speech of one not worth the naming Trajectum plantavit Lovanium rigavit Caesar dedit Incrementum Whereupon another made Answer Hic Deus nihil fecit I shall acknowledge Adwickium in Agro Eboracensi plantavit There I was born Oxonium rigavit There I had the greatest part of my Education Christus autem dedit Incrementum The increase and blessing of all I ascribe unto Christ alone Paul may plant and Apollo may water but God alone 1 Cor. 3. 6. giveth the encrease I have read that a Philosopher accounted it as his honor That he was a Man a Citizen and lived in the time of Socrates Much more do I account it my honor to be a Christian and born in a Land where Christ is known And through riches of Grace and Mercy to be born again And to be accounted worthy even such a worthless Instrument as I am to be a Minister of the Gospel of Jesus Christ for whose sake to spend and be spent I account it a far greater honor then to be the Emperor of the World And if the Lord be pleased to make me more Instrumental to gain souls to Christ through Mercy I have already heard of some brought in to my comfort This Mercy I shall value at a higher rate then all the Kingdoms of the World and the glory of them Neither may I pass by in silence for which I cannot be thankful enough Gods gracious dealings with me in my younger years at Gloc●ster where Mr. John Workman Mr. John Langly the Lord blest to my soul the Ministry of a * Holy man of God and likewise the Labors of a * Worthy School-master Further The Lord in mercy afforded unto me great advantages after I was placed in Magdalen-Hall under the Government of * Dr. John wil●inson Principal of Magdalen Hall 43 years my Honored Uncle the vigilant Principal one as I conceive endowed with the spirit of Government where likewise I was well accommodated with a * Dr. Henry wilkinson now Cannon of Ch Ch Religious Learned and Diligent Tutor now an eminent Professor of Divinity in this University These I mention with thankfulness unto God And with Pliny I conceive it Ingenuum confiteri per quos profec●rim As for many of my Brethren who have more Talents entrusted to them then my self I envy not any of them but heartily wish a diligent improvement of them as remembring where much is given much is required For what through Grace is given me I am obliged to be thankful and not hide in a napkin Those Scriptures are as Frontlets before mine eyes and frequent Monitors unto me viz. Eccles 9. 10. Whatsoever thy hand findeth to doe doe it with thy might for there is no work nor device nor knowledge nor wisdom in the grave whither thou goest Joh. 9. 4. I must work the works of him that sent me while it is day The night cometh when no man can work And 2 Cor. 5. 14. The love of Christ constraineth us Upon these Principles I desire to manage all my undertakings and act accordingly Now in an especial manner I present these Sermons as Duty and Gratitude bindes me to the University before whom I Preach'd them I cannot conceal what my heart is so much affected with but must acknowledge with all thankfulness those signal Mercies from Heaven of late extended even to a Miracle that the Ministry and maintenance due thereunto the Universities and their Priviledges are yet secured and rescued from the malitious projects and attempts of unreasonable men who cry with a Stentorean voice against an Universitie as the children of Edom did in the day of Jerusalem Psal 137. 7. Rase rase it even to the Foundation thereof These are of John of Leydens and Wigelius his Faction lately consuted by a * Learned Dr. Arrowsmith in Orat. Aqtiweig●l Professor It 's sufficiently known that men of this Leaven have an evil eye against all Schools of Learning and therefore bespatter and calumniate them that they may more easily make a prey of their Revenues This was the Divelish design of Julian the Apostate to overthrow Schools of Learning and rob them of their maintenance and this was a subtle Stratagem used by him to hinder the succession of Ministers But all sober minded persons who have their eyes in their heads see and cannot but acknowledge the singular and daily use of Publick Nurseries of Learning Maugre all the Aspersions and out-crys of those false tongues set on Fire of Hell From these places of Learning have come forth a Noble Army of Martyrs viz. Cranmer Ridley Latimer Hooper Bradford Tindall Philpot c. who have resisted Popery unto Blood and sealed unto the truth of the Protestant Religion with their own Blood Our Vniversity of Oxford can produce a large Catalogue of eminent Champions for the Truth some whereof were Bradwardin Wickliffe Jewell Fox Jo Reynolds Hooker Ayry Crackenthorp Field Lake Hackwell Benefield Bolton Pemble c. Our publick Professors have been an Ornament unto that Chair and have opposed Rome Racovia Munster c. Their Names are like precious Oyntment poured forth leaving
tidings but rather hearing them as it were in a dreame he cuts the role in peices and casts it into the fire O the Sottish Lethargy of a rebellious sinner Hee 's setled upon his lees at ease in Zion come what will come he thinks himselfe secure that no evill shall happen unto him Security is the harbinger of ruine But wickednesse stands not still it 's a teeming mother though of a spurious issue To make his sinne compleatly sinfull he sends hue and crie to apprehend the prophet and the scribe Heel 'e be reveng'd on the instruments though for the performance of their obliged duty O ungratefull patient who when he hath trampled soveraigne physick under his feet straightway plots the destruction of his physitian but humane power is circumscrib'd with certaine limits and compasses and cannot goe one jot further then the supreme overruling hand permits the motion Man purposeth but the Lord disposeth of that purpose as it pleaseth him God himselfe becomes an hiding place unto his servants But the Lord hid them Jer. 36. 26. the kings expresse commands must be frustrated his messengers must returne without their errand for God hath more worke for the prophet and the scribe A new role must be writ The nationall rebellions must stand upon record legible to posterity This God gives in precept and they immediatly put in execution And over and above the text is expresse in the close of the forecited chapter that there were added besides unto them many like words New rebellions renew their sorrowes and continuance in sin abundantly aggravates the punishment By this time Baruch is perplex'd with multitudes of sorrowes the apprehension of the Kings wrath makes him feare and tremble he is sensible of a burthen too heavy for him to beare the weight whereof mak's him fall groveling unto the ground The Lord becomes the remembrancer of his passionate expressions Thou didst say woe is me now for the Lord hath added greife to my sorrow I fainted in my sighing and find no rect v. 3. Addidit dominus scriptionem Scripti vi one writing after another I hardly scap't for my former writing and now I put my selfe into the very mouth of the lyon adding a second danger to the former and so expose my selfe unto a continuall succession of miseries In the mount in the greatest straits and extremities the Lord will be seene Now comes the Lord and brings out a precious cordiall which he reserv'd for a languishing condition Now he shewes himselfe indeed a very present helpe in this needfull condition and time of trouble Hee 's the good Samaritan he powrs oyle into the wounds and binds them up hee 'l in no wise quench this smoking flax nor breake this Matth. 12. 20. bruised reed O tast and see O Baruch how good and gracious the Lord is to thee in particular There 's an universall conflagration and yet thou art as a brand pluck't out of the burning There 's a generall massacre and yet thy life is given thee for a prey whithersoever thou goest The Prophet brings this tidings from the mouth of God v. 4. behold that which I have built I will breake downe Goodly edifices must be leveld with the ground and not one stone left upon another It followeth and that which I have planted I will pluck up even this whole land The vineyard of Gods own plantation must be laid wast and pluck't up root and branch The Lord when he begins will make an end Laesa patientia fit furor Patience abused breaks forth into extremity of fury his wrath is incens'd and his jealousy burnes hot like fire If any thing questionlesse a showre of teares might quench this burning but their hearts are unbroken their fallow-ground is not plowed up they are past relenting and so shut against themselves a dore of mercy And now O Baruch thou sonne of Neriah where 's thy sympathy why dost not thou call thy comforts Ichabods Dost thou thinke to fare well at home whilst the Church of God is under hatches abroad wouldst thou be in the floate of prosperity whilst the Church is in the ebbe of adversity As the marriners in a tempest rows'd Jonah and cryed what meanest thou O sleeper arise call upon thy God Jonah 1. 6. so say I arise and lay to heart the afflictions of thy brethren When private calamities come in competition with publick let the latter preponderate Thou must not stick to foregoe thy own rest ease tranquility nay thy life it selfe when thou hast a lawfull calling to lay it downe in these times of horrour and confusion Let this advice from heaven in my text have an effectuall influence upon thy spirit tu quaer●res tibi res magnas ne quaerito and seekest thou great things for thy selfe seeke them not My text may be stil'd Baruch's hurt and cure If he or any other Baruchs Hurt and Cure would with the sorcerer bost himselfe to be some great one in the world if he set upon the pursuite of great things in this world an arrow from God will be sent and pierce his soule through with many sorrowes there 's his hurt But if so be he become endowed with a selfe denying spirit so that sublunary things are below his notice he can bid adieu unto them as unsutable to his elevated affections hee 's a man of a singular temper hee 'l discerne a sun of righteousnesse with healing wings there 's his cure So then in the words formally considered there 's a Question and an answere In the Question I recommend three particulars unto 1. An Act. 2. An Object 3. The person your observation 1. An act and seekest thou 2. The Object great things 3. The persons one and the same thou for thy selfe The Prophet anticipates Baruchs answere and gives it himselfe seeke them not This dehortation is diametrically opposite It stands like the Cherubims with a flaming sword to keep the way of the tree of life A sinner rides full speed in a swift career of ungodlinesse Here 's a Remora which purposely meets him and stops his passage Hee 's bid to stand by the watchman of the Lord of Hosts You see then my Brethren what I am to presse upon your affections that ye would get rays'd spirits and sue out a divorce between your selves and the world The Argument of my discourse is Heavenly mindednesse The enlargement of this Theme is most sutable to these present distractions where there are such sad thoughts of heart for the afflictions of Joseph and for the divisions of Reuben Is it now a time for purchasing of Lands and revenues eating the fat and drinking the sweet to solace our selves in all variety of voluptuousnesse and epicurisme to stretch out our selves in beds of Ivory to drinke wine in bowles and yet remaine insensible of the afflictions of Joseph If by such projects as these we seeke to get a name upon earth we may build a Babel of our own confusion
But let us learne to deny our lawfull pleasures and make our teares our meate and drinke imitating St James whose knees as Eusebius records became like camels hooss by the assiduity of his devotion Where 's the man that spares the more either from his Eusebius Eccle. Hist belly or his back that prostrates himselfe in the dust before the throne of Grace whose soule is alike affected with J●remies to weep in secret for the sins of the times I feare our times are just like those before the deluge eating and drinking and making merry God grant that wee imitate not the Swans who as they say sing sweetly before their Funerall Cast your eyes upon the bleeding condition of Ireland and that which comes neerer home the miserable distractions of the land of our Nativity Is mirth jollity seasonable at a Fast or Funerall Is it a discourse sutable for a dying man to talke of honours high places and promotions shall a man drencht in teares pursue pastimes and pleasures shall humility and lowlinesse change the scene into pride and ambition shall poverty invest it selfe with stately robes shalt thou O Baruch when all the world is in combustion be so spiritually benummed as to have thy heart doting upon the momentany pleasures of this wicked world doth thy heart hanker after thy pleasures and with Lots wife doest thou looke back upon the delights of Sodom Let her 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be thy warning peice not to seeke great things for thy selfe Thus having paraphras'd the words I shall prosecute them according to my proposed method intending the question for the doctrinall part of my text and seekest thou great things for thy selfe And the dehortatory answere shall be my use and application seeke them not In the unfolding whereof I shall purposely indeavour to enlarge my selfe in a plaine and familiar discourse making my text my Apology not to seeke great things for my selfe not any sublime composures to gratify any wanton eares of Athens but to condiscend unto the capacity of the meanest Auditor that heares me this day In the prosecution of the words I shall not separate the act from the object they are joyn'd in the sense and therefore I l'e not divide them in my discourse And so I l'e resume them jointly Et quaeris tibi grandia and seekest thou great things And now O Baruch thou sonne of Neriah let me once more on this wise expostulate the matter with thee Is there any such a miablenesse in that thing whereon thy heart is so wholy enamoured doth the object so necessarily conduce to the compleating of thy felicity that with Rachel thou must have it or else die Is thy life bound up in it's life as Jacobs was in Benjamins so that for a moment thou canst not foregoe the fruition of it what is the reason that thou art so possest with so much anxiety of spirit when I see a man bid adieu to all other things and wholly fix himselfe upon one thing alone I presently conjecture that there is some rarity and excellency in that thing which wholy takes up his affections and terminates his acquiescencie as lines in their proper center Let 's then as Moses did turne aside and see what these great things are whether answerable to the report and expectation yea or no. But alas our paines will be to small purpose and the issue parallel to the pains both alike unfruitfull The text calls them great things by which Vatablus and some others understand the gift of prophe●y but this interpretation hath no correspondence with the History and seems Vatablus Theodoretus C. A. Lapide Calv. in Loc. to offer violence to the words But I rather adhere to Theodoret a Lapide Calv. and indeed the generall current of interpreters who by great things understand rest and tranquility an immunity from imminent and apparent dangers a confluence of outward delights and comforts as riches honours and the like Out of an apprehension of the losse of these there arose such grievous complaints and bitter expressions of sorrowes a great infirmity a practise how unsutable unto a servant of God! what was not Baruch promoted to so high an honour as to be the Scribe and Amanuensis of the Lord of Hosts and shall he be so nice and delicate as to account his life more precious then many thousands to preferre his private well-fare before the weale-publick O faint hearted souldier Vriah was of a more Heroicall spirit when David bad him goe home to his house and refresh himselfe after his journey The Arke saith he and Israel and Judah abid in tents and my Lord Ioab and the servants of my Lord are incamped in open feild shall I then goe into my house to eat and to drink and to lie with my wife as thou livest and as 2 Sam. 11. 11. Salu. Bell. Jugur●h thy soule liveth I will not do this thing Marius in Salust discoverd a magnanimous resolution unto his souldiers Doctus sum hiemem aestatem juxta pati humi requiescere e●dem tempore inopiam laborem tolerare A child of God must preferre the welfare of Zion before his private respects and interests he must not dreame of his own personall peace in their publick calamities in times of captivity and Iacobs troubles we must beare a share with them in their sufferings O brave profession of the Kingly prophet Psal 137. 6. If I forget thee O Jerusal●m let my right hand forget her cunning That of Moses must be the good Christians choyce Heb. 11. 25. Rather to suffer affliction with the people of God then to enjoy the pleasures of sin which last but for a season But le ts take a narrower survey of these great things and le ts consider whether they be worth the seeking after yea or no. One man seek's rest and quietnesse these are his great things Naomi sought out a rest for Ruth This man would Induction One man seekes rest and quietnesse faine sit under his own vine and under his own figtree hee 's secure with the men of Laish he resembles the whore who sits as a queen and saith no evill shall happen unto her But ye know the wofull end of the men of Laish Their security exposed them to their enemies rage and fury And that Babylonish strumpet shall have death and mourning and famine even all these plagues come upon her in one day Rev. 18. 8. So the foole in the Gospell and Nebuchadnezzar amidst their vaine glorious boastings were cashier'd of all When Amnons heart was merry with wine then was he slaine The hand-writing came out against Belshazzar and numbred his dayes amid'st his carousing and jollities Agag came delicately but was presently hewed in peices before the Lord in Gilgal Sis●ra tooke his sleepe but never awak't but unto eternity When men seeke rest it will fly from them When Job promis'd rest unto himselfe he could not find it my bones saith he are p●irced
in me in the night season and my sinew's take no rest Job 30. 17. Ponder seriously with thy selfe how David was a man of warres and the sword never departed from his house so perhaps God hath not yet intended for thee a blessing of peace Hee 'l make a souldier of thee to fight his battles hee 'l put thee upon hard services in hard times to try what mettall thou art made of he intends thee for a valiant champion and combatant Take heed then of incurring that fearfull curse of M●roz Jud. 3. 23. who came not to the helpe of the Lord to the helpe of the Lord against the mighty Would'st thou faine sleep in a whole skin when thousands fall besides thee and ten thousands at thy right hand Thinkest thou to be at rest free from all enemies within and without May be God sees it fit in wisdome to exercise thee with some smarting crosse lest otherwise with Jeshurun thou should'st wax fat and kick against the Rock of thy salvation God know's what 's better for thee then thou dost for thy selfe May be its a speciall providence that thou shalt not receive good things in this life nor take thy rest in this world Non ad hoc noc de paradiso voluptatis Bern. ejecit saith Bernard God hath not cast a man out of paradise for him to find another paradise in this world All our rest and quietnesse is in God It 's an observation of the Rabbines that all the letters in the name Jehovah are quiescent And they say ther 's a mystery in it to shew that all our rest is in God alone Domine August fecisti nos pro te in quietum est cor nostrum donec veniat ad te Lord thou hast made us for thee and our heart● is never at rest untill it come unto thee so Augustine We cannot chuse but expect crosses in this world since we live in the valley of teares The Canaanites were thornes in the Israelites sides which the Lord left for their triall such a man is of a proud and haughty spirit God sends an affliction and bids it take downe his pride Another loves his ease and lives carelesly God sends some sharp crosse to scoure away his rust contracted by want of usage The emulation between Rome and Carthage was a foyle to set out each others renoune and valour The skilfullnesse of a Pilot is unknown but in a tempest a Captains valour appeares in the day of battle and a Christians Magnanimity in a fiery triall so then to summe up this particular Let me aske thee are peace and quietnesse an exemption from cares and troubles the great things which thou seekest after O how wilt thou be deceiv'd of thy expectation quaeris magna scilicet quietem tranquilitatem thou seekest great things i. e. rest ease and tranquility invenies misera scilicet motus proc●llas thou shalt find quite contrary hurley-burleyes stormes and tempests Another man seek's for promotion and high places these are A Second man seeks promotions the grandia his great things for the attainment whereof he becomes as very a Parasite as were those sordid flatterers of Dionysius who lick't up his spittle and preferr'd it before N●ctor this is indeed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an unstable man as St James phraseth him who Jam. 1. 8. runs with the tide and varies with the practise of the times so that oft times the humour of his honourable Mecoenas becomes the compasse whereby hee 'l steere the course of his life and conversation But pause a while thou who runst in an eager pursuit after promotion let me aske thee art thou fit for it or if so art thou sure thou shalt not misse of it honor fugientem s●quitur sequentem fugit Honour like the shadow when a man looks towards it it avoids him but if a man turne his back from it it followes him And whence comes promotion It comes neither from the East nor from the West nor from the South But God is the Iudge he●utt●th down one and sett●th up another Psal 75. 6 7. How many verify the proverbe of the Ambitious who have a Pope in their belly How many are their aspiring projects and how unsatiable are their desires Me thinks the practise of David should curbe them who went into the Sanctuary of God and understood their end and that 's specified Psal 73. 18. surely thou did'st set them in slippery places then castest them down into destruction Agrippina temper'd her poysons in that meat which Claudius most delighted And so thy greatest honours may prove thy greatest torments It 's the observation Abulensis of Abulensis that those men of renoune who have been most glorious in the worlds accompt have come to most inglorious ends as Absaloms beauty Sampsons strength Achitophels policy Asahels swiftnesse proved their overthrowes and Alexand●r notwithstanding his great conquests was at the last poisoned Those quatuor summa imperia the Assyrian Persian Graecian and Roman Empires presently came to ruine You know the fatall end of Haman the greatest favourite in King Ahashuerosh Court who erst while was advanc't above all the princes and presently after was elevated higher upon a gallowes O then take heed lest any preferment choake the grace of God in thy soule C. A Lapide hath a story of C. A Lapide Pius quintus Cùm essem religiosus bene sperabam de salute animae meae Cardinalis factus extimui Pontifex creatus pene desper● Every degree of preferment made his condition more disconsolate But my charity hopes better things of you my brethren and such as accompany salvation When I see the failings of my elder Brethren as on ●●e side I abhorre daubing and flattery so on the other side I can in no wise brooke the practise of an undutifull Cham to discover their nakednesse where is probable hopes of amendment If it were possible we should have peace with all men and cover one anothers errors with the mantle of love A bad sense must not be entertain'd when words can admit of a better construction May it never be verifyed of any of us that our young yeares condemne our old and that we grow worse by those dignities which should make us more dutifull Let not O let not your talents be as so many prices put into the hands of fooles for want of hearts to make the best improvement of them What pitty 't is to see and I cannot see it without a bleeding heart that excellent gifts and abilities are so often buried in a napkin or else imployed the contrary way by such who are ingeniose nequam witty enough to their shame and infamy To dismisse this particular instance thou that art so ambitious of honours It 's a great hazard whether thou canst get honours or if got it 's a greater hazard whether thou canst keepe them miserrimum est fuisse faelicem Quaeris magna Honours promotions Invenies
in their greatest estate and confluences yet in comparison of Christ he sets upon them this brand of infamy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luther had such high esteeme of Christ and such a regard unto precious soules as he professeth satius est conturbari Lutheri loc com Adveniat verbum Dei adveniat et si sexcentum habuissemus ora cisummitteremus omnia Baldassar Minist Germ. Acts 17. 34. collidi totum terrarum orbem quam Christum non praedicari c. Baldassar Minister of Germany profest Let the Word of God come let it come if I had 600 necks I would submit unto it T is verified by experience what Luther was wont to say Praedicare verbum Dei nihil aliud est quam derivare in se furorem totius inferni satanae Yet God in his wisdome hath ordained this for a medium to convert soules And where the word of God is preached in sincerity the messengers meete with the same entertainment as Paul at Athens though some mocked and accounted him a babler yet others cleaved unto him Here then my Brethren is a point of wisdome to follow the example of Christ his Apostles and servants It was their wisdome to beget soules unto God It was their principall businesse according to their commission to open their eyes to turne them from darknesse unto light and from the power of Satan unto God Acts 28. 18. Goe you and doe likewise It 's a sound glosse upon the text Ex his colligitur c. Hence we gather wherein consists the Cartwright in locum true praise of Ministers not in others applauding of them and setting forth their parts but here 's their wisdome and knowledg indeed in converting soules unto God So judicious Carthwright 2. I proceed to the other demonstration 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here my taske 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Why it is so Arguments will be in laying downe some Arguments for confirmation of the truth The Arguments I 'le cast into 4 heads 1. In respect of God 2. In respect of the Object 3. In respect of the worke And 4ly In respect of the reward Arg. 1. In respect of God 1. In respect of God God hath a tender care of his own glory and this must be the end of the whole creation And above all the reasonable creature must act in every thing for the attainment of the last end the glory of God Now wherein is God more glorified then in the conversion of soules It s said John 15. 8. Herein is my Father glorified that ye beare much fruit And amidst variety of good fruit this is one of the most sweet and acceptable to God to pluck a sinner out of the Devils snare and convert him to Jesus Christ And this should be the sole end and designe of every one that enters into the Ministeriall function to promote the glory of God in saving of their own soules and those that heare them when this end is first in thine eye and accompanied with a consciencious sedulity in the exercise of the meanes thou mayest expect the blessing of God crowning thy endeavours with good successe And such a person is a man of wisdome who is so highly honoured by God as to be an instrument to convert but one soule unto God Arg. 2. In respect of soules The second Argument is in respect of the object soules and that rationall soules endowed with noble faculties the understanding and the will the very breath of God Gen. 2. 7. The peculiar creation of God not ex traduce not by propagation it 's God that formeth the spirit of man within him Zech. 12. 1. And God is terminus a quo ad quem both Eccl. 12. 7. The spirit shall returne unto God that gave it The soule is immateriall and spirituall a Heavenly borne being not made of the earth as the body was but infused by creation and created by infusion and though the body moulder into A nima creando infunditur insundendo creatur Aug. dust and see corruption yet the soule runs parallel with the longest line of eternity Men and Divels banding together cannot kill the soule And hereupon against perplexing feares and cares Christ gives a seasonable caution Matth. 10. 28. Feare not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soule but rather feare him which is able to destroy both body and soule in Hell Now then in the third place in respect of the excellent work Arg. 3. In respect of the w●r●e employed upon so noble an object as an immortall soule the wisdome of the worker will be more enhaunc't We must know that God is the sole efficient cause of the salvation of a sinner man onlyan instrument subservient to Gods commands To preach pray conserre meditate is the Ministers duty but the successe is the work of God We are earthen vessels encompassed with infirmities men of like passions but in the weaknesse of the instrument the strength of God more eminently appeares and God works by weake meanes men of meane presence and low esteeme amongst men that no flesh may glory ●n his presence and all the honour may redound to God But the Lord had never any speciall service but he raised up persons of suitable spirits for the performance of it Bezaleel and Aholiab were filled with wisdome for building of the tabernacle God raised up the spirits of Ezra Nehemiah Haggai Zacharie Zerubbabel for the reedifying of the temple And now adaies God raiseth up men of heroicall spirits both of the Magistracy and Ministry to carry on the worke of reformation both in Church and State maugre all the hostile oppositions plots and projects of Sanballats and Tobiahs even all Jesuiticall Malignantfactions which are the Pests and Gangrenes of the kingdome Remora's and obstructions of reformation That prophesy doth afford many hopes against in any feares Dan. 9. 25. The street shall be built againe and the walls in troublous times Thus then I argue To conquer potent enemies to subdue places of great strength and reduce them to outward obedience is an argument of wisdome in the conquerours but to subdue unruly affections to conquer mens spirits to winne soules unto Christ this must be a higher piece of wisdome indeed 4. And lastly In respect of the reward the excellency of this wisdome shines forth more clearly He that gaines a soule doth Arg. 4. In respect of the reward an excellent worke so James sets it forth James 5. 19 20. Brethren if any one of you do erre from the truth and one convert him let him know that he which converteth a sinner from the errour of his way shall save a soule from death and shall hide a multitude of sins The very worke it selfe is sometime counted a reward the work and the reward are used assynonymous termes Isay 49 4. Yet surely my judgm●nt is with the Lord and my work with my God And besides no man
ever did nor shall ever goe away a looser by Gods service God keeps the wages 'till afterwards Here we may have an earnest part of payment but the great summe is reserved for another world And they that honour God in bringing converts to the Gospell and making Proselytes to Jesus Christ they are highly honoured of God Them that honour me saith God I will honour 1 Sam. 2. 30. And what honour God will one day put upon them you may read Dan. 12. 3. And they that be wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnesse is the stars for ever and ever such honour hath all his Saints When Andrew shall come in with Achaia by him converted to the truth John with Asia Thomas with India Peter with the Jewes and Paul with the Gentiles and all the Ministers of the Gospell and others whom God hath made instrumentall in this great service when these shall be able to say Behold Lord here we are and the children which thou hast given us then will the Lord say to them well done good and faithfull servants enter into your masters joy And thus I have dispatcht the first head propounded in the second 2. Head The Characters of him that win neth soules Charact. 1. He must abound in love place I am to give in the character of him who of all others is likeliest to win soules how such a one should be qualified I shall represent unto you in these ensuing Characters 1. He must abound in the grace of love his heart must be enflamed with seraphicall love unto Jesus Christ It 's a passage frequently used in Ignatius Epistles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my love is crucified It 's an excellent saying in Paul 2 Cor. 5. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the love of Christ constrains us A faithfull Minister acts altogether from a principle of love to Jesus Christ He prayeth preacheth giveth almes fasteth watcheth and hee 's indefatigable in his labours and what 's the reason or ground of all Because the love of Christ constrains him Then onely are we upon sure grounds when the love of Christ is that primum mobile that sets all the other orbes in their motion and where there 's a principle of love to Jesus Christ there will be shed abroad mutuall love towards our brethren such love was unparalleld in Moses who wish'd himselfe blotted out of the bo●ke of life Exod. 32. 3. And in Paul who wished himselfe an Anathema for the Jewes Rom. 9. 3. Here 's soule love indeed beyond compare O what an ardent affection and tender compassion ought Ministers to have to the soules of their people Love to their soules will make them runne through fire and water grapple with beasts of Ephesus sons of Anak even Herculean labours But where 's love to the fleece onely Mercenary hopes of promotions dignities carnal interest all such self-ends and sinister respects will be but as so many Ignes fatui to lead men away into dangerous and destructive ways It 's onely love to the soul that will set thee a working to good purpose And further he that is thus set on fire with love to Christ and to his Brethrens souls must be a man of such wisdom as to temper all his counsels in love In all his Meditations and Exhortations Love is one main Ingredient in the composition He abhors sin in any and reproves it but whilest he hates the sin he loves the person and whilest he endeavors to slay and utterly to destroy the sin he would gladly be instrumental to save the soul of the sinner This is the rule which the Apostle gives Eph. 4. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some render it speaking some following some doing the truth But if the English word may be admitted it 's rendred most suitable to the Original truthing of it in love 2. He must be a man of a willing minde God expects his offering Charact. 2. A man of a willing minde of the willing hearted Exod. 35. 5. And the people are commended for willingly offering themselves Judg. 5. 2. The question was asked 1 Chron. 29. 5. Who then is willing to consecrate his service to the Lord and it 's said v. 6. Then the chief of the Fathers and the Princes of the tribes of Israel c. offered willingly And Gods people are a willing people people of willingn●sse Psalm 110. 3. Every one set apart for the Ministry must have such a Spirit as Amasiah the Son of Zichri had who willingly offered himself unto the Lord And this was as eminent in Paul And I will very gladly spend 2 Chro. 17. 16. 2 Chro. 12. 15. and be spent for you Necessity and constraint may not put any upon a Ministerial Function Quasi ultimum refugium not an Advowson purchased by the Father and intended for the Son nor an Impropriator who intends his Son for his Substitute at a venture A strange Soloecism saith Mr. Bolt●n that holy man of God a Lay-Rector and not Preach nor a Collegiate Education by Statute enjoyning at such a standing to enter into Orders whereas alass many venter thus upon this calling who have neither heart nor hand to put forth to the work but onely that they might keep their places I say none of those can be a sufficient warrant in point of conscience to take upon them so high a Calling This Calling must be took upon choice and serious deliberation It must be willingly entred upon and willingly performed No thinking of putting thy hand to the Plough and looking back such are not fit for the service of the Lord This must be thy resolution come good report come evil report honor dis honor prosperity or adversity I will give my self up to God as Hannah gave Samuel for a loan all the days of my life 3. He must be a man of a meek spirit such a singular spirit was Charact. 3. A man of a meek spirit in Moses Numb 12. 3. And beyond all parallel in Christ He propounds himself the pattern of our imitation Matth. 11. 29. How must the servant of the Lord be qualified 2 Timothy 2. 24 25. And the servant of the Lord must not strive but be gentle unto all m●n apt to teach patient in meekness instructing those that oppose themselves And how must an erring brother be dealt withal you may observe the rule Gal. 6. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 4. He must be a man of zeal and courage in the cause of God Every Charact. 4. He must be a man of zeal and courage thing is beautiful in its season There 's a season for meekness and a season for zeal Moses who was meek in his own cause yet was highly transported with zeal in the cause of God Some are Boanergesses Sons of Thunder and others are Barnabasses sons of consolation It 's observed that notwithstanding many failings there 's some good spoken of all the
luxuriously and live with Dives deliciously every day Peradventure they give their flock a visit at Sheep-shearing time once a year as the High Priest entred into the Temple and then with blood and indeed a Non-Resident is a soul-murderer who maintains his bravery with the price of blood Fathers and Brethren I love not to lay out my Mothers nakedness but my heart burns in love to your souls and I hope and pray that a through Reformation may go on and prosper and that under no pretence whatsoever Non-residency may be dispensed withal for the future it being Materia pr●rsus indisp●nsabilis For this sin the Scarlet Gowns ought to come down in the dust and wear Sack-cloth Statute Tolerations Dispensations for such and such Dignities local Statutes in Colledges dispensing for such a Lecture and for a Living under such a value all these will prove but sorry fig-leaves to cover thy nakedness Will any of these ●leas serve thy turn at the Audit of the great Judge of Heaven and Earth Will they stop the cry of blood It was said in Suetonius Quintili Vareredde l●giones so will it be said Steward give an account of thy Stewardship Sheep-herd give an account of thy flock Isa 56. 10. where then will dumb dogs as the Holy Ghost stiles them and Idol Shepherds appear They will wish that th● hills might fall upon them and the mountains cover them from the face of the Lamb. In the second place suffer I beseech you my Brethren the Vse 2. For Exhortation word of Exhortation I beseech you by the mercies of God in the bowels of Jesus Christ above all your gettings get this wisdom to gain souls In general it concerns every one to do all the offices of Heb. 10. 24. love they can and to consider one another to prov●ke to love and to good works Let Parents do this for their Children Tutors for the in Scholars they are Pro-parents for the time Masters for their Servants one Friend one Neighbor for another Let any one indifferently learn this Art and put it into practice These Scriptures I commend to your serious considerations and continual practice one is Levit. 19. 17. Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbor and not suffer sin upon him Another is Mal. 3. 16. Then they that feared the Lord spoke often one to another and the Lord hearkned and heard it and a Book of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and thought upon his name A third is Heb. 3. 13. Exhort one another daily whilest it is called to day lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin And in a peculiar and special manner I address my Exhortation unto my Brethren of the Ministry in the Language of the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I put you in remembrance 2 Tim. 1. 16. to stir up your gifts Let not good parts be blasted or lie rusty for want of using If such yet remain here unpurged would there were none who keep their Pastoral Livings and their Founders maintenance living here at ease let the Flock sink or swim I recommend those dreadful Imprecations unto their saddest thoughts Zech. 11. 17. Woe to the Idol Shepheard that leaveth the flock the sword shall be upon his arm and upon his right eye his arm shall be clean dryed up and his right eye utterly darkned And 1 Cor. 9. 16. Wo is unto me if I Preach not the Gospel And for such as are set apart for this Calling and as yet have not a Pastoral cure a particular determination ad hic nunc know that you are Ministers of Christ ordained into the universal Church that 's my Judgement for the benefit of the Church of God in general be not idle and lazy saying No man hath hired us Begin betimes and consecrate your strength and marrow to God And if the first-fruit be holy the whole lump will be sancti●ied Neighbor Villages stand in need of your charity many poor souls ready to starve cry as earnestly for spiritual bread as poor Prisoners for corporal bread And the want of a setled Ministry in several places is occasioned by a scandalous maintenance Give me leave to be importunate in my suit and press your duty farther from th●se moving considerations 1. Consider your high and weighty Calling what a great honour it is to be a Minister of Jesus Christ You are called Ambassadors Consid 1. The Ministers weighty calling 2 Cor. 5. 10. Matth. 5. 13. now Ambassadors must pursue the Instructions of their Commissions and your principal instruction is to beseech people to be reconciled to God You are the salt of the earth and if the salt loose its savour wherewith shall it be salted You are lights and lights must not be put under a bushel you are Stewards and Stewards must be faithful you are Laborers and Laborers may not eat the bread of idleness 2. There 's a price put into your hands you have abilities and opportunities Consid 2. A price put into the hands of Ministers health and strength and if God be pleased to give you hearts the business would be soon done and well done you have helps of Learning helps of an ingenuous Education helps of frequent Preachers dividing the Word faithfully amongst you these are as so many prizes put into your hands to get wisdom the Lord give you an heart to make a spiritual improvement of them Two places of Scripture drawing to a close I would gladly fasten upon your thoughts The one is Eccl. 9. 10. What soever thy hand find th to do do it with thy might for there is no work nor device nor kn●wledge in the grave whither thou goest The other is John 9 4. I must work the works of him that sent me whilst it is day the night cometh when no man can work Thirdly and lastly Consider the strictness of your account at the Consid 3. From the day of accompt day of Judgement Then the Lord will say Give account of thy Stewardship Shepheard give account of thy Flock Watch-man hast thou looked to thy Watch Laborer hast thou wrought in my Vine-yard The consideration of the day of Judgement the day of visitation should awaken your spirits and put you upon a carefull provision against that day Vse 3. In the last place let me close up all with a word of direction Vse 3. ●or direction and I have done according to that little experience I have and the Lord forgive me that I have no more I 'le commend a few rules of direction to you 1. Give your selves to Divine Meditation This was Mose's practice Direct 1. To meditate 1 Tim. 4. 13. in the Mount Isaac's in the Field and a duty prescribed by Paul to Timothy Meditate upon these things Meditation is as it were the wing of the soul to carry it unto Heaven and herein a Ministers
truly of calamities and of their causes shall in silence and with patience worship Gods Justice without any murmuring or scandal David falls not a railing at Shimei he was better instructed then to render railing for railing but he looks at a higher hand and submits So when Iliads of troubles surround thee and one cross follows upon the neck of another as one Wave of the Sea upon another Oh! do not break forth into cursing and reviling but look at the hand of God and say Lord I see thy hand I desire to know thy meaning to be instructed with Ephraim to smite upon my thigh and submit unto thy hand in every thing and I beseech thee what I understand not teach thou me and wherein I have done amiss I will do so no more Job 34. 32. 3. We must wait patiently 3. It 's the nature of Faith to wait patiently This is waiting indeed when with a quiet frame of spirit I expect the fulfilling of the Vision whether it speak good or whether it speak evil I am content my heart is of Davids temper My h●art is fixed O God my Psal 57. 7. heart is fixed I will sing and give praise The Husband-man waits for the Harvest so must we wait patiently for the Harvest of deliverance Delay is the sickness of the soul Patience is the cure of it Patience is the very soul and life of waiting Waiting without patience is inraged sury We must bear Gods anger patiently I will Micah 7. 9. bear the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against him until he plead my cause and execute judgement for me He will bring me forth to the light and I shall behold his righteousness We must wait for that we see not If we saith the Apostle hope for that we see not then Rom. 8. 25. do we with patience wait for it Hence are we commanded In your patience Luke 21. 19. p●ssess ye your souls There 's a Philosopher that hath this expression if the Gods would grant me my desire and bid me ask what I would have I would ask of them this thing That I might have the spirit of Socrates such a composed spirit as he had It 's observed of him and of Cato likewise that they were in such a quiet composed sedate frame that they never changed their countenances upon any thing that befell them This should stir up Christians to beg of God the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit whereof the Apostle 1. Pet. 3. 4. speaks which is in the sight of God of great price Pray hard for the excellency of a quiet composed spirit Come what will if thou be armed with patience it will ward off the blow 4 It 's the duty and property of waiting Christians to exercise Faith 4. We must exercise faith upon the Divine Promises on the Divine Promises A Heathen out of a Cynical stupidity and by Moral Documents may have patience and pass by injuries but he knows not how to believe against sence he 's a stranger to Faith he discerns no excellency in a Promise he cannot live upon a word he knows not how to relie upon a Crucified Saviour and live by Faith on the Son of God But a true Christian waits believingly he lays hold upon Jesus Christ by Faith and lives upon the Divine Promises and applys them by Faith unto his particular condition Faith gives the soul a firm bottom to stand on a strong foundation to build on which is the Word of God Faith saith the Apostle is Heb. 11. 1. Psal 27. 13. the substance of things hoped for and the evid●nce of things not seen There are two great words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I had fainted saith David unless I had beli●ved to see the goodness of the Lord in the land of Rom. 8. 28. the living A Believer knows that all things shall work together for good to them that love God to them who are called according to his purpose Mal. 4. 2. Such Scriptures are his strong Rock But unto you that fear my nam● shall the Son of righteousness arise with healing in his wings and ye shall goe forth and grow up as calves of the s●all For a small moment Isa 54. 7. have I forsak●n thee but with great mercies will I gather thee A Believer Matth. 28. 20. stays himself upon a promise Loe I am with you alway even unto the end of the world He fears not the opposition of men and devils against the Ministry for he knows Christ will uphold them and vindicate their quarrel A Believer knows that the rod of the wicked shall not rest upon the back of the righteous therefore he waits till God take it off He knows that deliverance shall come to the Church that the Lord will build up Zion and appear in his glory that all the enemies shall come and worship before the Churches feet and the shaking of Nations is a harbinger to deliverance Peruse Hag. 2. 7. that great Promise I will shake all nations and the desire of all nations shall come and I will fill with glory this house saith the Lord of hosts A Believer knows that God can bring light out of darkness order out of a Chaos strike a straight line with a crooked stick make the wrath of man turn to his praise and restrain the remainder thereof By Faith Stephen saw Christ when the stones were about his ears And by Faith Job saw a Redeemer upon the Dung-hill And by Faith Moses saw him that vvas invisible amidst Reproaches and Sufferings Faith discerns a Sun-shine approaching amidst cloudyness and dismall darkness Whatever makes against a Believer in a carnal apprehension the spiritual eye of Faith seeth something to make for him So that a Believer hath double nay trebble even multiplyed hopes for single fears It 's the nature of waiting to have Hope for its companion Waiting ● We must wait and hope Lam. 3. 26. Heb. 6. 19. and Hope are conjoyned It is good that a man should both hope and quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord. Hope is the Anchor of the soul both sure and stedfast and which entereth into that within the vail When thou art tossed in the troublesome waves of the World cast anchor and let hope support and stay thy spirit Were it not for hope the heart would break in those days of confusion and misery where there are so many sad thoughts and searchings of heart for the afflictions of Joseph and divisions of Reuben yet we are not without hope Let 's apply that of Ezrah amidst all their sorrows and perplexity Shecaniah the son of J●hiel one of the sons of Elam answered and said unto Ezra We have trespassed against our God Ezra 10. 2. and have taken strange wives of the people of the Land yet now there is h●pe in Israel concerning this thing They fall a making a Covenant and O that we would bewail the
strength and power in the hands of men if they mis-imploy it God can give strength to wounded men to do great exploits For though ye had smitten the Jer. 37. 10. whole army of the Caldeans that fight against you and there remained but wounded men among them yet should they rise up every man in his tent and burn this city with fire And God can cause the lame to take the prey Thy tacklings are loosed they could not well strengthen their Isa 33. 23. mast they could not spread the sail then is the prey of a great spoil divided the lame take the prey Let us leave off murmuring and repining and wait to see what God will do with us and for us His time is next He will bring to pass his own work his own way to his own glory The third and last Argument I shall name shall be drawn from Arg. 3. Drawn from the benefit of waiting Isa 40. 31. the singular benefit and utility of the duty Art thou weak wait and thou shalt receive strength They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength they shall mount up on wings as eagles they shall run and not be weary they shall walk and not faint Art thou afraid of shame and disgrace lest contempt and ignominy be cast upon the Church of God see what the Prophet Isaiah saith It is he that sitteth upon the circle of the earth and the inhabitants thereof are as grashoppers Isa 40. 22 23. that stretcheth out the heaven as a curtain and spreadeth them out as a tent to dwell in that bringeth the Princes to nothing he maketh the Judges of the earth as vanity Dost thou desire Gods blessing wait and thou shalt have it And therefore doth the Lord wait that he Isa 30. 18. may be gracious unto you and therefore will he be exalted that he may have mercy upon you For the Lord is a God of judgement Blessed are all they that wait for him God knows when and how to help his Cum duplicātur lateres venit Deus Isa 3● 9 10 people In the mount God will be seen When the Bricks were doubled then came God and delivered the Israelites from their Aegyptian bondage The earth mourneth languisheth Leban●n is ashamed and hewed down Sharon is like a wilderness and Bashan and Carm●l shake off their fruits Now will I rise saith the Lord now will I be exalted now will I lift up my self When helps from earth have been cut off then help came from Heaven When Abraham was stretching forth his hand to kill Isaac then the Angel said Stay thy hand When David was hemm'd in on every side then a way was made for his escape by the Philistines Invasion When Paul was a killing and they were beating of him to beat out his life then came news of an Insurrection in Jerusalem and by that diversion Paul was repreived God hath a way of escape for his people in Fire and Water When thou passest thorow the waters I will be with thee and thorow the Isa 43. 2 3. rivers they shall not over-fl●w thee when thou walk●st thorow the fire thou shalt not be burnt neither shall the flame kindle upon thee Sometimes they have their lives for a prey other times they are made a prey and suffer in a common calamity Yet though the Saints suffer they have an hiding-place And a man shall be as an hiding-place from Isa 32. 2. the wind and a covert from the tempest as rivers of water in a dry place as the shaddow of a great rock in a weary land They have a Pella a Zoar sometimes where they may securely escape with their lives yet they have always a refuge and shelter in the Divine Promises They have a rock higher then themselves from the end of the earth saith the Psalmist will I cry unto thee when my heart is overwhelmed Psalm 61. 2. lead me to the rock that is higher then I. It 's an obliged duty to wait upon the Counsels of God By waiting we may look for good successe because we goe Gods way by murmuring or reviling we cannot look for comfort because we goe the way of flesh and blood By patience the pain and anguish of our fore is mitigated by impatience it corrodes and is inrag'd Thus far of the Doctrinal part I shall improve all unto four Use 1. For Terror Uses viz. For Reprehension Exhortation Direction and Consolation It breathes forth terror and severe reproof unto the murmuring spirits of these present times Never more complaining in our Streets Oh! we would have peace upon any tearms when will the Sword be put into the sheath when shall the Kingdom be setled That complaint is frequently taken up Hast thou utterly rejected Judah Hath thy soul loathed Zion Why hast thou smitten us and Jer. 14. 1● there is no healing for us we looked for peace and there is no good and for the time of healing but behold trouble For Answer I expostulate with Jehu What Peace What Peace with Rome What Peace with Benhadad What Peace with falshood Peace upon such tearms will prove but a Body massacring a Soul-murdering Peace What Peace with our lusts and corruptions Till they be slaughtered what peace can we expect Can we expect a cessation of punishing before there be a cessation of sinning Can we expect peace with men as long as we continue at War with God For all those Monethly Fasts and days of Humiliation where 's a serious Reformation of our hearts and lives You know how hasty Saul was he forced himself to sacrifice and would not stay till Samuel came it cost him his Kingdom The Israelites would not wait Gods time but were hasty for an encounter with the Amalekites and you may see what they got by it they fell before them and were discomfited unto Hormah Then the Amalekites came down and the Canaanites that dwelt in the hill and smote Numb 14. 45. them and discomfited them even unto Hormah And what 's the ground of this hastiness of spirit It 's infidelity because we believe not God upon his Word we are such hot spurres we out-run Providence and antidate Deliverance We go devised ways untract pathes according to secret impulses quite contrary to the rode of the Word did we believe the faithfulness of God That he is faithful that hath promised that the gates of hell shall not prevail against his Church we should possess our selves with patience and wait quietly for deliverance We usually say that hasty men never want woe Rash preproperous and preposterous practices are the ruine of practitioners An impatient man is a gate without an hinge Janua sine cardine What shame is it for a Christian to be like Hercules furens or like the Demoniack mentioned in the Gospel rending and tearing himself An impatient male-contented person is Felo de se his own Executioner What a weakness was it in
shee highly deserved it as being one of the worst of Haereticks An ingenuous spirit relents with teares Ille dolet qu●ties cogitur esse ferox Iudgment must bee given with abundance of humanitie and commiseration And now Right Honorable and the rest beloved in the Lord Iesus give me leave for a close of the whole to apply all in a word of exhortation Let mee divide to every one his portion You that sit in Iudgment remember the text Establish judgment Vse for exhortation c. Consider your Authority in what an eminent place you are set lay out your dignity to doe God and your Countrey good service You are a Beacon set upon a Hill the whole country gazeth upon you There are many eyes upon you and if you swerve from the rule of Iustice the people will serve you as the Levite served his Concubine they will quarter your faults and send them up and down the Kingdome with a was it ever thus I commend Jehoshaphats counsell to your serious consideration 2 Chron 19. 6. 7. Hee said to the Judges Take heed what you doe for yee judge not for man but for the Lord who is with you in the judgment wherefore let the feare of the Lord bee upon you take heed and doe it for there is no Iniquity with the Lord our God nor respect of persons nor taking of gifts You are summoned and have a charge given you by the spirit of God Psal 2 10. Bee wise now therefore yee Kinges and bee instructed yee Judges of the earth You have the name Elohim Psal 82. 6. I have said yee are Gods and all of you are children of the most high Doe you as God would doe Hee would relieve the oppressed acquit the innocent condemne the nocent stand for the poore man in a righteous cause Hee would have Achans Zimri●s Cosbies Blasphemers Murderers Idolaters Adulterers punished Remember I humbly entreat you that Iustice is God's Legacy and you are Executours and Administratours thereof be carefull to have the will of God performed I beseech your patience in a few humble requests which I shall make unto you before I conclude I intreat you for poore Prisoners for their soules and bodies For To the Judges their soules that they may have some to teach them the Knowledge of God And for their bodies that they may not bee starved in prison lye in a pit wherein is no water Prisons are oft times Nurseries of all wickedness and that which is a place of restraint is imployed in all manner of licentious outrage so that none are more vile and wicked than Iaylours and their Prisoners 2. I intreat you to incourage the faithfull ministry of the Kingdome As for Baals or Bacchus Priests that make God's sacrifice to be abhorred I wish an Ostracisme to them a tumbling out of their places if they evidence not signall Repentance I plead only for men pious orthodox learned help them to bread help them to bookes If the nurse bee starved the child will bee starved Help them to encounter with the mighty who refuse to pay them their dues because they dare not give the Sacrament to them that are Scandalous when as many times such as they refuse are fitter to go a grazing with Nebucadnezzar amongst the beasts of the field Because some Conscientious ministers have refused to give the Sacrament to drunkards swearers and adulterers some have detained their maintenance from them 3. I have a word to speake in behalfe of this University I speak to a Person of learning my argument is maintaine that my Lord which maintaines you Wee desire no Prelaticall Pompe or domination but only our just rights and priviledges that Religion and learning may be countenanced by your Authority 4. I have a word to speak for the Town I beseech you subdue the Ale-houses the Nurseries of the Divell Ther 's a good expedient and a pious worke begun very lately a work-house and some poore are set to worke in it I humbly crave your incouragement and counsell that it may not be crusht in the Bud nor sinke for want of your assistance And you the honourable Bench the Iustices of the County I beseech To the ●ono●●ble bench you to lay forth all your Interests to promote the Kingdome of Iesus Christ Labour to bee as so many instrumentall Saviours for your Countrey punish swearing and blasphemies There is an Act in the beginning of Q. Eliz that such as maintained Heresies condemned by the foure Generall Counsels should be burnt to ashes You have a late Ordinance of Parliament for your warrant nay rather the Ordinance of God Levit. 24. 16. Hee that blasphemeth the name of the Lord h●e shall surely bee put to death and all the congregation shall certainly stone him as well the stranger as hee that is borne in the land when hee blasphemeth the name of the Lord shall bee put to death Try your skill and put forth your skill to subdue the lewd Ale-houses Mr Bolton said in an Assise sermon that it was easier to take Dunkirke than put down an Ale-house Dunkirke was not long since taken would the Ale-houses were put downe You must seare these Hydras else new heads will spring up Give not any just cause to any to complaine that the Justice sweares himselfe and will not punish swearing that the Justice is a good fellow himselfe and will not punish drunkenness I hope better things of you Purge your families keep no swearers drunkards adulterers sabath-breakers within your roofe Give them not harbour for secular Interest but resolve that if they will not serve God let them not serve you according to Joshuas practice chap. 24. 15. If it seeme evill unto you to serve the Lord chuse you this day whom you will serve whether the God's which your fathers served that were on the other side of the flood or the Gods of the Amorites in whose land yee dwell but as for mee and my house wee will serve the Lord. Set the 101 Ps as a just standard rule to go by TheMaxime of Constantius was He cannot be faithfull unto mee that is unfaithfull unto God Remember the National Covenant taken in a day of distress for which there will bee a day of account to goe before each other in a reall example of reformation That Covenant is not an Almanack out of date but obligeth us as the Tenour runs all the dayes of our life You the learned Lawyers I have a word to say to you To the Lawyers Doe not patronize unrighteous causes Set not your tongues to sale to bolster a bad cause See Isai 5. 20. Woe unto them that call evill good and good evill and put darkness for light and light for darkness that put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter Doe not wire-draw Clients suites Doe not snarle and intangle a cause with needless perplexities to tire out the poore Client with tedious attendances Take heed likewise of base mercenarie silence
people and exiles from the Covenant in the day of their distresses much more will he comfort his own people A father will not take care of a Kite and neglect his child Hagar was comforted and Ishmael in a necessary instant when the bottle was spent and they knew not what to doe Further in temporall mercies God answereth his people seasonably When Aegypt's flower was spent then it rained Mannah I may instance in Sampsons thirst Elijahs fasting c. An Angel a Raven a Brook a Widow-woman were his Purveyers But I 'le enlarge the proofe in spirituall things and persons Daniel found divine assistance in the Lions den Dan. chap. 6. 22. chap. 9. 21 22. My God hath sent his Angel and hath shut the Lions mouthes that they have not hurt mee Forasmuch as before him innocency was found in mee and also before thee O King have I done noe hurt chap. 9. Yea whiles I was speaking in praier even the man Gabriel whom I had seene in the vision at the beginning being caused to fly swiftly touched me about the time of evening oblation David amidst multitudes of distracting thoughts found God his comfort Ps 94. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within mee thy comforts delight my soule Paul in a ●ore conflict met with seasonable refreshing comforts 2 Cor. 12. 9. And he said unto mee my grace is sufficient for thee for my strength is made perfect in weakenesse most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities that the power of Christ may rest upon mee so true is that Ps 126. 1. When the Lord turned againe the captivity of Zion we were like them that dreame then was our mouth filled with laughter and our tongue with singing Then said they among the Heathen the Lord hath done great thinges for them Isai 16. 1 2 3. The spirit of the Lord God is upon mee because the Lord hath anointed me to preach good tidings unto the meeke he hath sent me to binde up the broken hearted to proclaime liberty to the captives and the opening of the prison to them that are bound to proclaime the acceptable yeare of the Lord and the day of vengeance of our God to comfort all that mourne to appoint unto them that mourne in Zion to give unto them beauty for ashes the oyl of joy for mourning the garment of praise for the spirit of heavinesse that they might be called trees of righteousnesse the planting of the Lord that he might be glorified When there 's a double tale of bricks required Cum duplicantur lateres veni● deus then comes God and brings deliverance when 430 yeares for Israels comming out of Aegypt 70 for comming out of Babylon 13 for the daughter of Abraham 36 for the impotent cripple were expired then came seasonable deliverance So for morning for sin In that day and whilst Mary was weeping Christ came When the Disciples were going to Emmaus and discoursing of Christ then comes Christ and cleares up their judgments 2 Scripture Reasons Reason 1. The scripture reasons are 1. Because God hath prefixed and limited a peculiar time for deliverance When the fit season is come the appointed time of God then deliverance will come and will not tarry Heb. 10. 36 37. For yee have need of patience that after ye have done the will of God ye might receive the promise for yet a little while and he that shall come will come and will not tarry 2. God would have a people prepared for him Mat. 3. 3. This Reason 2 is he that was spoken of by the Prophet Esaias saying The voice of one crying in the wildernesse Prepare ye the way of the Lord make his paths straight 3. The price of the mercy will be the more esteemed O how Reason 3 welcome was a deliverance to Israel in the brick-Kilne misery will make us priz● mercy at the highest rate 4. The greater glory will redound to God when he helpes at a Reason 4 time of need Ps 46. 1. God is our refuge and strength a very present help in trouble 5. It 's usuall with God to looke upon a people in a low estate that Reason 5 it may appeare that none but a God can bring deliverance Isai 33. 9. 10. The earth mourneth and languisheth Lebanon is ashamed and h●wen downe Sharon is like a wildernesse and Bashan and Carmel shake off their fruits Now will I rise saith the Lord now will I be exalted now will I lift up my selfe Deut. 32. 36. For the Lord shall judge his people and repent himselfe for his servants when he seeth that their power is gone and there is none shut up or left 2 Kings 14. 26. For the Lord saw the affliction of Israel that it was very bitter for there was not any shut up nor any left nor any helper for Israel Thus was the poore woman healed by Iesus Christ when she lost all upon Physitians And joy came after a great mourning in my text 6. All the gifts and graces of the spirit will be set a working viz. Reason 6 of prayer faith love hope patience and when joy comes as the birth and issue of all these O how welcome will deliverance be Now I le cast the scripture counsells into an use of exhortation Vse 1 1. Be exhorted to possesse your soules with patience Luke 21. ●9 In your patience possesse ye your soules Heb. 10. 36. For yee have need of patience that after yee have done the will of God yee might receive the promise Be patient waite quietly upon God 2. Encourage your selves in God so did David 1 Sam 30. 6. 3. Learn to live by faith Heb. 2. 4. The just shall live by faith 4. Be much in prayer Aske and ye shall receive 5. Limit not the holy one of Israel to times or meanes It was the Israelites great fault in Limiting the holy one of Israel 6. Take heed of omitting duties or of abating of love zeale meditation c. Adde to thy duties If God send not comfort at one time it may come at another and that may be a more convenient time Knock harder cry lowder wrestle tug harder at the oare But the other doctrine is the Principall which I intend and I Doctrine 2 shall handle it more largly That there 's a fountaine c. The invitations are many Isai 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth come yee to the waters and he that hath no mon●y come ye bye and eat yea come buy wine and milke without money and without price Iohn 7. 37. If any man thirst let him come unto me and drinke Rev. 22. 17. And the spirit and the bride say Come and let him that heareth say come And let him that is athirst come And whosoever will let him come and take of the waters of life freely Rev. 21. 6. I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountaine of the water of life freely And the vertues of this fountaine are set forth John 4. 14.
Fountaine is opened and men apprehend their thirst they will hasten to the waters 4. The fountaine is opened because God sends messengers to 4. God sends Messengers to invite invite and guides to direct to it The ministers Embass●e is to invite men and women to come unto this Fountaine to perswade them to reconciliation 2 Cor. 5. 20. Now then wee are Embassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you by us wee pray you in Christs stead to bee reconciled unto God It 's our maine business to beseech and intreat men to take Christ and to come unto this fountaine 5. Now is the day of grace the opportunity season offered from 5. Now is the day of grace God a price put into our hands Now Christ tenders himselfe and his benefits Now the counsel is a word in due season Isai 55. 6 7. Seek yee the Lord while hee may bee found and call upon him while hee is near Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him returne unto the Lord and hee will have mercy 6. The Lord opens to us upon him and to our God for hee will abundantly pardon 6. The Lord himselfe now opens to us and this is evident because hee knocks for us to open to him Rev. 3. 20. Behold I stand 6. The Lord opens to us at the dore and knock if any man heare my voice and open the dore I will come in unto him and I will sup with him and he with mee And the Lord affords us severall Hammers to knock at his dore withall viz. especially 4. Hammers God useth to knock withall 1. The Hammer of his word Every sermon you heare is a 1. Hammer of the word knocking at the do●res of your hearts God makes use of his Messengers as his mouth Jer. 15. 19. Thou shalt stand before mee and if thou take forth the precious from the vile thou shalt bee as my mouth However the Ministers of God be despised and evill intreated Christ accounts the affronts offered to them equall to those hee met withall immediately offered unto himselfe Luk 10. 10. But into whatsoever City you enter and they receive you not goe out into the streets of the same and say even the very dust of your City that cleaveth on us wee shak off against you By the sermons you heare God knocks at your hearts Ezek. 25. and Ezek. 33. 30 31 32 33. They speak each one to another saying Come and heare what is the word that commeth forth from the Lord they sit before thee as my people and heare thy wordes but will not doe them 2. The hammer of his spirit The spirit breatheth upon the waters 2. Hammer of the spirit How many strivinges waitings whispers of the spirit are there to draw us unto God Wee are exhorted not to quench the spirit nor grieve the spirit The Lord will once say as Gen. 6. 3. My spirit shall not alwayes strive with man 3. The Hammer of mercies God knocks at our hearts by mercies peace prosperity Ther 's a prevalent exhortation Rom. 12. 1. 3. Hammer of mercies I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God that yee present your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service To us he speakes by mercies Wee are brands pluckt out of the burning and have our lives for a prey 'T is mercy wee enjoy peace in our Borders wee are free as yet from the Plague Famine and the sword wee enjoy the peace of the Gospell and the Gospel of peace 4. God knockes sometimes by the Hammers of judgment sometimes 4. The Hammer of Judgments by the Sword Plague and other Calamities though at present we are free our duty is Jer. 6. 8. Bee thou instructed O Jerusalem lest my soule depart from thee lest I make thee desolate and a land not inhabited Wee should learne righteousness at all times especially when judgments are amongst us Isai 26. 9. With my soule have I desired thee in the night yea with my spirit within mee will I se●k thee earely for when thy judgments are in the earth the inhabitants of the world will learne righteousness Micah 6. 9. Heare yee th● rod who hath appointed it It appeares farther that the fountaine is opened because God God affords the right key One false key is Free-will hath afforded us the right keys to open it There are three false keyes and foure true keyes The first false Key is free-will O saith the sinner I le repent hereafter I shall have time enough But is repentance in thy power Velle naturae malè velle corruptae naturae b●ne velle gratiae Phil. 2. 13. For it is God who worketh in you both to will and to doe of his own good pleasure Jam. 1. 18. Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth that wee should bee a kind of first fruites of his Creatures Free-will is an Aegyptian reed it will deceive us Jer. 10. 23. O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe it is not in man that walk●th to direct his steps Sams●ns case is very observable Judg. 16. 20. And shee said the Philistines be upon thee Samson and hee awoke out of sleep and said I will goe out as at other times before and shake my selfe and he wist not that the Lord was departed from him Man can undoe himselfe and marre himselfe but cannot save himselfe Hos 13. 9. O Israel thou hast destroyed thy selfe but in me is thy help 2. A second false key is universal grace and redemption Christ died A 2d false key is universal Redemption for all say some tasted death for every man for Cain and Judas as well as David and Paul many plead and think by this key to open the Fountaine but it 's a false key and will not unlock the fountain Dore. The latter part of the Text which they urge expounds the former they urge Joh. 316. God so loved the world that hee gave his only begotten-Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have life everlasting And that in 2 Cor. 5. 15. And that hee died for all But what followeth that they which live should not h●nceforth live unto themselves but unto him who died for them and rose againe They urge likewise Heb. 2. 9. But wee see Jesus who was made a little lower than the Angels for the suffering of death crowned with glory and honour that hee by the grace of God should tast death for every man The grace and free love of God moved him to bestow this transcendent benefit on his people only not for the whole world Rom. 5. 18. Therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men to justification of life Here is hended the universality of Christ's body Adam was a common
Root and brought death unto all his Posterity And Christ was a common Root and brought life unto all his Posterity They urge likewise Joh. 1. 29. Behold the lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world A. Those in the world whom he loveth washeth and justifieth it 's not universall not singula gen●rum but genera singulorum Compare this with Mat. 1. 21. And shee shall bring forth a son and thou shalt call his name Jesus for hee shall save his people from their sinnes The third false key is presumption of long life and mercy Neither A third false key Presumption of long life space nor grace are in thine own power God gave Jezabel space but denyed her grace Rev. 2. 21. And I gave her space to repent of her fornication and shee repented not This presumption hath ruined many a soule Many neglect their opportunities run their swinge and career in sinne and presume of mercy but the dore of mercy is shut against them and this key cannot unlock it Now God affords foure true keyes 1. Knowledge The eyes are opened to see the fountaine to 1. True key knowledge look up to the brasen serpent The knowledge of the worth of Christ provokes us to come to him God's people have inlightned judgements they are renewed in the spirit of their minds Eph. 4. 23. 2. Faith to believe that ther 's virtue enough in Christ to cure all 2. True key Faith our diseases both of body and soule Matth 9. 21. For shee said within her selfe if I may but touch his garment I shall be whole 3. Love And this will make us take many journies long and dangerous through fowle weather and it will sweeten all The 3. True key Love beloved object when enjoyed will make amends for all the waiting for it 4. Repentance mourning for sinne Repentance in us causeth 4. True key Repentance God to repent and make his bowels like the sounding of an Harp Jer. 31. 18 19 20. I have heard Ephraim bemoaning himselfe thus Thou hast chastised mee and I was chastised as a Bullock unaccustomed to the yoake turne thou mee and I shall be turned for thou art the Lord my God Surely after that I was turned I repented and after that I was instructed I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed even confounded I did b●are the reproach of my youth Is Ephraim my deare son Is he a pleasant child for since I spake against him I doe earnestly remember him still therefore my bowels are troubled for him I will surely have mercy upon him saith the Lord. You must understand these clave non errante not as if the fountaine was merited for any of these duties for when wee have done all wee can we must acknowledge that wee are unprofitable servants But God hath afforded these meanes keyes and helpes we must make use of them but may not make them our Christs and our Saviours 5. I will adde a 5th Praier This is a key to open and shut 5th True key prayer Heaven James 5. 17 18. Elias was a man subject to like passions as we are and hee prayed earnestly that it might not raine and it rained not upon the earth by the space of three yeares and six months And he prayed againe and the h●aven gave raine and the earth brought forth her fruit Pray that God would wash thee and cleanse thee Psal 51. 10. Create in mee O Lord a cleane heart and ren●w a right spirit within mee 3. I proceed to the third head propounded For whom is this 3. For whom is this Fountaine opened fountaine opened To give in my answer ' I le lay down this truth by way of corollary inferred from the premises That the fountaine of free grace is only opened to the adopted children of God This I shall open and apply briefly for opening whereof I shall propound these ensuing considerations 1. God from all eternity hath elected a peculiar people unto himselfe Consid 1. God from all eternity hath elected a peculiar people unto himselfe according to his owngood pleasure and purpose of his will Now election is of here and there one It 's an act of choice taking some and passing by others Jer. 3. 14. Turne O backsliding children saith the Lord for I am married unto you and I will take you one of a City and two of a familie and I will bring you unto Zion Like gleaning grapes Isai 17. 6. Yet gleaning grapes shall be left in it as the shak●ing of an olive tree two or three berries in the top of the uppermost bough foure or five in the utmost fruitfull branches thereof saith the Lord God of Israel This election hath no other motive but free love and grace Wee were in our blood Ezek. 16. 5 When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thy own blood I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live yea I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live No provision of faith or Repentance mooved God to set his heart upon us as appeares Rom. 9. 11. For the children being not yet borne neither haveing done any good or evill that the purpose of God according to election might stand not of work●s but of him that calleth c. This Postulatum being laid down for undeniable God from all eternity hath elected a peculiar people Hence I frame this syllogisme only the elect have interest in the fountaine of free grace and mercy But only God's adopted children are elect ergo they only have interest in it 2. There are a peculiar people who alone are justified by the free grace of God in Christ Rom. 5. 1. Being justified by faith wee have Consid 2. There are a peculiar poople justified by free grace p●ace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ Rom. 3. 24. Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ Now thus I argue Only justified persons have interest in the fountaine of Christ's blood But the sons of God by grace and adoption are only justified persons Ergo they alone have interest in the fountaine of Christ's blood Psal 32. 1 2. Blessed is hee whose trangression is forgiven whose sinne is covered Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity and in whose spirit there is no guil● Iustification is a forensicall terme took from an earthly Tribunal where a person arraign'd and condemned is afterward by virtue of a pardon acquitted 3ly Consider there are a peculiar people effectually called Many Consid 3. There are a peculiar people effectually called have an outward calling and take upon them an outward profession few are inwardly and effectually called This the Apostle presseth 2 Pet. 1. 10. Wherefore the rather brethren give diligence to make your calling and election sure for if you doe these things you shall never fall There are a few and but a very few called out of the world partakers
And such were some of you but yee are washed but yee are sanctified but yee are justifyd in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the spirit of our God You then that are washt in this fountaine rejoyce and bee glad that your names are written in the book of life that you have received a white stone a new name the hidden Mannah Stand then admiring and praising God that hath done so graciously for you that when many even the greatest part of the world are shut out cannot find the Dore are denyed the right key and the fountaine is lockt and barr'd against them yet it 's opened wide to thee thou art washt and cleansed in this fountaine Not any goodness in thee but free grace and mercy makes the difference Whatever aspersions calumnies reproaches thou meetest withall in the world from ungodly men bee of good comfort all is washt away by the bloud of Jesus Christ The world casts dirt on thee Christ washeth thee cleane O then doe not desponde doe not droop as without hope by reason of hardships sufferings evill entreaties in and from the world Drinke of the waters of this fountaine They are the Restorative to revive and refresh thy spirit Thou meetest with diseases corporall spirituall oh come to this fountaine It s a medicine made up of the blood of Jesus Christ It will cure both diseases of soule and body Thou seest by experience that the Cisternes of the creatures are dried up Honours Pleasures Profits decay and faile tarry not at these cisternes goe to the fountaine it 's inexhausted Thy manifold sinnes trouble and torment thee sinne is a havy burden upon the conscience thou art afraid to come O! bee not afraid to do good unto thy own soule This fountaine workes miracles cleanseth the Aethiopian and the Leopards spots even a persecuting Paul a perjur'd Peter an adulterous David and it is not shut against thee unless thou shut out thy selse Bee then of good comsort you that are God's children amidst your fainting fits you have this Aqua vitae In your diseases and sores you have this soveraigne plaister Amidst your pollutions and defilements you have a fountaine opened wide to wash and cleanse you in In diseases afflictions pollutions and all conditions whatsoever repaire to this fountaine the streames are healing reviving refreshing streames O but my sins are a barre against mee Ans Art thou sensible of sinnes thou art the fitter to goe bewaile thy sinnes allow not thy selfe in them Though sinne lockes the Fountaine dore yet free grace will open it wide againe O! But I have been there and have not found any virtue Ans Goe againe The virtues of medicines are not presently discerned Medicines may worke when thou least thinkest of them A sermon preacht now if the Lord work by it may doe good many a yeare after Imitate Eliah's servant who went over and over againe at last a cloud was seen which maskt the whole Heaven O but I question whether I have any right to come it 's opened only to the house of David Ans Doe not shut out thy selfe doe not destroy thy selfe the Invitation is very large Isai 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth let let him come c. If thou dost but thirst thou hast an invitation To this purpose I proceed to a second use which is for Vse 2. for Examination Examination Let 's search andtry whether wee have right to come whether wee are so qualified as to receive benefit and virtue by this fountaine I shall therefore propound 7 Qualifications 1. Wee must see fully and discerne the emptiness of all creature Qualif 1. Wee may see the emptiness of creature Cisternes cisterns Jer. 2. 13. My people have committed two evils they have forsaken mee the fountaine of living waters and hewed them out cisternes broken cisternes that can hold no water Creature cisternes are broken they run through as a sive le ts water fall to the ground or are quite drawne dry Honour could not satisfie Haman Riches could not satisfie Solomon Luther would not so bee satisfied valdè protestatus sum me n●lle satiari ab co 2. Discerne their vanitie and emptiness wee must forsake them Qualif 2. We emust forsake Cisterne Comforts Isai 55. 2. Wherefore doe doe you spend mony for that which is not bread and your labour for that which satisfieth not hearken diligently unto mee and eat yee that which is good and let your soule delight it selfe in fatness Wee must forsake these lying vanities wee must not stay by them wee must relinquish them and leane no more to broken staves but value the world at it's own rate and breake off all carnall confidences wee must bid honours riches profits pleasures adieu so farre forth as they stand in competition with or opposition unto Christ 3. Wee must bee sensible of the want and necessitie wee have of Qualif 3. Wee must bee sensible of the necessity of Christ Christ that wee are poore blind miserable and naked Wee must apprehend our selves stung with the fierie Serpent 4. Wee must discerne fulness and Excellency in Jesus Christ Qualif 4. Wee must discerne fulnesse in Christ beauty wisdome holiness abundance of virtue flowing from him There are cleansing and healing streames in this fountaine Emptiness discerned in our selves will enhance Christ's wroth Scarcity raiseth the market 5. Wee must come with faith to bee healed In the whole dispensation Qualif 5. Wee must come with faith to be healed of Christ's miracles ther 's a question premised believest thou or a condition interposed be it unto thee as thou believest 6. Mourne for sinne like the mourning of Hadadrimm●n in the valley of Megiddo They who mourne for sin are prepared to wash Qualif 6. Wee must mourne for sin in this fountaine Their eyes are blubbered for sinne and they come and wash themselves in this fountaine 7ly and lastly Wee must come in the strength of Christ Wee Qualif 7. Wee must come in the strength of Christ can doe nothing without him Cant. 1. 4. Draw mee wee will run after thee Noe man commeth unto mee except the father draw him Wee must performe our duties in the strength of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through Christ that strengthneth us The third use shall bee for exhortation This hath two parts Vse 3. For Exhortation Generall and speciall 1. In generall My invitation from God is for all to come in and wash in this fountaine Christ is here offered and tendered to all The Brasen Serpent is erected upon a pole The free grace of the Gospel is enlarged mercy is exalted O come come in quickly and accept of Christ O! that God would worke upon your hearts this day to imbrace the free tenders of the Gospel of Iesus Christ Now the fountaine is open come unto it but you must bee thirsty have a spiritual appetite else you will never come It is not a bare comming Take heed least
if unlawful happy art thou that God deprives thee of them 'T is a sign that the Parents have a tender love to their children when they take away a Knife from them for fear lest they should hurt themselves with it So 't is mercy when God cuts thee off and deprives thee of such Delights and Pleasures which if thou hadst liberty to enjoy therewith thou wouldst dishonor Almighty God Object 2. A second Objection is How are the ways of God ways of pleasantness when they require abundance of Humiliation brinish Tears sorrow for sin and is not this irksome and unpleasant A. There 's more sweetness in this which thou callest bitternesse I mean godly sorrow for sin then in all the pleasures of the world for as in the laughter of the wicked the heart is sorrowful so in the sorrow of the godly the heart laughs and rejoyceth Christ turns these Waters into Wine Call not the tears of repentance Marah but Naomi In the winding up we shall finde that the tears of repentance are not bitter waters but sweet refreshing waters Every tear in thy eye is a Pearl in Gods eye Every tear is exhal'd into Gods bottle All the laughter of the wicked is Risus Sardonicus Their greatest merriments are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luther hath an excellent saying Vna guttula malae conscientiae totum mare mundani gaudii absorbet But the godly rejoyce in their sufferings Rom. 5. 3. And not onely so but we glory in tribulations They have inward joy amidst outward sorrows VVhen their cheeks run down with tears they have a chearful spirit something they feel of comfort coming in They have a principle of Joy within them from the apprehension of Gods love in Christ and this swallows up all sorrows One glimpse of Christs countenance will swallow up an Ocean of sorrows And this will appear in two or three Particulars 1. The work of Humiliation hath the melting work of the Gospel The Law breaks but the Gospel melts the heart No such kindly working upon the heart as mercy bowels opened and the goodness of God To sin against these will deepliest affect the heart When a soul is humbled for sinning against mercy and goodness and the heart is melted and dissolved into tears there must be pleasantness and sweetness in these because they proceed from such a Principle even the Principle of the melting work of the Gospel and this cannot have much bitterness in it 2. The Soul in the work of Humiliation melting before the Lord easeth it self of abundance of sin We say Leves curae loquuntur Sen. Trag. ingentes stupent When people can shed tears thereby they ease their heart but when the heart is so opprest as the eyes cannot shed tears the sorrow or passion of the heart is greater and more dangerous By weeping for sin thou dost ease and rid thy self of abundance of sin thy heart feels some joy and draws and sucks some sweetness out of these bitter herbs 3. In the work of Humiliation there 's much delight because the soul hath much delight in looking back to that sorrow it hath had The wicked rejoyce in their pleasures the godly rejoyce in their tears Epaminondas went sad about the City when the Thebanes were a revelling when others have been in May-games and Merriments and lascivious Enterludes it will cheer up thy spirit that thou hast been sorrowing for thy sin Object 3. But thirdly it 's Objected That godliness puts us upon hard services we shall meet with many scandals great sufferings and persecutions for the name of Christ we shall meet with sore temptations and tryals Peradventure we may be brought to fry at a Stake for Christ How then can the ways of godliness be ways of pleasantness A. Notwithstanding the hardest sufferings that the heart of a godly man shall meet withal yet there 's that delight in the ways of godliness as to uphold the heart under all sufferings and carry it on sweetly How much did the Martyrs rejoyce They kist the Stake welcomm'd Fire and Fagot some of them leapt for joy wrote singular Letters for the confirmation of their Brethren Godlyness will carry thee chearfully through sufferings It will make thee account thy Chains as Ornaments thy Prison thy Palace thy Dungeon thy Paradise Gods people suck sweetness out of the bitterest hearbs They finde an Honey-comb in the carcass of Lyons They never see so much of God in prosperity as adversity Never do they feel more inward comforts then amidst outward sorrows for then God settles the tranquility of their spirits and the serenity of their consciences Christ appeared to Mary weeping to Jacob at Bethel to Elias after forty days fasting God brings forth his Cordials to his people in their forest tryals so that whatever sorrows hardships and troubles they meet withal abroad yet they have joy at home and though they may make many a hard meal yet a good conscience is to them a continual feast There 's one Objection more which I shall answer and then proceed Object 4. Some object from common experience When people come into the ways of godliness they do not finde that delight and joy as they had before The world observes them to be more melancholy and of a heavy dumpish spirit This is a meer calumny of the Devils raising to keep men off from the ways of God This is a great pull-back and Remora to the conversion of many souls I shall give a more full and I hope satisfactory Answer to the Objection in these following Considerations 1. Religion denys not civil courteous and affable behaviour Consid 1. Religion denys not civil behaviour Religion forbids not a chearful disposition Nay there 's a Judgement threatned to the contrary Deut. 28. 47. Because thou servedst not the Lord thy God with joyfulness and with gladness of heart therefore shalt thou serve thine enemies saith the Lord. A churlish Nabal is a dishonor to Religion Take heed therefore of discrediting the Gospel by your sad melancholy spirits lest the world bring an evil report upon the ways of godliness None have such chearful spirits as true Believers Their heart is full and must have a vent their tongues countenances carriages will shew that they have comfort in God But secondly consider thou maist mistake Gods children Thou Consid 2. Gods children are serious accountest that sadness and sorrow which is seriousness gravity and a stay'd compos'd carriage The carriage of Gods children must be sober and grave their words serious season'd with salt and their whole conversation must be such as may adorn their profession Phil. 1. 27. Onely let your conversation be as becometh the Gospell of Christ 3. Consider Gods people may appear sad because they are out Consid 3. Gods children are sad when out of their element of their element When the Fish is out of its element of Water it cannot enjoy it self Birds do not ordinarily sing upon the ground
c. No peace with lusts no peace in the ways of wickedness Isa 57. 20 21. But the wicked are like the troubled sea when it cannot rest whose waters cast up mire and dirt Th●re is no peace saith my God to the wicked Whatever jollity and quietness wicked persons enjoy from without yet there 's war at home A tortur'd conscience will dash all thy sports But a childe of God though wars may be without yet he injoys peace at home with God and a good conscience I shewed formerly the causes of peace wicked men want all these God is their enemy Christ their enemy The Gospel thunders out Anathema's against them As for those mine enemies that would not have me to reign over them bring them out and slay them before me For Instruction 1. Be instructed in these particular Duties 1. Select the ways of godliness and walk close in them Turn neither to the right hand nor to the left Walk straight forward and square all your actions by the rule which is the Word of God When men relinquish their callings and walk out of Gods ways then troubles and calamities befall them and they can take no comfort in them But when thou walkest exactly and keepest close to God whatever crosses befall thee thou maist take comfort inward peace thou maist injoy in the midst of outward troubles 2. Get a spiritual acquaintance with God Job 22. 21. Acquaint thy self with him and be at peace thereby good shall come unto thee Job 34. 29. When he giveth quietness who can make trouble and when he hideth his face who then can behold him Get thy peace made in heaven 3. Prize at an invaluable rate the pearl of a good conscience and take heed of sinning against thy conscience Wouldst thou walk without trouble walk uprightly as was before mention'd for it 's undoubtedly true That he that walketh uprightly walketh truly but he that perverteth his ways shall be known 'T is true offences will come and many scandals and hardships we shall meet withal in our way to Heaven But if we can 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we shall be as bold as Lyons Uprightness onely hath boldness The upright is as bold as a Lyon 4. Choose any affliction rather then wound thy conscience by the least sin Job 36. 21. Take heed regard not iniquity for this hast thou chosen rather then affliction To procure peace with men O do not hazzard thy peace with God and the serenity of a good conscience No peace like to the peace of a good conscience Here 's comfort to Gods people Amidst all their troubles they injoy abundance of peace The serenity of a good conscience quiets their spirits so that the fiercest turbulent Euroclydons cannot shake them Object O but I have many perplexities of conscience I go mourning all the day long God shooteth his keen Shafts at me and vexeth me in his sore displeasure 1. For answer I demand Art thou weary of the burthen of thy sins and art thou sensible of thy insupportable burthen Art thou acquainted with thy miserable condition and apprehensive of thy wretchedness 2. Dost thou willingly allow thy self in no sin though never so secret though sin of delight or constitution 3. Dost thou desire grace for to sanctifie thee as well as mercy to pardon thee Wouldst thou rather be rid of thy sins then the punishments due to them Then thy condition is full of hope And I shall propose these counsels to thee 1. To lie in the way where Christ comes by at the Pool of Bethesda 2. Unbare thy Wounds unto him Look unto the Brazen Serpent 3. Stand not in thine own light but hearken to Gods voice in his Messengers Psal 85. 8. I will hear what God the Lord will say for he will speak peace unto his people and to his saints but let not them turn again unto folly 4. Continue thy duties Adde more Oyl to the flame Be more swift to hear more fervent in the spirit When God holds up thy spirit to continue chearfully in the performance of thy duty there 's mercy in store for thee 5. Remove all hinderances of thy peace all murmuring discontented expressions If peace comes not as soon as thou wouldst have it take heed of Rachels passionate language Give me children or else I die 6. Cherish those motions of the spirit and feelings that Christ puts into thy heart When Christ gives thee one good look O make much of it 'T is mercy thou hast one good look O set a high prize of it Christ sometimes comes and dines and sups with his Spouse and then she is overjoyed other while he absents himself from her then she 's sick for him Now whenever Christ inspires a good motion into thy heart be sure thou cherish it When ever he smiles upon thee O! observe it and make much of it And seventhly and lastly VVait and resolve not to be driven from thy Fathers dore Though he slay thee yet put thy trust in him Though he be angry with thee yet still praise him Wrestle with him as Jacob did and at last thy desires will be granted and thy joy shall be full The dignity of the Soul Mark 8. 36. For what shall it profit a man if he shall gaine the Serm. 10. St Maries Oxon. March 10. 1650. whole world and lose his own soule OUr Saviour Christ in the verses immediately foregoing exhorteth his disciples to deny themselves v. 34. Hee lays down a Reason verse the 35th wherein he prevents a tacit objection Is it not good methinks to look to our selves and to sleep in a whole skin No thou mistakest thy selfe whilest thou thinkest to save thy life thou will lose it For whosoever c. But further they might say wee must bid adieu to the world our losse will be wonderfull great But compare thy losse and gain together If thou gainest the world O miserable gaine oh dreadfull losse if in the interim thou hazardest thy pretious soule For what shall it profit us c. The words are a weighty reason evidently convincing us of this truth That the gaine of the world is a miserable unprofitable gaine purchased with the losse of the soule The words are propounded by way of question and containe virtually a vehement negation As if he should say The gaine of the world will not profit there 's no comparison the world is base and contemptible the soule excellent and invaluable Is there any compare between gold and drosse excellency and baseness the soule and the world Wherein observe Division 1. The things compared the soule and the world 2ly The purchaser A man 3ly The price pay'd and shall lose c. 4ly 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. The purchase The whole world 5ly The miserable bad bargaine What shall it profit c. I 'le a little insist in the explication of the words and then draw forth the Doctrines contain'd in them Here 's a question propounded of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
expectation of Novel Opinions and Phrases and as for the failings either of Author or Printer be pleased to cover them with the Mantle of a charitable Interpretation I beg thy Prayers and commend these Labours to thy acceptance and commit thee unto Gods gracious providence I remain Thy Servant for Christs sake Henry Wilkinson The Contents of this Second Decad. SERM. I. JOb 13. 26. For thou writest bitter things against me and makest to possesse the inquities of my youth The Text divided p. 2. and explained by answering 5. Queries 1. What 's meant by bitter things p. 3. 2. What 's meant by writing of them p. 3. 3. What 's meant by the sins of youth p. 4. 4. What 's meant by possessing the sins of youth p. 5. 5. Why doth Job a holy man whose sins were pardoned complain of himself p. 6. Doct. That sins committed in our youth will cause much smart and bitternesse in our elder years Method of handling the Doctrine 1. By Scripture proof p. 7. 2. By three Reasons 1. D●awn from the rule of Justice p. 8. Reas 2. Drawn from the nature and quality of sin p. 9. Reas 3. Drawn from four Aggravations of youthfull sins viz. 1. They are committed with a great deal of violence p. 9. 2. They are committed with abundance of delight p. 10. 3. Young men make many vain pretences ibid. 4. Youthfull sinnes are committed after many Invitations Calls and Warnings p. 11. 3. By improving all in four Uses 1. For Humiliation p. 12 13 14. Here are four sins especially reproved 1. Voluptuousness p. 15. 2. Contempt of Superiours p. 16. 3. Affectation of Novelty p. 17. 4. Pride p. 18. Use 2. For Exhortation p. 19. Four Considerations are prest 1. From Gods Omniscience p. 20. 2. God keeps Record ibid. 3. Consider what sinne will cost thee ibid. 4. Consider the four last things p. 21 22. Use 3. For Direction 1. Be humbled for all sins p. 22. 2. Look through thy Humiliation to Christ p. 23. 3. Walk circumspectly ibid. Use 4. For Consolation ibid. SERM. II. Gen. 6. 3. And the Lord said my Spirit shall not alwaies strive with man for that he also is flesh yet his dayes shall be an hundred and twenty years The Text Divided and Explained p. 28 29. Doct. 1. That it is a most dreadfull judgement upon a people when the Spirit of God refuseth to strive any longer with them p. 30. Doct. 2. That it 's an exceeding great mercy to a people when the Lord vouchsafeth them time and space of Repentance ibid. Method of handling the first Doctrine 1. From Scripture Testimony p. 30 31 32. Three signes of Night 1 When shadows grow long p. 32. 2. When wild beasts goe abroad and 3ly when Labourers go to their rest p. 33. 2. Seven wayes the Spirit strives 1. By its Motions p. 35. 36. 2. By the Ministery of the Word p. 37 38. 3. By the checks and convictions of conscience p. 39 40. A fourfold Rule for examining of conscience p. 40. 4. By the tenders of mercies p. 41. 5. By the exercise of patience p. 42. 6. By National Judgements p. 43. 7. By Personal Judgements p. 44. SERM. III. upon the same Text viz. Gen. 6. 3. 3. Reas 1. Because man is flesh p. 45 46. Reas 2. Because the Spirit is a free Agent p. 47. Reas 3. Drawn from the rule of Divine Justice p. 48 49. 4. For Application Use 1. For Information of the greatnesse of the Judgement when the Spirit ceaseth striving in 4. Aggravations 1. God takes away his Ordinances p. 50. 2. God suffers not the Spirit to work by the Ordinances 3. God gives them over to a Spirit of delusion ibid. 4. God gives them over to a hard heart p. 53. ●se 2. For Exhortation Three Morives 1. From the brevity of our lives p. 55. 2. From the Vncertainty of the Spirits striving ibid. 3. From the certainty of the Day of Judgement p. 56. Use 3. For Reproof of 4. sorts of persons especially 1. Such as contemne the Spirit p. 56. 2. Such as are barren and unfruitfull p. 57. 3. Such as are secure p. 57. 4. Impenitent persons p. 57. Use 4. for Examination in three Queries 1. How we may distinguish the strivings of Gods Spirit from a spirit of error and delusion p. 58 59. 2. How we may distinguish the strivings of Gods Spirit from our own spirit p. 59. 3. How we may know whether Gods Spirit hath effectually stroven with us p. 59 60. Use 5. for Direction in four particulars p. 60. Use 6. for Consolation Doct. 2. That it is an exceeding great mercy when the Lord vouchsafes unto any person time and space for Repentance p. 60. Reas 1. To glorifie the Riches of Gods Mercy p. 61. Reas 2. To glorifie his Justice ibid. Reas 3. At the request of Gods servants many are spared ibid. Vse 1. For admiration of Gods infinite mercy Vse 2. For terrour unto presumptuous sinners Convictions 1. It 's great folly to put off Repentance 2. It argues great contempt 3. It argues high presumption Use 3. for Exhortation in four Considerations 1. Now the Spirit strives 2. Now is the limited time 3. Now is the accepted time 4. Now once past cannot be recalled Use 4. for Caution in five particulars 63 64. The 5. ●se for Admonition in five particulars p. 64 65. The 6. Vse is for Comfort ibid. SERM. IV. 2 Pet. 3. 11. Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godlynesse The Coherence and Text explained and divided p. 65 66 67 68. Doct. That the serious consideration of the day of Judgement should in an especial manner engage us unto an holy life and conversation p. 69. Method of handling the Doctrine 1. By Scripture Testimony p. 69 70. 2. By evidence of three Reasons 1. Because onely holy persons shall be able to stand in judgement p. 71. Q. Whether the Saints shall have their sins mentioned at the day of Judgement p. 71. Reas 2. This is the present time ibid. Reas 3. Judgement returns all as death leaves them p. 72. 3. By particular Application in five Vses 1. For terrour unto three sorts 1. Scoffers at holynesse p. 73. 2. Hypocrites p. 74. 3. Secret sinners p. 75. Vse 2. for Exhortation p. 76 77. 9. Motives 1. We are elected unto Holynesse p. 78. 2. We are created unto Holynesse ibid. 3. We are redeemed to be holy ibid. 4. It s Gods will that we should be holy ibid. 5. Holynesse is our calling p. 79. 6. Heaven is a place for holy persons ibid. 7. There shall be holy employment ibid. 8. There shall be holy company ibid. 9. This is the time of labouring after holynesse ibid. Use 3. for Examination in 12. Characters 1. Spiritual poverty p. 80. 2. High estimation of Jesus Christ ibid. 3. The heart is in love with holynesse p. 81. 4. Irgenuous sorrow for sinne ibid. 5.
be such a bitter sorrow for sin as for the losse of a first-born like the mourning of Hadad-rimmon in the valley of Megiddo Peter denyed shamefully and wept bitterly David watered his Couch with his tears Mary Magdalen out of whom Christ cast seven Devils washt Christs feet with her tears and wip'd them with the hair of her head Let it be bitter to remember that thou hast been so undutiful to so gracious a God that thou hast provoked such a merciful God to wrath whose nature is to shew mercy O how this consideration should melt thy heart into a soul-reforming sorrow Sins may be compared to the waters of Marah so bitter as none could drink of them Sin is a very bitter thing it produceth bitter effects But God shewed Dir. 2. Look through all Humiliations unto Jesus Christ Moses a Tree which made the Waters of Marah sweet The bitter Tears of Repentance and the most bitter afflictions which sin produceth will end in joy to those that are truly penitent 2. Though thou must be humbled and he that was never humbled never truly believed yet thou must not rest in thy humiliation but look unto Jesus Christ for a cure Thou must be sensible of the stings and wounds of sin and look unto Jesus Christ by the eye of Faith for a cure He is our peace Eph. 2. 14. No reconciliation but by him 2 Cor. 5. 19. No way to get healing pardon salvation but by him sue then out a Pardon sealed by the Blood of Christ O pray that be would cancel the hand-writing against thee and that by his Blood he would Justifie Sanctifie and Save thee No name no Mediator no Blood can make an Atonement for thee but this Blood of Sprinkling which speaks better things then the Blood of Abel 3. Having got a pardon through the Blood of Christ walk Dir. 3. Walk circu●●spectly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Qui exacte vivunt nolunt vel in minimis deficere cedere solent enim vel minutissima observare Favorinus circums●ectly in thy whole conversation Eph. 15. 5. There is an Emphasis in the Adverb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bids be watchful and circumspect take heed of re-acting thy youthful sins ●ill be renewing thy repentance and pray for more manifestation of Gods love unto thy soul 4. And lastly To conclude here is one word of comfort unto those upon whom God hath poured the Spirit of Repentance Old people that have truly repented of their sins shall have them imputed unto Christ and Christs righteousness unto them for Justification and let them read their blessedness Psalm 32. 1 2. Happy are they whose souls are washt white in the blood of the Use 4. For Consolation Lamb You that mourn for sin you shall be comforted You that bewail your sins and hate them and endeavor to walk closely with God in a holy conformity to his will you shall have this hand-writing blotted out And whether your sorrow be right and genuine you must try it by those Apostolical Characters 2 Cor. 7. 10 11. Let no man apply comfort to himself but upon Gospel terms And to you that are young upon whose hearts God hath wrought saving Grace in your tender years I must pronounce comfort to you Happy is it with you that God hath begun with you betimes and hath planted his fear in your hearts betimes You have heard how dear youthful sins cost many in their elder years O now be advised take warning fly youthful sins labour to be grave and serious in your carriages God hath done much for you what will you do for him speak good of his name advance his glory incourage your fellows to come unto God Remember that counsel which Christ gives Peter When thou art converted streng then thy brethren I beseech you all in the fear of God in the close of my Sermon to beware of youthful levity There is Mr. Jeremy Burroughs a great deal of frothy with amongst young men A Reverend Divine now with God used to pray That of all spirits God would be pleased to deliver him from a frothy spirit Beware of foolish Jesting Though the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be allowed in Aristotle yet it is condemned by St. Paul Eph. 5. 4. Let young Timothy be a patern for your imitation of whom Paul had such confidence And always labor to cleanse your ways according to that rule which I shall leave with you for a close of all Psal 119. v. 9. By taking heed thereto according to the word Iudgement and Mercy Set forth upon Gen. 6. 3. And the Lord said My spirit shall not always strive with man for that he also is flesh yet his days shall be an hundred and twenty years IN the precedent Chapter you have the Genealogy of the long Serm. 2. At St. Mary's Oxon. Jan. 12. 1652. Gen. 5. 27. liv'd Patriarchs of the old World It 's observable that every ones particular age is exactly reckon'd and though they lived some more some fewer years yet every one agrees in the same conclusion And he dyed Methuselah who lived the longest of all lived nine hundred sixty and nine years and he dyed The longest livers saw death and could not deliver themselves from the hand of the Grave These ancient Fathers though dead may be said to live in their Posterities They left behinde them a numerous off-spring the Earth is full of people and mankinde is now multiplyed into multitudes v. 1. And as the People so their wickednesses are multiplyed The more people the more sinners O stupendious ingratitude God multiplies their off-spring and revives their memory in the fruit of their loyns For what are Parents of many Children but themselves so much the more multiplyed yet these wicked Wretches by how much the more God encreased and multiplyed them in their Posterity by so much the more they encreased and multiplyed their wickedness against him their Creator And now their abominations are come to the full and they are ripe for destruction The Lord exercised Mercies bowels of Mercies patience long-suffering towards them waiting upon them many years Preaching to them by the Patriarchs calling them to Repentance and notwithstanding all the loving kindnesses forbearances patient expectations of a gracious God ye● they remain obstinate refractory incorrigible whereupon the Lord will not suffer his patience to be abused any longer his Servants and Ministry to be contemned his Holy Spirit to be grieved v. 7 8. The Creatures were made for the service of Man both he and they should be took away together Man was the Lord over the Creatures and when he was took away what use would there be of them as Chrysostome observes Man had abused the Creatures over which he had dominion Master and Servants both fall together thus the whole Creation gro●neth by reason of mans Apostacy from God As the Beasts were made for Man so they became subject 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quod
subjiciuntur Contra ingenium naturae suae agnoscamus naturam Dei quae cogit illa nostris usibus inservire Pet. Mart. Poenitentia Dei est Mutādorum immutabilis ratio August Hunc adulterinum degenerum pro meo jam agnoscere dedignor Calv. in Loc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 omni die 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 70 Inter. Sedes vitae sedes animae principium intellectus vo luntatis affectnum mo●um to vanity and destruction through Mans iniquity Rom. 8. 20 22. But this sharp Sentence God pronounceth with a great deal of reluctancy he is said to repent in this verse and v. 6. both to repent and be grieved at his heart This is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 repentance cannot in a proper sense be attributed to God Repentance in God is the unchangeable disposition of changeable things as Augustine observes God may will a change where he doth not change his will There 's no change in the Creator the change is in the Creature and here we may see how God takes upon him our affections and so condescends to our capacity As we repent and are grieved when any thing displeaseth us so God here speaking after the manner of men is said to repent and grieve Hence we may observe what an hainous and abominable thing sin is that causeth God to grieve Calvin on the place supposeth God pleading on this wise This is not my work this is not the man created after mine Image endowed with such noble faculties this adulterous and degenerate world I scorn to own for mine But wherein consists the greatness of the sins of the old World against whom the Lord threatens destruction You have a general charge given in by God himself v. 5. compared with Gen. 8. 21. It 's said there The imagination of mans heart is evil from his youth They were habituated in wickedness generally both heart and life stark n●ught they were gray hair'd in wickedness and now arrived at the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the highest point and degree of impiety and the heart which the Philosophers say is the seat of life and Scripture saith It is the seat of the soul and principle of the understanding will affections and motions this is depraved and become the forge of all abominations It 's said Every imagination of the thoughts of his heart were onely evil continually Of this change in general the Lord gives a clear proof by particulars v. 2. The sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair c. By sons of God some understand Angels This was the conjecture of Tertullian Justin Martyr Clemens Alexardrinus and others But Chrysostome urgeth that Scripture which to me seems a full confutation of their opinion Matth. 22. 30. In the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage but are as the angels of God in heaven Others understand by sons of God the sons of Princes and those great Personages that liv'd in those days I shall rather wave these ●xpositions and concur with Calvin Luther Musculus Ainsworth and other solid Commentators who unanimously by Sons of God understand the Posterity of Seth such as were the sons of God by external Profession the men of the Church of God and these took the daughters of men i. e. The Posterity of Cain The holy Seed mingled themselves with the prophane Seed they looked at naught 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 70 Interp. else besides Beauty and satisfaction of ●usts Beauty was the * object of their Love This desire of Beauty was the Harbinger of their ruine It seems they took any Women whatsoever having no regard to goodness no regard to God none to their Parents advice they made their own choice Beauty Lust Violence their own will was the rule they went by and might prevail'd above right Violence and power carryed all before them v. 4. some derive the word quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sons of the Earth This Etymology savors of a Poetical Figment therefore I discard it altogether The word in the Original is Nephilim it comes from Naphal to fall they were Apo●ates and fell from God and by reason of their tyranny and cruelty caused many to fall before them It 's said Haggibburim they were mighty men The Caldee calls them Gibbaraja mighty men So Nimrod was Gibbor mighty Gen. 10. 8. He hunted souls he was a monstrous Tyrant and Persecutor of the Church of God These men were famous they had a great name but they were famous onely for oppression and cruelty their Will was their L●w and their strength and might bore down all before them They got power and a name by the Injuries and Persecutions which they exercised upon the Church of God Calvin gives a remarkable observation That it was the Haec prima fuit mundi nobilitas nequis longa famosa imaginum serie nimium sibi placeat Calv. in Loc. first Nobility of the world That no one should too much please himself with a long and famous series of Images of Ancestors And Luther gives another note writing of the fame of these wicked Gyants and the renown they got by their Villanies he compares them to the Popes Cardinals and Bishops who would not be called by those names they deserved they would not be called Tyrants Impious Qui salutantur principes regna tenerent non Tyranni c. sed clementissimi sanctissimi reverendissimi appellantur Luth. Sacrilegious but Merciful Holy Reverend So the renown of these Gyants is mentioned for their Villanies They were famous Oppressors cruel Blood-suckers wicked Tyrants And thus you have a draught of the old World set before your view Their crying sins were prophaneness of heart and life promiscuous Marriages Polygamies contempt of God and Parents Oppressions Cruelty and Persecution They had many warnings from God many reproofs and admonitions by the Ministry of the Patriarchs and all in vain wherefore the Lord threatens in the Text My spirit shall not always strive c. Which words are a Sermon Preach'd by the great God of Heaven and Earth to the old wicked World which Sermon is a Patern and the Archetipam for Ministers to Preach by and consists of Judgement and Mercy 1. Here 's a dreadful Judgement or a sad Commination of Divis 1. A Judgement and the reason thereof the heaviest punishment that can befall a people on this side Hell My spirit c. 2. Here 's a strong reason to enforce For that he also is flesh In the Mercy contained in the Text. 1. You have something implyed It s said Not always implying that it hath striven some time and a long time too In Justice God might cut sinners asunder in the midst of their rebellions and send them to Hell But O the infinite mercy and patience of God thus to strive at all and to strive so long with rebellious sinners 2. Here 's a mercy
tum in Romana captivitate testantur palam Hist●riae fieri hoc denique quotidie testatur experientia Timeamus ergo Dominum simusque palmites fructiferi ne post hanc vitam eliam tradamur igni sempiterno B●lling hill and he fenced it and gathered out the stones thereof and planted it with the choicest vine and built a Tower in the midst of it and also made a wine-press therein and he looked that it should bring forth grapes and it brought forth wilde grapes c. But all is labor lost v. 5 6. And now go too I will tell you what I will do with my vineyard I will take away the hedge thereof and it shall be eaten up and break down the wall thereof and it shall be troden and I will lay it waste it shall not be pruned nor digged but there shall come up bryars and thorns I also will command the clouds that they rain no rain upon it * They had many choice spirited Prophets Isaiah Hosea and Jeremiah c. They were knotty pieces wherefore the Lord hewed them by the Prophets Hos 6. 5. Therefore I have hewed them by the Prophets I have slain them by the words of my mouth and thy judgements are as the light that goeth forth They had warning upon warning Prophet after Prophet yet no more hope of doing them any good and working reformation upon them then of changing the Aethiopians skin or Leopards spots Jer. 13. 23. Can the Aethiopian change his skin or the Leopard his spots then may ye also do good who are accustomed to do evil Now let us hear the doom God will smite them no more Isa 1. 5. Why should ye be stricken any more ye will revolt more and more the whole head is sick and the whole heart faint God will not let them fare the better for those righteous persons that are amongst them who are Advocates for them Jer. 15. 1. Though Moses and Samuel stood before me yet my minde could not be towards this people cast them out of my sight and let them go forth So Ezek. 14. 20. Though Noah Daniel and Job were in it as I live saith the Lord God they shall deliver neither son nor daughter they shall but deliver their own souls by their righteousness Further God will straiten the spirit of Prayer in his Prophets Jer. 7. 14 15 16. Therefore will I doe unto this house which is called by name as I have done to Shiloh and I will cast you out of my sight as I have cast out all your brethren even the whole seed of Ephraim Wherefore pray not thou for this people neither lift up cry nor prayer for them neither make intercession to me for I will not hear thee Ephraim he is obstinate and incorrigible I will strive no longer by reproofs and admonitions let him be fill'd with his own ways He is given to idols let him alone Hos 4. 17. Luseris operā fi ad poenitentiā invitaris Ephraim Gravissima est poena relinqui à Deo Vatab. It 's a dreadful Judgement upon Jerusalem Luke 19. 42. If thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things which belong unto thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes This is further implyed in the parable of the fruitless fig-tree Luke 13. 7. Behold these three years I come seeking fruit on this fig-tree and finde none cut it down why cumbreth it the ground All these are Types and Examples and as so many warning-pieces unto us God waited a long time upon them woed and intreated them by the Ministry of his Messengers to come in and repent but they as much as in them lay tryed conclusions with God and ungrateful wretches as they were strove to tire out and weary the patience and long-suffering of God wherefore his spirit would strive no longer with them and when Gods spirit will no longer strive what 's the sequel but ruine and destruction Let us reflect upon our selves in Israels glass we may behold our own faces and they will gather blackness The inferences we should make are set down Luke 13. 5. I tell you nay but except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish And Amos 4. 12. Therefore thus will I do unto thee O Israel and because I will do thus unto thee prepare to meet thy God O Israel Likewise I will adde Zeph. 2. 1. Gather your selves together yea gather together O nation not desired before the decree bring forth c. Some Reverend Divines have given three Signs of night 1. When the shadows grow long when wilde Beasts go abroad 1. When shadows grow long it is a sign of night and when Labourers go to their rest Now he 's a meer stranger in Israel who knows not how of late years Shadows fruitless and ridiculous Ceremonies have been advanced and stickled for and violence hath been offered unto many tender consciences Hinc illae lachrymae Many godly Ministers with their Families have been ruin'd for non-conformity and others have been forced to leave the Land of their Nativity when as in the mean time the fundamentals of Religion Faith Repentance Love Regeneration were neglected and much discountenanced and the zealous Preachers of these Doctrines stigmatized with the odious nick-names of Puritans which in a proper sense is that proud Heresie of Novatus as Eusebius records in his Ecclesiastical History But Euseb Eccles Hist through the iniquity of the time was used as a brand of Infamy to reproach the most strict and conscientious Professors Secondly Wilde Beasts went abroad Then those of the Tyrannical 2. Wilde Beasts go abroad Prelacy persecuted the old Puritans under the name of non-Conformists May such persons never range again under more plausible names and specious pretences or more covertly like wolves but in sheeps cloathing I wish the Jesuite may appear bare-faced that we may know him and beware of him It is a plain Jesuitical design to set Brethren together by the ears in circumstantial matters and so make them almost dispute and jangle away their Religion I wish what was blame-worthy amongst some be not Preached and practiced by others that succeed them though names may differ yet if the same thing remain it 's to the same purpose Melancton was desirous to die for two reasons One was That he might be with Christ The other was That he might be freed from those bitter contentions that were in the Church in those days Thirdly And likewise Laborers go to their rest It is to be observed 3. Laborers goe to their rest that within few years as many able men both of the Magistracy and Ministry have gone to their long home as the oldest alive can remember in a greater space of time so true is that of the Prophet Isa 57. 1. The righteous perisheth and no man layeth it to heart and merciful men are taken away none considering that the righteous is taken from the evil to come Methuselah
a new pretended light or revelation from the old Prophet he forsook the true word and believed a lying word what a sad Catastrophe befell him v. 24. When he was gone a Lyon met him by the way and slew him and his carcase was cast in the way and the 1 King 13. 24. Ass stood by it and the Lyon stood also by the carcase Yet notwithstanding extraordinary Revelations Dreams Visions Extasies Enthusiasms though they have ceased long ago and we have no warrant to expect them because we are to keep close to the revealed will of God written in his holy word Yet I say we are to take notice of the sweet motions and spiritual illapses upon our souls Though Prophesies cease yet there are manifold discoveries of Christ unto the soul The secret and intimate acquaintance of the soul with Christ the souls ravishing consolations the breaking in and flashes of heavenly light upon the soul the heavings aspirings and harmony of the heart with Christ experience of mercies issues out of temptations protections of Angels all these are Heavenly constant revelations out of the Word of God manifested to the souls of the faithful by the Spirit according to the word Let us therefore embrace and cherish the gracious motions of the Spirit of God Where the spirit of Grace is in the heart it cannot be idle or lie dead but it 's exceeding operative The Spirit gives light to teach thee it gives heat to warm and comfort thee It is a spirit of burning and purging to burn up the stubble of corruption to purge out thy sins It is a spirit of refining and purifying Therefore when the spirit of God strives by its gracious motions inlightning purging inflaming comforting wooing thee to walk closely with God bidding thee beware of wounding thy conscience of resisting the light and going against known truth O beware of grieving this holy Spirit of God! Do not O do not force the spirit to depart sadded and grieved from thee This is one way whereby the spirit strives viz. by its motions and whispers A second way whereby the spirit strives is by the Ministry of 2. The Spirit strives by the Ministery of the Word the word It is said Rev. 3. 20. Behold I stand at the door and knock if any man hear my voice and open the door I will come in to him and will sup with him and he with me The Spirit of God knocks at the doors of your hearts by the hammer of the word The spirit knocks louder and louder and the Ministers are to cry aloud and spare not Isa 58. 1. Cry aloud spare not lift up thy voice like a trumpet and shew thy people their transgressions and the House of Jacob their sins The Lord calls upon us by every Sermon we hear Why will ye die Why will ye bolt the door against the frequent knocking 's of the Spirit of God The Spirit of God hath strove with some of us ten years some twenty some fo●ty some sixty years How many years have we lived under the sound of the Gospel having heard the voice of the Turtle crying in our Land How many powerful Preachers have spent their strength their breath wasted their spirits wooing intreating beseeching us to be reconciled unto God many of them are gone to their rest their works praise them in the Gate their memory is blessed and their name is like sweet Oyntment poured forth How many are yet alive to this day who Preach Jesus Christ faithfully and experimentally how do they pray and wrestle with God how zealously do they preach how many admonitions reproofs exhortations warnings do they give us And if we will not take warning the Ministers shall deliver their own souls and our blood will be upon our own heads and the time will come when it shall be known that we have had Prophets amongst us I shall make an allusion to that Scripture Deut. 20. 11 12 13. It shall be if it make thee answer of peace and open unto thee then it shall be that all the people that is found therein shall be tributaries unto thee and they shall serve thee And if it will make no peace with thee but will make war against thee then thou shalt besiege it and when the Lord hath delivered it into thy hands thou shalt smite every male thereof with the edge of the sword Just so God proclaims peace and the Ministers are Ambassadors of Peace and deliver their commission after this manner Into whatsoever house ye enter first say Peace be to Luke 10. 5 6. this house And if the son of peace be there your peace shall rest upon it if not it shall turn to you again The Lord now bese●●eth your hearts by the Ministry of the word and offers you peace and reconciliation if you will submit unto his Scepter and cast down your rebellious weapons the Lord will have mercy on you but if you hold out the flag of defiance and will not come in to Jesus Christ what remains but utter ruine and destruction Every Sermon you hear is like the water of Jealousie when he hath made her to drink the water then it shall come to pass that if she be defiled and hath done trespass against her Husband that the water that causeth the curse shall enter into her and become bitter Num. 27. 28. and her belly shall swell c. but if she be not defiled she shall be free When the word is received into an honest and good heart it doth it good and makes it fruitful when into a corrupt heart it rots it and makes it worse It s an observation of a Reverend Divine That it is an indignity beyond all apprehension to the spirit of Dr. Ed Reynolds grace when we suffer him to wait daily at our Bethesda's our houses of mercy and all in vain to spend his sacred breath in the Ministry of reconciliation in doubling and redoubling his requests unto our souls that we would be content to be saved Yet all this while we harden our hearts and stop our ears and set up the pride and stoutness of our own reasonings till we even weary the spirit of God chide him away and cause him to depart sadded and grieved from us O my Brethren despise not prophecying undervalue not the Ministry of ● Thess 5. 20. reconciliation An indignity or affront offered unto Christs Messengers Christ takes it as done unto himself Luke 10. 16. He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me Be then exho●ted to set an high price of the Gospel and make much of the motions of Gods holy Spirit in the Ministry of the word Ursin relates in his Preface to his Catechism That those godly Vrsini Praf Catech. Protestants that fled beyond the Seas for their Religion in that Marian quinquenium of Persecution ackno●ledged That that great innundation of misery
came justly upon them for the neglect and unprofitableness under the Gospel in King Edward the sixth's days And if they were so severely punished for a few years unprofitableness under the means of Grace of how much forer punishment shall we of England be accounted worthy who well nigh a hundred years have enjoyed the purity of the Gospel and yet we are barren and unfruitful Let us every one acknowledge his own unfruitfulness that notwithstanding fatning Ordinances we have lean souls and let us every one pray in particular Lord lay not my unfruitfulness under the Ministry unto my charge The Spirit will not always strive and wait at those Bethesda's God may in judgement say I will take this kingdom from you and give it to others who will bring forth the fruits of it I will no more suffer my servants to be abused no more suffer my word to be despised I 'le rain Mann●h no more round about your tents if you have so cheap an esteem of it Let us all deprecate this dreadful judgement which the P●ophet Amos threatens Amos 8. 1. Behold a basket of summer-fruits and he said What seest thou and I said A basket of summer-fruit then said the Lord unto me The end is come upon my people of Israel I will not again pass by them any more This is the second way whereby the Spirit ●●rives viz. By the Ministry of the word A third way whereby the Spirit strives is by the checks and 3. The Spirit strives by the conviction of conscience Multi habent scientiā pauci vero conscientiam Bernard de interiore domo In corde puritatem In ore veritatem In actione rectitudinem Bern. de interdomo convictions of conscience Bernard makes a sad complaint in that excellent Tract De interiori domo Many haue knowledge but few have conscience He lays down there three choice qualifications of a good conscience To have sincerity in the heart truth in the mouth and rectitude in the conversation These are distinguishing Notes for tryal and examination Now the spirit of God strives by the checks of conscience Conscience flew in Judas his face a legal qualm came upon him I can call it no better It sprang from the horror of the wrath of God and Hell fire flashing in his face It was no Evangelical repentance Judas got thirty pieces of silver but conscience forced him to a restitution Conscience is a reflect act it looks back upon a mans self It is like a Musket over-charged it will recoil upon a sinner It is like a Blood-hound that will follow by the scent and will never leave searching till it hath descryed the Delinquent Wherefore Brethren let us take special notice of the checks of Conscience Let us keep faith and a good conscience joyn'd as the Apostle exhorts Let us not break Gods link Let Pauls Herein I exercise be our continual Monitor Acts 24. 16. Herein I exercise my self to have a conscience void of offence towards God and towards men A Christian may have a pardon in the Court of the Judge and yet not discern it in the Court of his conscience In case of desertions withdrawings and suspensions of Gods gracious countenance a Christian may not be able to apprehend Gods reconciled countenance but in this case there are incouraging supporting promises Isa 50. 10. Who is among you that feareth the Lord that obeyeth the voice of his servant that walketh in darkness and hath no light let him trust in the name of the Lord and stay upon his God We read likewise Psal 97. 11. Light is sown for the righteous and gladness for the upright in heart and Psal 112. 4. Unto the upright there ariseth light in the darkness God is gracious and full of compassion and righteous in all his ways But what shall we say when a sinner is condemned both in the Court of the Judge and of conscience how great is that condemnation Spira had a check of conscience and a voice forbidding him O do it not He paid full dear for the wounding of his conscience It 's an observatian of an excellent Divine in a precious Book called Moses self-denyal We had better saith he have all the world Mr. Burroughs Moses Self-denyal cast shame in our faces and upbraid us then that our consciences should cast dirt into them It 's better to endure all the frowns and anger of the greatest Potentates on earth then to have an angry conscience within our breast It 's better to want all the pleasures that earth can afford then to loose the delights which a good conscience will bring in O let the Bird in the breast be always kept singing whatsoever we suffer for it We all subscribe to this in The● whether we do thus in Hypothesi let 's examine our awakned Conscience Let us every one deal impartially with his own conscience All our hearts are naked unto him with whom we have to deal Let every one pray study confer for the information of his own Conscience nothing may be done doubtingly for that is not of faith and whatsoever is not of faith is sin In the whole course of our lives let us bring all our actions to the rule of the word of God and let that decide the controversie Here 's a four-fold infallible rule Let A four-fold rule for the examining of conscience 1. Every one be perswaded in his own heart 2. Let us abstain from all appearances of evil 3. Prove all things and hold fast that which is good 4. Hold faith and a good conscience Let us keep close to these known plain rules discarding carnal policy carnal interests which are the devised ways of men and then let our resolution concur with Luthers I bear this title I Hūc gero titulum cedo nulli Luth. yeild to none Now then when the Spirit thus strives by the checks of conscience let us not resist nor stifle those motions let us not shut our eyes against known light breaking in upon us This is a third way whereby the Spirit strives viz. by the checkings and convictions of Conscience A fourth way wereby the Spirit strives is by the tenders of 4. The Spirit strives by the tender of mercies mercies and loving kindness openings of bowels of compassion towards poor sinners These mercies are tender mercies and there is a multitude of them Psal 51. 1. Have mercy upon me O God according to thy loving kindeness according to the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions They are the sounding of Bowels the fountain opened Zech. 13. 1. In that day there shall be a fountain opened to the House of David and to the Inhabitants of Jerusalem for sin and for uncleanness Here is a free tender of Jesus Christ and the riches of his mercies The spirit makes many Proclamations and Invitations to come in to Jesus Christ One is Isa 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters and
he that hath no money come ye buy and eat yea come buy wine and milk without money and without price A second is Mat. 11. 28. Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden and I will give you rest A third invitation is John 7. 37. If any man thirst let him come unto me and drink Rev. 22. 17. A 4th is The Spirit the Bride say Come and let him that heareth say Come and let him that is athirst come and whosoever will let him take of the waters of life freely The l●st I shall name is the most prevalent obtestation in all the world Rom. 12. 1. I beseech you therefore brethren by the mercies of God that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service Put forth thy labor to make a Catalogue of the mercies of God they exceed all Arithmetick measure them their dimensions are infinite The Apostle makes four dimensions breadth length heighth and depth Eph. 3. 18. The mercies of God reach to the Heavens his faithfulness to the clouds All the pathes of the Lord are mercy and truth to such as keep his covenant and testimonies Psal 25. 10. His mercy is from everlasting to everlasting his mercy is above all his works Had we the tongues of Men and Angels we could not sufficiently set forth the mercies of God yet let us summon up all the members of our Bodies and all the faculties of our Souls to praise the Lord for his mercies and tell the wonders which he hath done for the children of men How many National mercies and signal deliverances have we received and we yet are in peace even to a miracle of mercies our fleece is yet dry whil'st others are wet with blood Thousands have faln beside us and ten thousand at our right hands and no evil comes nigh our dwelling What variety of personal mercies do we receive How many deliverances have we received from the Grave being ready to fall in and yet we are reprieved and have space to repent How many deliverances have we received from Fire Water Pobbers unreasonable men and all the plots and projects of Malignant Enemies unto the Gospel of Jesus Christ Further What mercies do we receive for our souls Do we not injoy Sabbaths Ordinances publick assemblies Blessed be God our eyes yet behold our teachers and our Gospel is not driven into corners How many mercies Quot misericordiae tot ora Isa 30. 20. so many mouthes All these mercies have so many mouthes calling upon us to thankfulness and amendment of life Now the holy Spirit of God strives by all these mercies to win us to repentance It is our obliged duty as God strives with us in mercy and loving kindness so we should strive with him in our return of thankfulness and reformation of our lives Every mercy should be a Lord-stone to draw us up to Christ Every mercy should be as a foot-stool to raise us up higher to Heaven Every mercy should be as a Looking-glass wherein we should behold the visible resemblances of the loving kindness of God O then take heed of neglecting the voice of the Spirit when he calls by mercies For if he be neglected when he speaks in the sweet musick of mercies he will speak terrible things in the thunder of judgement 5. The Spirit strives by the exercise of patience 5. Yet further The Spirit strives by the exercise of patience forbearance and long sufferance towards sinners God is not willing that any should perish but that they should repent and be saved O the unwearied patience of a merciful Father How long did God bear with the old world with the Amorites Jerusalem The Lord waits to be gracious he delights in mercy It is his nature to be merciful Judgement is called his act his strange act Isa 28. 21. The Lord will rise up as in mount Perazim he shall be wroth as in the valley of Gibeon that he may do his work his strange work and bring to pass his act his strange act This is to shew his unwillingne●s to punish sinners till needs must He is said to hyer a Razour to shave them as if he had none of his own Isa 7. 20. In the same day shall the Lord shave with a razor that is hired namely by them beyond the river by the King of Assyria the head and the hair of the feet See and admire the wonderful patience of God though we provoke him every day O wonderful patience that the Drunkard dies not in his vomit that the Swearers Blasphemers tongues fall not presently out of their heads Still the Lord waits knocking at the doors of our hearts exercising infinite patience and forbearance towards poor sinners He whets his Sword and bends his Bow Psal 7. 12. He might cleave us asunder presently but there we have experience of singular patience God was but six days in creating the world yet as Chrysostome observes he was seven days in encompassing the Walls of Jericho before he destroyed it Patientia laesa fit furor but let us take heed of abusing patience patience abused breaks forth into extremity of fury Mercy pleads I am slighted I am abused I will no more have mercy on them then patience interposeth I will wait longer but patience being abused it pleads I will be no longer tired out nor abused At last comes long-suffering I am gentle and merciful and I will wait longer and longer but if long-suffering be wearied out What will plead for us What will become of us The long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah whilest the Ark was preparing as the apostle Peter speaks 1 Pet. 3. 20. 2 Pet. 3. 9. The Lord is not slack concerning his promise as some men count slackness but is long-suffering to us-ward not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance We should account the long-suffering of the Lord our salvation Rom. 2. 4. or despisest thou the riches of his goodness and forbearance and long suffering not knowing that the goodness of the Lord leadeth thee to repentance 6. The Spirit of God strives by many signal exemplary Judgements 6. The spirit strives by many signal and exempla●y Judgements inflicted upon others inflicted upon others We have read of the Wars of Jerusalem in Josephus but more pathetically set forth in the ●ook of the Lamentations We have read of the heavy Judgements of God upon Germany and Palatinate We have read of the barbarous butcherings of those blood-sucking Caribals in Ireland upon the Protestant Party We hear now of a Sword letting out blood in Scotland good blood and bad blood being let out together the Sword destroying one as well as another We hear of sad breaches and heart-divisions widened more and more in England You hear a general complaint of poverty and decay of Trade By all these Judgements the Spirit of God strives with us and woes
us to repentance to Dan. 4. 27. break off our sins by repentance that our tranquillity may be lengthned and that there may be a healing of our errors The use we are to make is that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 10. 6. Now these things were our examples to the intent we should not lust after evil things as they also lusted Let us not pass uncharitable censures upon others as greater sinners for greater sufferings but remember that except we Luke 13. 5. repent we shall likewise perish Seventhly and lastly Let us consider how the Spirit of God 7 The Spirit strives by personal judgements strives by personal Judgements inslicted on our selves There is a Judgement of chastisement and a Judgement of revenge God sends Judgements by way of revenge upon the wicked of the World but by way of chastisement unto his own children When God takes away thy riches and other outward comforts as a childe a wife c. by these the Spirit of God strives with thee and sends thee to God to inquire into the cause and walk more closely and humbly with God and thy duty is to pray to God to teach thee what thou understandest not If God send thee a sore disease a grievous pain suppose the Stone Strangury Collick c. by all these the Spirit strives with thee and reads thee a Lecture of thy Mortality and warneth thee to make a serious and speedy preparation for death Afflictions are sent by God as Scullions to scour away the rust and canker of Gods children They are the Shepheards Dogs to bring home the straying Sheep Luther saith Afflictions teach us to understand Scripture Where God teacheth with the rod there he bestoweth a choice blessing Psal 94. 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest him out of thy Law God sends affliction on an errand Go affliction take down such a mans pride goe awaken another from his security Affliction is Gods Ordinance and with the same hand he gives Jesus Christ that he gives correction to his own children Thus the Spirit strives by personal judgements and afflictions The use we must continually make is Heb. 12. 5 6. My son despise not thou the chastening of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked of him for whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth Hence saith the Apo●●le Rom. 5. 3. We glory in tribulation knowing that tribulation worketh patience and Jam●s 1. 2. My brethren count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations The rod hath a voice and we are call'd upon Mich. 6. 9. Hear ye the rod and who hath appointed it Thus you have heard how Gods Spirit strives by its motions by the Ministery of the Word the checks of Conscience tenders of Mercy exercise of patience and long-suffering inslicting of exemplary and signal Judgements upon others and personal Judgements upon our selves Now the Lord give us his Grace and teach us to make much of and cherish the strivings of his holy Spirit and let us all deprecate the fearful judgement in the Text My spirit shall no longer strive with you Iudgement and Mercy Set forth from Gen. 6. 3. HAving dispatcht those two Particulars according to my Serm. 3. at St. Mary's Oxon Jan. 19. 1651. Three Reasons of the Doctrine Reas 1. From the Text because man is flesh method propounded in the unfolding of this Text In the third place I am to enquire into the Grounds and ●easons for the further confirmation of the Point Amongst many that may be given I shall reduce the Reasons of the Text into three Heads The first shall be drawn from the very reason in the Text for that he also is flesh Man is corrupted by reason of sin Man was created statu integro in integrity and innocency resembling the Image of God in righteousness and holiness but now statu corrupto by reason of Adams prevarication he became depraved in the faculties of his soul and all the members of his body and they are become instruments unto wickedness The Holy Ghost sets forth sinful man in a full Character Psal 14. 1 2 3. The fool hath said in his heart there is no God they are corrupt they have done abominable works there is none that doeth good The Lord looked down from Heaven upon the children of men to see whether there were any that did understand and seek God They are all gone aside they are become altogether filthy there is none that doth good no not one Suppose we heard the Lord thus expostulating the case Is this man Is this he that I advanced to the highest rank of visible Creatures whom I created after mine own Image whom I endowed with noble faculties an understanding the bright luminary of the soul to know his Maker and a will to obey him Is he now become flesh fleshly in his imagination fleshly minded Doth he walk after the flesh minding the things of the flesh Hath he thus turn'd Apostate rebell'd against his Lord and Maker This charge being all very true wherefore should I have any more to do with him wherefore should my Spirit strive with vile sinful flesh Thus God might plead and in judgement withdraw the strivings of his holy Spirit Betwixt the spirit and the flesh what agreement can there be The Spirit will not thus be unequally yoaked since man is become thus fleshly thus depraved such a degenerate Plant so corrupt its just with Gods spirit to strive no longer with man By flesh in Scripture is comprehended a Mass of corruption Apostoli verba docent haec duo affectuum genera esse opposita Quae ut intelligamus constitutū fit affectum carnis nihil aliud esse quam usum virium humanaru● semotâ gratiâ Affectus autem spiritus est impulsus divini afflatus usus gratiae Christi Pet. Mart. in Loc. man in his worst estate Rom. 8. 5. They that are after the flesh doe minde the things of the flesh What is predicated of it v. 6 7 8 9. To be carnally minded is death because the carnal minde is enmity against God So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God And what an Antithesis is there between flesh and spirit v. 13. For if ye live after the flesh ye shall die but if ye through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live The same disproportion there is as between death and life heaven and hell salvation and damnation That God strives with any is a great mercy that the Spirit waits knocking at our doors when as he might knock us down dead O great mercy But when the Spirit strives and flesh resists its motions the Spirit spends his sacred breath wooing us and inviting us to do good unto our own souls and the carnal minde bids defiance unto the Spirit of grace when notwithstanding all the beseechings wooings and sollicitations of the Spirit the flesh rebels carnal
men will not hearken to the voice of this spiritual Charmer though he charm never so wisely what then remains but utter ruine and destruction but that the Spirit should leave striving and fall a destroying rebellious sinners and carnal minded persons This is one reason He also is flesh the spiritual part that is obliterated he hath degenerated from his original hee is become corrup●●d he also is flesh Another reason may be because the Spirit is a most free agent Reas 2. Because the Spirit is a most free Agent This holy Spirit moveth when and where it pleaseth The Spirit of God is bound to none The Spirit is not at our command and beck yet vile man puts the Spirit of God to the condition of a slave for so the Lord complains Is 42. 24. Thou hast bought me no sweet cane with mony neither hast thou filled me with the fat of thy sacrifices but thou hast made me to serve with thy sinnes thou hast wearied me with thine iniquities It 's more than the Spirit owes any of us to move once he may move once and may never move more he may chuse whether he will move at all God now shootes warning-pieces the Spirit woes you to come in and make your peace with God to break off your sins by Repentance no longer to stand out in opposition unto Jesus Christ if you will not take warning God may suddenly shoot his Murdering-pieces and destroy you The Spirit cries to day to day now is the accepted time now is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 6. 2. day of salvation if we accept not of this golden opportunitie and now ●e come not in and embrace this great salvation tendered for ought we know the Spirit may be gone and never make a further tender of grace unto us Though the Spirit it self is most free and limits not nor ascribes to it self when and where to work but calls some sooner some later into the vineyard yet the Spirit limits and prescribes us a time of repentance Again he limiteth Heb. 4. 7. a certain day saying in David To day after so long a time as it is said to day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts It 's a common observation He that hath promised time to the penitent hath not promised a morrow for repentance Wherefore wee are Qui poenitentibus promisit veniam diem non promisit crastinum Gerr. Medit. Isa 55. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Antipat. Act. 24. 25. commanded Seek the Lord while he may be found and call upon him while he is near and Acts 17. 30. The times of this ignorance God winked at but now commands all men every where to repent The Spirit now knocks by its motions by the Word by conviction of Conscience and invites you to come presently to Jesus Christ When a Treatise of Happynesse was brought to Antipater he answered I am not at leisure a lamentable case not to be at leisure to read a Treatise of Happynesse Felix would hear Paul at a convenient time we never read that he sent for him any more In proverbial speeches we say Strike whilst the Iron is hot When there is a fair gale hoyst up thy sayles and delayes are dangerous Shall we then neglect the present opportunity upon a presumption of a future Shall we presume either of space ●● grace neither of them being in our power God is not bound to give space he struck Vzzah dead in the place for meddling with the Ark It 's said the 1 Chr. 13. 9. Oxen stumbled Vzzahs intention might be good but a good intention cannot justifie a bad action He invaded the Priests function his work was to drive on the Oxen not to touch the Ark. God struck Ananias and Saphira dead for their hypocrisie So often times God strikes dead the Drunkard in his vomit the Lyar Swearer Blasphemer with the lye oath blasphemy in each mans tongue But suppose which is uncertain God gives thee space yet often times where he gives space he denies grace as it was said of Jezabel Rev. 2. 21. I gave her space to repent of her fornication but she 2 Tim. 2. 25. repented not There is a peradventure put in 2 Tim. 2. 25. In meeknesse instructing those that oppose themselves if God peradventure may give them repentance unto the acknowledging of the truth My brethren consider in your most serious and composed thoughts that we deal for life and immortality and our negotiations are for the great things of Eternity Shall we dally in such weighty matters Shall we procrastinate our Repentance And shall we stop our ears bolt the doors of our hearts when the Spirit calls and knocks In matters of worldly employments what post-haste what expedition do men make they fear delayes may much prejudice them And shall we be thus wise for the world and such errand fooles for our soules Shall we be penny-wise and pound-foolish Shall we be so industrious to grasp the trash and pelf of the world and neglect our soules Every ones soul being a precious jewel is more wo●th than the world in all its pomp and bravery Let us lay hold on the golden season of the present time the time which the Spirit limits If thou neglectest this day for ought thou knowest thou mayst be in hell to morrow Whilst thou art dallying and delaying God may be a swearing in his wrath that thou shalt never enter into his rest The third reason and the last that I shall name shall be drawn Reas 3. Drawn from the rule of divine Justice from the rule of divine justice It 's most just when people neglect Gods limited time for God to allow them no more time when people squander out Gods seasons and mispend their choice opportunities it stands with justice to deny any further opportunity When the season is past it is like an Arrow out of the Bow like a swift stream not to be called back There 's a dreadfull judgement threatned Prov 1. 24. because I have called and ye have refused I have stretched out my hands and no man regarded therefore I will laugh at your calamity and mock when your fear commeth God usually payes sinners in their own coyn and punisheth them by way of retaliation As appears in Adonibezeks confession who said Threescore and ten Kings having their thumbs and great toes cut off gathered Judg. 1. 7● thered their meat under my table as I have done so hath God requited me God punisheth number with number according to the number of their cities so were their gods Jer. 2. 28. Where are thy Gods which thou hast made thee let them arise if they can save thee in the time Jerem. 2. 28. of thy trouble for according to the number of thy cities s● are thy gods O Judah And the Lord numbred them out to the sword and left them few in number God punisheth choice with cho●●e they chose new gods
and the Lord in judgement left them to their choice and in their extremities bade them goe to their gods and see whether they would deliver them The Lord punished contrariety with contrariety If ye will not be reformed by these things Lev. 26. 23. 24. but will walk contrary unto me then will I also walk contrary to you and punish you yet seven times for your sinns And when we refuse to hearken to him when he calls he will refuse to hearken to us in our greatest extremities when we call upon him It 's a broken but a very pathetical speech of Christ to Jerusalem O that thou hadst Luke 19. 4● known even thou at least in this thy day the things that belong unto thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes There is a Critical day set down there is a dreadfull judgement upon those that brought not the Lords offering in its season The man that is clean and is Numb 9. 13. not in a journey and forbeareth to keep the Passeover even the same soul shall be cut off from his people because he brought not the offering of the Lord in his appointed season that man shall bear his sinne The old world gave no heed to Noahs Preaching they neglected the time that God allowed them for repentance No mo●e time was Matth. 25. 10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 allowed when that was once expired a deluge overwhelmed them The five foolish Virgins sl●mbred and slept when they should have been preparing of their lamps they went to buy oyle and in their absence Christ came and perpetually shut them out Esau sought Heb. 12. 17. ●enedictionem illam exquisiss●t Beza the Blessing carefully with rears yet hee was rejected hee came when it was too late How many mischiefs befall men for neglecting their opportunities All these considerations should be as so many warning-pieces unto us and as so many prevalent incentives to cherish the whispers of the Spirit to take the benefit of the season Now whilst the Lord bids us seek his face our hearts must eccho back Thy face Lord we will seek Let us hearken to the motions of the Spirit and the checks of our conscience let us make much of the Spirit let us take heed of quenching and grieving of the holy Spirit whereby we are sealed unto the day of redemption An Angel swears in the Revelations There shal be no more time How soon Revel 10. 6. ● time may cease the Spirit cease working we cannot tel and time may be swallowed up in Eternity And therefore take this Caution as a word spoken in due season Beware of sadding the Spirit drive him not away from you for once having a repulse for ought you know he may come no more And th●●● have dispatch'd three Heads propounded of my Method I have asserted the truth of the point from Scripture ●e●timonies plainly evidencing the greatnesse of the Judgement when the Spirit of God departs from and will strive no longer with a people I have shewed how many wayes the Spirit usually strives with a people I have given in the reasons for the confirmation of the point In the next place it remains that I should reduce al home unto point of Practise by way of Use and particular Application This Doctrine affords six special Uses For Information Exhortation Reprehension Examination Direction and Consolation In the first place this serves for Information what a dreadfull Vse 1. For Information judgement lyes heavy upon any person whatsoever with whom Gods Spirit will strive no longer Was it not an heavy judgement when Gods Spirit left Saul and an evil spirit was sent to torment him Was it not an heavy case and dreadfull when the Philistines made war upon him and the Lord was departed from him And Samuel said to Saul why hast thou disquieted me to bring me up 1 Sam. 28 15 And Saul answered I am sore distressed for the Philistines make war against me and God is departed from me and answereth me no more neither by Prophets nor by dreames therefore I have called thee c. When Gods Spirit quite leaves a soul then the evil spirit takes possession of it Satan entred into Judas his heart and set him on work to betray Christ and when conscience gave him a bang and made him throw down the mony he felt Hell-fire flashing in him and betook himself to a desperate remedy to be his own executioner So I have read of Julian after he had departed from God and turn'd Apostate he had in his conscience more blows and butcherings Plures ictus laniatus At last when a dart hit him and gave him his fatal wound no man knowing from whence that dart came for it was a signal blow from heaven and was indeed the immediate hand of God at last he confest Thou hast overcome O Galilean thou hast overcome Vicisti Galilaee vicisti Now a little to set forth the greatnesse of the judgement upon those with whom Gods Spirit will strive no longer I le represent it you in these ensuing aggravations When God takes away his Spirit he usually takes away his Ordinances Whilst the Palladium remain'd with the Trojans they Aggrav 1. When God takes away his Spirit he usually takes away his Ordinances thought themselves secure The Jews put great confidence in the Ark they fet the Ark and went to battle with it against the Philistines and afterwards cryed up the Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord Herein they were superstitious they f●iled in putting too much confidence in the Temple They were Idolaters and followed Baal and Ashtaroth and thought the Ark would secure them The Ark would no more shelter prophane idolatrous people than the horns of the Altar would secure and shelter a Murtherer Yet questionlesse the Ark of Gods presence was a very great mercy and priviledge The Ark was kept away twenty yeares and they thought it long and the Text saith all the house of Israel lamented after the Lord. The sad report of the losse of the Ark brake Elies heart first and he fell down backward and his neck brake He heard 1 Sam. 7. 2. of the death of his sonnes their death went near but the losse of the Ark went nearer and Phinehas his wife named the child I●habod saying the glory is departed from Israel because the Ark of God was taken She fell in travel upon that sad news and dyed presently 1 Sam. 4. 18 21 22. The taking away Ministers Ordinances Sabbaths are dreadfull judgements upon a people This the Prophet Amos foretels of Behold the daies come saith the Lord that I will send a famine in the Amos 8. 11. land not a famine of bread nor a thirst for water but of hearing the word of the Lord. And Christ himself threarens The kingdom of Matth. 21. 43. God shall be taken from you and given to a Nation bringing forth the
fruits thereof And these judgements God oftentimes inflicts upon those that contemne his Ordinances and often ●imes causeth a people to know the worth of them by the want of them Aggrav 2. God will not suffer his Spirit to wo●ke in the Ordinances Or secondly if God continue his Ordinances and a people still resist the strivings of his Spirit this is another aggravation that the Lord wil not suffer his Spirit to work in the Ordinances What 's the Word without the Spirit but a dead letter The Word is the seed it is the Spirit that quickens it Now when God denieth his Spirit in an Ordinance and people hear onely a bare sound which goeth in at one ear and out of another and reap no profit and are never a whit wrought upon by an Ordinance this is a lamentable condition Enthusiasts cry up the Spirit and cry down the Word Formalists cry up the Word they keep their Church well that 's their own phrase but they regard not the workings of the Spirit This is Argumentum à bene conjunctis ad male divisa We have no warrant to leave the bright shining light of the Word and to follow a wild rambling light of our own The Spirit works by the Word and tyes us to the rule New devised lights may Levit. 10. 2 meet with the same judgement as Nadab and Abihu met withall for offering strange fire unto the Lord. Neither may we as Formalists doe rest in our comming to and hearing of Ordinances we must examine the working of Gods Spirit upon our soules When God gives quickning Ordinances let us pray for the energetical effectual working of Gods Spirit Deadnesse of Spirit saith Mr. Greenham is the grave of spiritual graces Between a lazy and a fervent performer of duties you may see the difference Greenham 2 Kings 4. 31 32 33 34. Gehazi went on in a carelesse formall manner and layd his staffe upon the child but there was neither voice nor hearing But when Elisha put his eyes upon the childs eyes and his mouth on the childs mouth the flesh of the child waxed warm O beware of slighting or resis●ing the ●pirit in an Ordinance lest in judgement God may give thee a bare Ordinance or resting contented with a bare outside formall service without any lively workings of the Spirit upon thine heart and that will be but as a carkasse when the soul is gone When people drive away Gods Spirit and will not regard its strivings Aggrav 3. God gives over those that resist his Spirit unto a spirit of delusion then God gives them over in judgement to a spirit of delusion 2 Thes 2. 11. For this cause God shall send them strong delusions that they shall believe a lye VVhen Ministery the Lords-day and other Sabbath-Ordinances are trampled under feet when the plain infallible rule of the Scriptures is laid aside when some flatter themselves with high swelling conceits of their own gifts upon pretence of a Light within them Dreams and Revelations then God in judgement gives them over to a spirit of delusion The Devil works upon their fancies and puffs them up with pride and their pride swels them and bursts them Beware of Pride and above all Pride of spiritual Pride Beware of itching eares after novel Doctrines Upon pretence of new truths many suck in antiquated long since explo●ed ●rrours And if it be an errour though I take it not so yet account it an errour of love I advise especially young beginners to beware of Scepticism high-slown curiosities in the study of divinity It 's a ground of experience Scepticism Rom. 14. 1. Quod si observassent Scholastici non tot● spinosas salebrosas ne dicā impi●s sacrilegas quaestiones in eorn̄ libris habere mus P. Mart. Aggrav 4. God gives those over to a hard heart who resist the motions of the Spirit frequently produceth Heresie ●ere●e terminatesin Atheisme and my counsel is grounded upon the known rule Him that is weak in the faith receive you but not in doubtfull disputat●ons Would Schoolmen saith Pet. Martyr had observed this Scripture Study Fundamentals get a Body of Divinity in your heads and hearts before you venture upon Polemicals Be well provided and furnished with weapons from the Principles of Divinity before you grapple with gain-sayers A fourth and last aggravation I shall mention is this when Gods Spirit hath stroven long knockt and waited and is abused and resisted then God gives over such persons to an hard heart and a reprobate mind And an hard heart and a reprobate mind is an hell upon earth Isa 6. 9 10. Go and tell this people Hear ye indeed but understand not and see ye indeed but perceive not Make the heart of this people fat and make their ears heavy and shut their eyes lest they see with their eyes and hear with their ears and understand with their hearts and convert and be healed It 's cited by all the four Evangelists and in the Acts of the Apostles and the Epistle to the Romans by such frequent repetition of the self-same thing aggravating the greatnesse of the judgement It 's accounted the grand curse of the Gospel Joh. 9. 39. For judgement am I come into this John 9. 39. world that they which see not might see and that they which see might be made blind When men have been a long time under the sound of the Gospel and the Spirit hath moved and woed beseeching us to amend our lives and walk in an holy obedience and conformity to the will of God and yet we stand out and bid defiance to the Spirit of Grace then it is just for God to say hard heart seize upon such a one reprobate sense take hold of another let them be Sermon-proof and Judgement-proof let them remain insensible let their consciences be cauterized O wha● a fearfull judgement is this as the Apostle mentions But after thy hardnesse Ro● 2. 5. and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgement of God May these aggravations make deep impressions upon all our spirits and make us fear and tremble any more to withstand the sweet motions and whispers of the Spirit of God A second use is for Exhortation I entreat beseech exhort conjure Vse 2. For Exhortation you by all the motions of the Spirit by all the tenders of mercies patience and long-suffering of God that you would take heed of quenching resisting sadding the holy Spirit of God but cherish embrace make much of all the strivings of the Spirit of God with your soules To day the Spirit calls hear his voice to day the Spirit woes and would make a contract with your soules O now accept of him to day the Spirit invites lay aside all excuses and come It 's the Embassie that Gods Ministers are sent upon Now then we are Ambassadors for Christ as though
as quench the Spirit which is forbidden 1 Thess 5. 19. such as deride praying by the spirit such as slight and scorn men of the spirit I mean such as are of a pretious annointing in whom the Spirit of Christ dwells O how sad will their Audit be 2. It reproves barren and unprofitable hearers who notwithstanding all the strivings wooings and waitings of Gods Spirit by the Ministry of the Word yet remain barren and unfruitful The Apostle tells their doom The earth that drinketh in the rain that Heb. 6. 7 8. cometh oft upon it and bringeth forth herbs meet for them by whom it is dressed receiveth a blessing from God but that which beareth thorns and bryars is rejected and is nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burned When Christ found nothing on the Fig-tree but leaves he said unto it Let no fruit grow on thee henceforward for ever and Matth. 21. 19 Luke 13. 7. presently the Fig-tree withered away And the Vine-dresser said Behold these three years I come seeking fruit on this fig-tree and finde none cut it down why cumbreth it the ground 3. It reproves secure persons setled on their Lees Let Gods Spirit strive never so often it is all in vain They think all is well with them they conceive their Estates very good Multitudes now adays are possest with a spirit of slumber and drousiness and this is a dreadful sin and a judgement both Rom. 11. 8. God hath given them a spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and ears that they should not hear to this day Is not he a desperate fool that dares sleep upon the top of a Mast Is not he much more that notwithstanding judgements threatned in Gods Word against rebellious sinners yet is secure heedless and satisfied in his present condition This is that carnal security mentioned which is under such terrible woe Deut. 29. 19 20. It shall come to pass when he heareth the words of this curse that he bless himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of mine heart to adde drunkenness to thirst the Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoak against that man and all the curses that are written in this book shall lie upon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from under heaven 4. And lastly This reproves all impenitent persons who notwithstanding all the Sermons they hear notwithstanding all the reproofs admonitions wooings knocking 's of Gods spirit yet remain impenitent Impenitency is that great soul-damning sin Christ tells us Rev. 3. 20. Behold I stand at the door and knock Rev. 3. 20. Ezek. 18. 31. if any man open to me I will come in and sup with him And the exhortation of the Prophet runs Cast away from you all your transgressions for I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth wherefore turn your selves and live So God expostulates the case with them Though by our own strength we cannot stand not by our own powe● will any good thing yet we may doe much more good then we do Can not the same legs carry a man to the Church which carry him to an Ale-house o● Tavern It s want of a good heart and love to the Ordinances of God that make men so negligent of the good of their souls Who forceth thee to swear thou saist thou can●● not leave it custom is become another nature Is it not thine own corrupt heart that causeth corrupt communications The Devil cannot compel to sin he perswades and enticeth neither doth God tempt any man Jam. 1. 13 14 15. But every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lust and enticed then Jam. 1. 13 14 15. when lust hath conceived it bringeth forth sin and sin when it is finished bringeth forth death Tremble and stand amazed thou impenitent person that resiste●● so many strivings of Gods Spirit so many checks of conscience so many warnings from the word O that thy heart might be touched with remorse and repentance for thine impenitency yet thou livest under the sound of the Gospel who knoweth but the spirit may this day once more move woe and beseech thee to be reconciled O do not refuse O do not slight these invitations A City besieged as we read Deut. 20. 11 12. If it make thee answer of peace and open unto thee thea the people that are found therein shall become tributary unto thee but if it will make no peace with thee then thou shalt besiege it and smlte every male with the edge of the sword Just so now the Lord besiegeth thy heart offers thee peace intreats thee to repent of thy Oathes Sabbath-breakings contempt of the Gospel Drunkenness Uncleanness If thou wilt not receive such a gracious offer of peace to thy peril be it thou art the murtherer of thine own soul 4. I proceed to a fourth Use which is for examination Three Vse 4. For Examination Q. 1 Quaeries by way of tryal I shall propose and answer Q. 1. How may we distinguish of the strivings of Gods spirit from a spirit of error and delusion I answer in this wise 1. Gods Spirit strives by the Ministry of the word and directs A. 1 1. Gods spirit strives by the Ministry of the word us according to that rule Gal. 6. 16. As many as walk according to this rule peace be upon them and mercy and upon the Israel of God But a spirit of delusion deviseth ways of its own and is wise above what is written whereunto a curse appertains Gal. 1. 8. Though we or an Angel from heaven preach a●other Gospel then that which we have preached unto you let him be accursed 2. Gods Spirit leads into all truth It is a s●irit of truth But 2. Gods spirit leads into all truth the spirit of delusion leads us into all errors God will send strong delusions that they shall believe a lie 2 Thess 2. 11. 3. Gods Spirit makes us humble meek gentle A spirit of delusion 3. Gods spirit makes us● humble and meek makes us to swell with pride and pride and passions Gods Spirit meekens our spirit An Antichristian deluded spirit makes us boystero●s ino●dinate in our affections But secondly The Quaery will be How we may distinguish the Q. 2 strivings of Gods Spirit from the strivings of our own spirits or natural conscience I answer thus 1. A natural conscience acts from a principle of A. 1 A natural conscience acts from a principle of fear fear of punishment and upon legal convictions hence come many torturings and strivings in natural mens consciences as in Ahab c. Herod feared John Baptist But Gods Spirit strives and moves the soul to act from a principle of love to Jesus Christ when the love of Christ constrains to duty that is genuine altogether 2. The striving of a m●ns own spirit and a natural
conscience 2. The strivings of a mans own spirit are pacified with natural means are pacified with natural means eating drinking sleeping idle company vain pleasures quiet meer natural convictions But where Gods Spirit strives the soul cannot be quieted but by supernatural means the in omes of God the ravishing consolations of the holy Ghost a white Stone a pardon sealed no mirth sports company can satisfie a wounded conscience onely one remedy is reserved for a perfect cure and that 's the Medicine made up of the Blood of Christ 3. The strivings of a mans own spirit are flashy suddain and soon gone when the judgement ceaseth As soon as the judgement 3. The strivi●gs of a mans own Spirit are flashy and suddain is removed the strivings cease but when Gods Spirit strives it is solid and serious If the Jvdgement be removed and the s●n unpardoned there can be no quiet If the Judgement be over Pharaoh is quiet but no quiet in Davids spirit till the sin be removed Q. 3. A third Quaery is How may we know whether Gods Spirit Q. 3 A. hath effectually stroven and prevailed with us 1. When we hearken to the call of Gods Spirit Psal 27. 8. Thou 1. Wh●● we answe● the call of God● spirit saidst seek my face my heart said unto thee Thy face Lord will I seek 2. When we have the testimonie of Gods Spirit as Rom. 8. 16. The spirit it self beareth witness with our spirits that we are the 2. When we have the spirits testimony children of God 3 When we have the sealing of the Spirit Eph. 1. 13. In 3. When the spirit seals whom after ye believed ye were sealed with the holy Spirit of promise 4. When we have the earnest of the Spirit Eph. 1. 14. 4. When we have the earnest of the Spirit 5. When we have the spirits anointing 6. When we have the fruits of the Spirit Use 5. For direction 1. Pray for the Spirit 2. Set a high price on the Spirit 3. Cherish the motions of the Spirit 4. Observe the call and knocking of the Spirit 5 When we have the anointings of the Spirit 1 John 2. 20. Ye have an Unction from the Holy One and ye know all things 6. When we have the fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5. 22 23 24. Love joy peace long-suffering gentleness goodness faith meekness temperance The fifth Use is for direction 1. Pray for the Spirit to sanctifie and cleanse thee No work of sanctification but by the spirit 2. Set an high price of and be a diligent attendant of Gods word The Spirit usually works by the Word The Spirit and Word agree together 3. Cherish the sweet motions of Gods Spirit make much of every holy motion and inspiration O do not grieve nor sad O do not quench the Spirit of God but account Gods long-suffering your salvation God waits and is patient O do not provoke do not abuse his patience 4. Observe all the calls knocking 's and invitations of Gods Spirit The Lord calls by his word by checks of conscience by mercies and by judgements do not then bolt the doors of your hearts nor stand out against all the warnings threatnings and promises all these are upon record Heb. 2. 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation Lastly Here 's one word of comfort unto all those who make Use 6. For comfort much of the strivings of Gods Spirit These shall be filled with the consolations of the Spirit The Spirit will comfort support help them In Prayer The Spirit helpeth their infirmities Rom. 8. 26. The Spirit purgeth and purisieth them The Spirit of God is their Counsellor in doubts their Comforter in all distresses and the Spirit will guide them by his counsel till he bring them unto glory Doct. 2. It s a● exceeding great mercy c. I now proceed in a few words to the second Doctrine That it is an exceeding great mercy when the Lord vouchsafes unto any person time and space for repentance Here the Lord alloweth to the old World 120 years so long it was that the Spirit of God strove with the old World We read in Gen. 18. 24 25. the Lord staid communing with Abraham making abatements from 50 to 45 from 45 to 40 from 40 to 30 from 30 to 20 from 20 to 10 Was it not a great mercy for the Lord to bear so long with the Amorites They had a long time of forbearance Thus did the Lord deal with Niniveh Jonah 3. 4. Yet forty days and Niniveh shall be overthrown So the Lord waited long on the Israelites Psal 95. 8. Harden not your hearts as in the provocation and as in the day of temptation in the wilderness So Jerusalem Luke 19. 42 44. If thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things that belong unto thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes The five foolish Virgins had a time allowed both wise and foolish slept and slumbred but the foolish wanted oyl and lost the accepted season Jezabel had time alloted her Rev. 2. 21. I gave her space to repent of her fornication but she repented not The Reasons are 1. To glorifie the riches of Gods mercy Mercy Reas 1. To glorifie the riches of Gods mercy waits upon us wooing and alluring us to repentance The Lord invites Isa 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth let him come c. He calls sinners to repentance He entreateth by his Ambassadors 2 Cor. 5. 20. He waits to be gracious Rev. 3. 20. 2. To glorifie the Justice of God and to leave a people without R. 2. To glorifie Gods justice excuse When mercy patience goodness graciousness long-suffering are all abused what remains but destruction never fruit grow on thee more Cut it down I will take this kingdom from you I will send you a famine of the word These are terrible threatnings 3. The Lord oftentimes is pleased to spare a people longer at the R. 3. God spares a people at the request of his servants request of his servants Luke 13. 8. The Vine-dresser prayed Let it alone yet longer till I dig about it and dung it Gods Ministers pray hard and tug hard at the oar they cry night and day Lord spare try this people a little longer exercise a little more patience towards them let thy Word work upon them they live under the sound of it let it effectually prevail with them The Uses are 1. For admiration O admire the infinite mercies of God who doth thus bear with sinners notwithstanding Use 1. For admiration their provocations yet he tryes waits and allows them a great deal of space when as in Justice he might cut sinners assunder in the midst of their sins This breathes terrors unto all presumptuous sinners who presume Vse 2. For terror of space and grace neither of which is in their own power To some God gives space others he
4. 7. 2. Repent seriously and Evangelically make not a slight matter of so great a work neither rest satisfied in a legal repentance extorted from the fear of Hell and the wrath of an angry God but let it be done Evangelically from the love of God the consideration of the displeasure of so good a God and the sinfulness of sin let those considerations melt thee into tears and cause thee to mourn ingenuously 3. Be continually renewing thy repentance and when thou hast 3 Be renewing thy repentance frequently felt a pardon get it fairer transcribed and renewed through the Blood of Christ His blood cleanseth from all sins And there is redemption through his Blood the forgiveness of sins 4. Be thankful for the space that God gives thee thou canst never 4 Be thankfull for the space given thee 5. Improve every mercy to more saith full performance of duty acknowledge enough the patience and forbearance of God who gives thee time and allows thee space and wher 's his Sword and bends his Bow to give thee warning to escape the blow What shall I render unto the Lord for all his mercies and loving kindnesses Will Eternity be enough to praise the Lord 5. Improve every mercy to more faithful performance of duties The last Use is for comfort unto those who make much of the strivings of Gods Spirit and make the best improvement of the Use 6. For consolation time that God alots them for repentance This will yield them comfort in their lives on their death-beds 2 Kings 20. 3. Remember O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and have done that which is good in thy sight And to all Eternity Happy are they that have hearkned to Gods call and made a good use of all the means of Grace and spent the allotted time to Gods glory Here they shall reap the first-fruits of Joy and Comfort and hereafter the full Harvest unto all Eternity An Ingagement unto Holyness from the consideration of the Day of Iudgement Unfolded from 2 Pet. 3. 11. Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and Godliness THat Christ shall come to Judgement is an Article of our Ser. 4. at St. Maryes Oxon July 27 1651. Faith We profess we believe it yet how many deny it in their practices Some put far from them the evil day or think not of a day of account like desperate Bank-rupts adding more to the score not considering an after reckoning Hence multitudes live as they list without God in the world running into all excess of riot frolicking it in all manner of Epicurism and Voluptuousness thus denying the Day of Judgement by the wickedness of their lives Others are much offended because the day is so long a coming because Christ stays so long they are hot-spurs and will not wait If Gods clo●k strike not according to their Dyal If the Resurrection Day of Judgement Christs second coming be not assoon as they expect they call all in question and propose a question full of Blasphemy and Infidelity both ver 4. Where is the promise of his coming These blasphemous Scoffers ver 4. Arg. 1. Ver. 5. the Apostle consures by several Arguments The world was created by the word of God v. 5. It was not ab aeterno as Philosophers dreamed now the Argument is valid The same God who by his word made the world can by his word destroy it when he pleaseth A second Argument is drawn from experience v. 6. By the Deluge Arg. 2. Ver. 6. the old world was destroyed God bade the water over-flow and destroy man and beast and it did so And the time will come that he will bid the fire to destroy this visible World wherein we no● live and it shall be so v. 7. A third Argument is drawn from the Eternity of God We Ver. 7. Arg. 3. poor Creatures measure things by time we speak of days weeks moneths and years of times past present and to come thus we apprehend but time past present and to come are all one in God His Decree delays not He 's not measured by time Ver. 8. v. 8. If God seem to defer this day yet this is an argument of singular patience mercy and loving kindness not of any slackness Ver. 9. v. 9. Gods long-suffering should be our salvation Gods patience and waiting upon us roads us a Lecture of Repentance O infinite forbearance bowels of mercy opened when as the Lord might cut us asunder in the midst of our rebellions and send us to Hell immediately yet he wooes invites and beseecheth us to repent and he waits and trys us whetting of his Sword bending of his Bow that whil'st the Sword is a whetting and the Bow a bending we should prudently fore-see and take warning that so we might escape the blow The fourth and last Argument to confute those scoffers who Arg. 4 are over curiously inquisitive hasty unbelieving rashly expostulating Where is the promise of his coming This I say is drawn Ver. 10. from the manner of Christs coming v. 10. Hoc additum est saith Calvin ut semper sint in excubiis fideles nec crastinum sibi promittant This may be considered three manner of ways 1. It 's unexpected as Thieves come unlook'd for when men 1. are asleep and most secure then the Thief comes When the old World was secure in the midst of their jollity then came the Flood and swept them away 2. There will be a change of the whole frame of the Universe 2. Matth. 24. 38. 39. Beza Erasmus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. v. 10. The heavens c. Impetum veluti Sibillantis procella declarat So Beza In morem procellae in manner of a storm So Erasmus 3. There shall be an utter conslagration of all things even of those wherein worldlings place their happiness The Mannors Lands goodly Buildings the Wonders and Idols of the World shall be burnt up at that day Now it will be our wisdom neither to question the truth of these things for Truth it self the Lord Jesus Christ hath told us that these things shall come to pass neither ought we to be curiously inquisitive after the particular time when as some of the Jewish Rabbins have been too bold in this pa●ticular neither ought we to be impatient or querulous because it s not yet accomplished 4. Our duty to wait and believe And our main duty and wisdom will consist in this to make preparation to be in Procinctu 4. Hab. 2. 3 4. to have our Garments girt about us to have our Lamps burning and Oyl enough in them against that great day Far be it from me to raise a dust or rake into the Dung-hill of those ancient lately 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hereticks who deny the Resurrection the Day of
that are Masters of Families be exhorted to set up Holynesse in your Families Teach your children and servants to know God keep up your authority give not liberty to them under your roofe to live as they list Abraham gave no toleration he commanded his houshold to keep the way of the Lord. Let all sorts and sexes old and Gen. 18. 19. young learned and unlearned lay this Exhortation to heart I presse holynesse upon you all O that the Priests Motto were writ upon your hearts and lives Holynesse unto the Lord. You cannot say as Sheba the Son of Bichri said We have no portion in David c. as if this concerns not us but holynesse concerns you all you must all follow after holynesse To excite you to your duty I 'll lay down some moving considerations Consid 1. We are elected unto holinesse 2 Thes 2. 13. 1. Consider you are elected unto holynesse not for holynesse nor through praevision of holyness that 's a false Arminian glosse but unto holynesse 2. We are created unto holynesse All the members of our bodies Consid 2. We are created in holynesse Ephes 4. 24. and faculties of our soules should be instruments of holynesse The tongue should speak holily holy communication should drop from the tongue the heart and hand both should be clean as James specifies c. 4. 8. The feet must keep the wayes of Gods commandements Consid ● We are redeemed to be holy Luk. 1. 74. 75. the understanding will affections the whole man all must be holy to this purpose they were created 3. Consider we are redeemed for this end and purpose that we may be holy 4. It 's Gods will that we should be holy 1 Thes 4. 3. Now our Consid 4. It s Gods will that we should be holy wils must be subject unto Gods will He commands us to be holy we should pray for his grace to enable us to perform his command Holynesse is suitable to Gods will and wee have an encouraging promise 1 Joh. 5. 14. 5. ●olynesse is our calling 1 Pet. 1. 15. 1 Thes 4. 7. Wee can Consid 5. Holyness is our calling have no comfort but when we are in a lawfull calling when our wayes are according to Gods wayes wee may hope for Gods gracious protection according to the promise Psal 91. 11. When any commit wickednesse are unclean drunk associate themselves with wicked persons they are out of their calling and so out of Gods special p●ovidence Consider this seriously when you are tempted to Whoredom or any o●her sin God hath not called you unto un●eannesse but unto holynesse 6. Heaven is an holy place only appointed for holy persons Nothing Consid 6. Heaven is a holy place that 's defiled shall enter there Rev. 21. 27. Onely holy persons shall be acquitted before Christs Judgement-seat They only shall enter into the new Jerusalem 7. In heaven there shall bee no other but holy employment Consid 7. In Heaven there is holy employment singing Hosannahs and Hallelujahs to him that sitteth on the throne and to the Lamb for evermore A prophane person hates holy Ordinances and holy employments here on earth Were it possible for him to be in heaven hee would be weary of the employment whereas the Saints shall have their hearts put into such an high and excellent frame as they shall without molestation weariness or intermission be ever setting forth the praises of the Lord. 8. And there will be in heaven the most holy company the holy Consid 8. In heaven there is holy company Trinitie God the Father God the Son God the Holy Ghost the most holy blessed and glorious Trinity There will be holy Angels the spirits of just men made perfect holy Martyrs holy Ministers holy people No company there but all holy company 9. And lastly to close up all Now whilst we live on earth is Consid 9. The present time is the time to labor after holynes the time or never to labour after holynesse now I mean in this time of life we must make provision for eternity This is Gods summons to day if you will hear his voice Delay not a minute longer Resist not the movings of the Spirit great is the danger of resisting the Spirits movings The Lord set home all these considerations upon your hearts and if hereby the Lord should be pleased to gaine any soul to the love and practise of holynesse I should never be enough thankful for the mercies of this day The third Use is for Examination and Tryal Every one will Use 3. For Examination plead for himself and pretend to an holy conversation As it was said When the Son of man comes shall he finde faith on the earth So shall he find an holy conversation a formal Professor a Christian at large are every where to be found like Sycamo●es in the valley for abundance but the power of holynesse an holy circumspect walking are rarely found Now then because its the grand Ministerial duty to distinguish the precious from the vile according to that high commendation and priviledge given as to be the mouthes of God Jer. 15. 19. And because God hath gone forth in a signal exemplary blessing upon this way which hath been so frequently used by old Disciples faithful labouring Ministers whose plain Preaching would it were more revived now adaies It shall therefore be my task to lay forth some distinguishing characters and signs of a gracious sincere heart whose life is accordingly ordered in an holy conversation and by them you may put your selves upon the test and tryal as in the presence of God whether you are such manner of persons in all holy conversation and godlinesse The first sign is spiritual poverty and this consists in the emptying Charact. 1. Spiritual Poverty of the heart of self-confidence self-opinion self-sufficiency and self-righteousnesse whereby a Christian becomes nothing in himself altogether lost undone blind miserable poor and naked He is thoroughly sensible of his own misery and wretchednesse He is apprehensive of his own undone condition and what need he hath of a Saviour such an one Christ pronounceth to be in the state Mat. 5. 3. of blessednesse 2. There followeth the highest prizing and estimate of Jesus Charact. 2. High prizing of Jesus Chr. Christ That soul which is spiritually poor accounts Christ the greatest treasure it apprehends it self blind that Christ may give it eye-salve miserable and lost that Christ may save it naked that Christ may cloath it with his righteousnesse See what an high price the Spo●se puts upon Jesus Christ Cant. 5. 10 11 12 c. He is precious 1 Pet. 2. 7. a plant of renown Ezek. 34 29. Such an high price had the wise Merchant to sell all for him Mat. 13. 45 46. So Moses who preferred the reproach of Christ before Egypts treasure Bradford wept often even at meales because he could not bring his dul heart
1 Joh 3 3. Jam. 14 8 thy self to cleanse thy hands and purifie thy heart this is a needfull study its time well imployed in searching our hearts in washing and purifying of the inward man 3. Be much exercised in divine meditation Meditate frequently Rule 3. Be exercised the divine in art of meditation of the four last things Death Judgement Hell and Heaven Entertain frequent and serious thoughts of ●ternity It 's a poynt of understanding and wisdome to consider our latter end Meditate what a holy place heaven is what holy company and what holy employments aret here Nothing that defileth shall ever come there Get up into the Mount with Moses let thy affections soare aloft being carried aloft with the wings of heavenly meditation This was Isaacs practise Davids and Pauls Were you acquainted with the singular benefit of Meditation you would not lye groveling here below your words thoughts whole conversations would bee in heaven 4. Consider the omnipresence and omniscience of God whither Rule 4. Consider Gods omnipresence canst thou goe from his presence how canst thou escape his knowledge If I sinne saith Job he marketh me Job 10. 14 15. God seeth thy secret sinnes hee knoweth all thy reservations and cunning conveyances All things are naked unto him with whom thou hast to deale and without holynesse thou shalt never see the face of God with comfort The serious consideration of the Omnipresence and Omniscience of God through the grace of God may prevaile with us to a circumspect and holy conversation 5. Set an high estimate upon and frequent diligently the holy Rule 5 Consider Gods Ordinances Ordinances of God They are called The beauties of Holynesse Psal 110. 3. There is a cleansing virtue in the Word of God Psal 119. 9. Gods face is beautifull his holynesse is his beauty Now by the face of God Calvin understands the Ordinances of God Psal 27. 8. Wait then O Christian at the posts of Wisdoms gate lye in the way where Christ comes by tarry at these Bethesdaes The Ordinances are the golden Pipes to conveigh the golden Oyle take heed of sitting loose from them Blesse God that your eyes behold your Teachers and that your Gospel is not driven into corners Improve these prices and spiritual advantages for the good of your precious souls 6. And lastly associate your selves with holy company Love Rule 6. Associa●e your selves with holy company where God loves now the Lord loveth his Saints It was Davids profession that his delight was in the Saints Psal 16. 2 3. Bee a companion to those that fear God If a dead coale be neare a live co●le it may be inkindled by it but if two live coales be together what abundance of heate will they give We read Mal. 3. 16. That they that feared the Lord spake often one to another Let not Christians be strange and shie of one anothers company But let 's unite as one man to conserre all our interests to give each other a lift to heaven Make them thy companions on earth whom thou hopest to enjoy in heaven to all eternity The last Use and so in a few words to conclude is a word of Use 5. For Consolation Consolation unto holy persons true beleevers the adopted sonnes and daughters of God when the day of Judgement comes and the whole world is in a flame they shall bee of good comfort That day which will be a day of terrour and revenge to the wicked shall be a day of refreshing and restitution unto them The Saints that sleep in the grave shall be awakned at the sound of the Trumpet and their bodies and soules shall bee reunited and they sh●ll receive the consummation of their happynesse The Saints that are alive shall be caught up together with those that are dead in Christ in the cloudes to meet the ●ord in the air and so shall be ever with the Lord. The inference the Apostle makes should be ours wherefore 1 Thes 4. 18. comfort one another with these words O but I cannot see this in me I would be holy yet I cannot find this growth of holynesse in me Is this thy case goe thy way to God challenge him with his promise put his bond in suit Hee commands make you a clean heart but doth he not promise to give it Ezek. 36. 25. Comfort thy self with Christs praier to the Father He prayes Father sanctifie them through thy truth And know there may be grace where feeling may be wanting It s an excellent Joh. 17. 17. Eph. 1. 13. saying of Mr. Greenham We hold Christ by faith and not by feeling Feeling is an after thing After ye beleeved ye were sealed with that holy spirit of promise Is it the desire and endeavour of thy soule to be holy Notwithstanding infirmities yet is thy heart single and without guile be of good comfort thou shalt hold up thy head with comfort at that great day of accompt when the wicked shall wish that the mountains might fall upon them and the hills cover them from the face of the Lamb thou shalt behold Christ in the face with comfort when all these visible things shall be dissolved and the elements shall melt with fervent heat thou shalt be glad and rejoice at that day and enjoy eternall felloship with the blessed Trinity in whose presence there is fulness of joy and at whose right hand there are pleasures for evermore Did we but seriously consider of Psal 16. 11. these things wee should desire to bee dissolved and to be with Christ we should cry Come Lord Jesus come quickly we should have the Moon under our feet we should negotiate for the great things of eternity May all things that have been said make deep impression upon our spirits and prevaile with us to the love and practise of holynesse looking for and hasting unto the comming of God Though at that day the world be on fire we shall be safe though there shall be a general Assize wee shall be acquitted and that day of Judgement will be the Saints refreshing day Christ is their Redeemer and Intercessour VVho would not now be in love with holyness holyness will be holyness indeed at that day Only holy persons shall hold up their heads with comfort they only shall be able to stand in judgement God onely that made the heart can cleanse it Christ doth love and wash his people Le ts therefore pray for holynesse follow after holynesse Thus our fruit being unto holynesse our end will be happynesse The Necessity of the Knowledge of Regeneration Discovered from Joh. 3. v. 10. Jesus answered and said unto him Art thou a Master of Israel and knowest not these things THE report of Christs Miracles being famous every where Serm. 5. at St. Maries Oxon. Aug. 14. 1654. v. 1. insomuch that multitudes followed him at last one of an eminent Rank comes to visit and conferre with Christ v. 1. By degree he
fruition thereof There 's great reason to perswade us to labour and secure our everlasting estate if we consider 1. When once wee are in eternity consider what we are freed from There are severall privative Immunities which glorified Reas 1 Saints are partakers of and Militant Saints have onely in their eye heart desires and expectation of that happy welcome day These things are in the desire hope and earnest longing of Militant Saints but gloryfied Saints have their desires accomplished and the fruition of that which on earth they hoped for And what are these privative immunities 1. Freedome from sinne Nothing that defileth is in heaven ● We are f●eed from sinne there is no conflict between the flesh and spirit no struggling against lust no combating with the flesh It 's the greatest desire of Gods children that they may sinne no more In this world the best of Gods children are subject to many infirmities they carry about with them a body of sinne But then there shall be no infirmities no corruptions no lusts to conflict withall as appears more fully from Isai 44. 22. Jer. 50. 20. All which Prophesies have reference unto the Triumphant Church Jerusalem which is above the Mother of us all 2. We shall in eternity be freed from all tentations to sin from 2. We are freed from all tentations the Flesh the Devil and the World 1. There we shall not be troubled with corrupt flesh to lust against the spirit There we shall not be troubled with the deeds of the flesh Envy Hatred Malice Heresies Variances c. Here we are in part carnal there we shall be wholly spiritual 2. There we shall not be troubled with the Devils temptations his methods snares depths shall doe us no harm In this world he is a Lyon let loose running about seeking whom he may devoure there he is a Lyon chained shut up he may like as dogs bark at the Moon rayle against the Saints but he can doe them no harme This Accuser of the Brethren is shut up In this world the Devil is busie to winnow the Saints as Wheat but in the world to come the Saints are like Wheat layd up in the Garner out of his reach and meddling withall as we may read Rev. 20. 10. 3. The Saints shall be freed from all the worlds temptations what 's in the world is reckoned up 1 Joh. 2. 16. viz. the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life But in that day the world shall be burnt up and be dissolved There shall not remaine a wicked world to seduce the Saints The Devil cries come to me but he will deceive thee The flesh cries come to me but it will assuredly faile thy expectation The world cries come to me but it will destroy thee But in the world to come there will be neither a devil to deceive nor a flesh to faile nor a world to flay And lastly we are freed in heaven from all punishments of sin 3. Wee are freed from punishments all sorrows calamities afflictions of all sorts and sizes Rev. 21. 4. Heaven is a place of rest There the weary goe to rest Heaven is a place of security no enemy can pursue thee there no persecutor can reach thee there no slanderous tongue can there do thee harm there thou shalt be hid from the scourge of tongues there shall be neither thirst nor hunger no sorrow nor mourning All teares are then wiped away sorrow and mourning shall flee away In heaven thou shalt not bee troubled with an aking head nor with a sad heart None shall complaine there of fainting fits nor of stone chollick gout strangury tooth-ake or such like pains full of dolour and anguish Nay more than this after once thou art in heaven thou shalt no more tast of death a temporal death thou sufferedst before that was the wages of sinne but a second death thou shalt escape as we may read Rev. 20. 14. When once thou gettest into heaven thou art out of gun-shot out of all dangers out of the rage and malice of wicked men the Whip the Rack the Block the Gibbet all the threats of ungodly men can do thee no harm Thou hast a life secured from the malice of men and devils it 's a hidden life 't is in the safest custody Col. 3. 3. Your life is hid with Christ in God These are privative immunities But in the second place another Reason to perswade us to the Reas 2. Drawn from Positive Benefits search study and inquisition after eternal things shall be drawn from those positive singular benefits which the Saints shall reap in eternity Particularly 1. They shall enjoy the blessed presence of the holy Trinity the vision and fruition of God This is a transforming sight They are like unto God so far as a creature can be capable of assimilation unto a deity Though Saints are not deified become Gods yet they are in an eminent manner partakers of the divine nature They shall see in heaven God the first being of all and their gracious Father reconciled to them in Jesus Christ They shall see Christ God and man in one person their Redeemer and Intercessor and they shall see the holy Ghost their comforter Neither shall they as strangers and travellers see other mens Lands or as men by maps see farre Countries wherein they have no interest But they shall see the blessed Trinity as haveing themselves a special interest therein God as their God Christ as their Redeemer the Holy Ghost as their Comforter Tolle meum saith a Father tolle Deum In My God and my Lord there li●th the great consolation 2. Glorified Saints enjoy the society of Saints and Angels the 2. Glorified Saints enjoy the society of Saints spirits of just men made perfect There they shall see Abraham the father of the faithful David a man after Gods own heart Moses and Job Mirrours of meekness and patience Paul the great Dr. of the Gentiles There the godly Pastor and godly People the godly Husband and godly Wife the godly Father and godly Children shall meet together O what pretious company is there None but holy persons are admitted into the new Jerusalem Whether the Saints shall know one another in heaven who have been so well acquainted on earth is a question much controverted But there are two Scriptures that make much for the affirmative viz. Mat. 17. 4. At Christs transfiguration which was a type and glimpse of heaven Peter knew Moses and Elias who were dead many hundred years before Another is 1 Thes 2. 19 20. For what is our hope or joy or crown of rejoicing Are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming For ye are our glory and joy 3. The glorified Saints shall be busied in a rare transcendent 3. Glorified Saints shall be busied in a high em●loyment imployment In heaven they shall be for ever praysing of
what he professeth wherefore Mr. Calvin on the place giveth him this brand of infamy Qui ergo putant se posse elabi Calv. in loc ex Dei judicio talibus artificiis eos Propheta maledictos esse dicit Such who by such tricks and juglings think to escape Gods judgement they are accursed persons In the second place we are to make enquiry what 's to be understood by having in the flock a Male A. By Male wee are to understand the best of the flock such as the Law required without blemish Lev. 1. 3. 10. This Male must have these properties according to Vatablus his observation It must be Integer immaculatus absque ullo vitio The 70. renders the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. that man that is able to give a better sacrifice A man of ability to give a Male and offers a vile contemptible sacrifice O what a horrible affront and indignity is this to God! Haec Hierom. autem dicendo ostendit eos habere quae optima sunt offerre quae mala sunt So Hierome on the place They had the best in the flock and yet offered the worst such are accursed persons who carry themselves thus contemptuously towards the great God of Heaven and Cyril Alexan. Earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so Cyril of Alexandria This is nothing lesse than contumely and injury offered unto God 3. What are we to understand by a corrupt thing A. By a corrupt thing we are to understand that which is weak vile feeble and contemptible Cyril on the place thus expresseth them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Such things as seem of no account and reckoning Such was the basenesse of their spirits in those daies that they thought any thing good enough for God No Vows no Ingagements held them fast so great was their falshood and hypocrisie that they offered the refuse and worst to God They loved a cheap religion easie duties sleight services wherefore if they could find out any thing more cheap easie and contemptible than another that these base hypocrites offered to the Lord. These are the deceivers and notorious juglers which come under the Anathema of the Text I wish there were not an Anabaptistical spawn in these daies who love a cheap Gospel and decry Ministers and their maintenance Some are best pleased with that portion which they have robbed the Ministers of Insomuch that many will brand Ministers with the odious names of Jewish and Antichristian Priests though onely for demanding their lawfull dues And further though a Minister demands onely his own he having as good a right to his tenth part as any other have to their nine parts yet the iniquity of these times are such that many make no conscience at all of defrauding the Minister Siquid blae●um siquid debile siquid distortum that they will allot for the Ministers share But such cheaters of Gods Messengers will thrive by their fraudulent dealing no otherwise than the Eagle which stole a peece of flesh from the Altar and with it took a live coale which burnt up her own nest And now the Paraphrase of the words being premised Here are four Doctrines which lye obviously in the words 1. All such as deale deceitfully and hypocritically in Gods service Doct. 1 expose themselves unto the dreadful curse of God 2. In all our services it 's Gods expectation and our obliged duty to Doct. 2 offer the best we can possible unto the Lord. 3. It 's a high contempt and indignity to offer any thing vile refuse Doct. 3 and corrupt unto the Lord. 4. The greatnesse of Gods Majesty and the estimation that Heathens Doct. 4 have of a Deity do abundantly condemne the contemptuous carriages of seeming Professors who offer a contemptible sacrifice unto the Lord. Of these I shall fixe onely on the second as comprehending the rest which I shall lay down for the ground work of my ensuing Meditations The other Doctrines will fall in either as Reasons or Vses For the inlargement of the point of Doctrine propounded my Method shall be 1. To make strict enquirie how must our services be performed Method in the best way which we ought to offer unto the Lord or what is that Male in the Text which wee ought to sacrifice unto the Lord Then in the second place I am to prove my assertion by Scripture Testimony And then thirdly and lastly improve the premises in some usefull Application and I hope so to conclude with the assistance of Gods Spirit as to prevaile with you to put this Doctrine into practise i. e. To give God your best services best endeavours even such as will be acceptable unto the Lord For what was first propounded The Inquiry being how must our services be performed which we ought to offer unto the Lord I shall by way of character give in my Answer in these six distinguishing Qualifications 1. What we do even all we doe must come from and be performed Charact. 1. Al must bee done from the heart with a pure heart Purity and Integrity of heart are principally lookt after and esteemed of in Gods accompt The heart God calls for Prov. 23. 26. My Son give me thy heart And this heart may not be divided It must be one heart Jer. 32. 39. And I will give them one heart and one way that they may fear mee for ever for the good of them and of their children after them It must be the whole heart Joel 2. 12. Therefore saith the Lord Turne yee unto me with all your heart with fasting with weeping and with mourning It must be all the heart Josh 22. 5. But take heed diligently to doe the Commandement and the Law which Moses the servant of the Lord charged you to love the Lord your God and to walk in his waies and to keep his Commandements and to cleave unto him and to serve him with all your heart and with all your soul Lo then a single sincere undivided heart must be offered up to God And whatsoever we doe we must do it heartily as unto the Lord Col. 3. 23. Quod cor non facit non fit When one of the Roman Emperours offered a Beast in sacrifice and it wanted a heart their Augures upon the observation foretold some strange misery to ensue I am sure whatever we offer unto God if wee bring not our hearts with the offering all will be rejected Wherefore the sacrifice of the wicked is abominated by God because he offereth it with a naughty heart Prov. 21. 27. The sacrifice of the wicked is abomination how much more when he bringeth it with a wicked mind Charact. 2. We must have regard unto the beauty of the season 2. In all our services we must have regard to the Beauty of the season for every thing is beautifull in its season And a dreadful curse is threatned against all those who brought not the Lord an offering in its season Numb 9. 13. Of
before he ●lew them Judas kist Christ and then betrayed him Multitudes there are that put on a Vizard of Religion to cover their oppressions treachearies and Machivillian Pollicies Such are set forth by the Poet in a lively character Pulchra Laverna Da mihi fallere da mihi justum sanctumque videri Noctem peccatis fraudibus objice nubem I will not English it would mens contrary practises would make the confutation But can a Hypocrite think to put off God with the worst i. e. shews phansies pretences and airy complements Such empty sleight services as come from a rotten heart are like the Prophets rotten girdle good for nothing like Cains sacrifice like the cutting off a Dogs neck like eating of Swines flesh all which are an abhomination unto the Lord. Histories make mention V. Fox Act. Monum Vol. 1. of William the Conquerour to have these Characters He was wise but crafty rich but covetous faire spoken but false hearted If a Professor be guilty of these characters he is a shame to his Profession Ananias and Saphira played the notorious Hypocrites They entred themselves into Church-fellowship and would have been counted as good Disciples as the best but they agreed together to keep back part of the price and their sin found them out and left them as signal spectacles of Gods dreadfull judgement to Posterity Thus Hypocrites keep back part of the price they may present their bodies before the Lord in a publick Congregation but they keep their hearts afarre off They may doe many things out of custome forme desire of applause reputation amongst men for fear of the brawling of a naturall conscience yet notwithstanding their hearts are not right before the Lord. 2. This Doctrine reproves negligent lazy persons who are so farre from giving God the best as they think any thing will serve the turn wherefore they will be at no pains in Gods service loth to rise out of bed to hear a Sermon Solomon describes such Prov. 6. 9 10. Men of lazy supine spirits have alwayes excuses ready at hand as wee may read Prov 20. 4. Prov. 22. 13. This slothfulnesse is a very great sinne when men will not stirre up themselves nor improve their parts and abilities to serve God with diligence Seneca calls Otium vivi hominis sepulturam And a learned Professor calls it Christiani Barathrum There is a dreadfull D. Arrowsmith Tact. Sacr. doome upon the slothfull servant Mat. 25. 30. where God gives but one Talent he expects improvement thereof But what shall we say of such as have many Talents great Gifts and Abilities and yet hide them in a Napkin It 's a hard matter to get some into a Pulpit though they have been solemnly set apart for that great work and have dedicated themselves thereunto Consider with your selves where much is given much is required and for more Talents entrusted to you the greater shall your accompt be at the last day VVhat shall we think of such who should have inspection over those that are entrusted to their government but they faile that trust which Parents repose in them Children are the Parents dearest Jewels and Governours and Tutors are Pro-parents or should be so Now to let youth have their liberty and runne their course to let them chuse whether they will come to Prayers or no to Scholastical exercises or no this liberty will be their bane and how heavy an account have those to make to God who have power to restrain them yet are of Gallio's carelesse temper Brethren let 's take heed of sloath and ease in our places but let 's be vigilant industrious and active for God Let 's look to all under us let 's Catechise them keep them close to Religious and Scholastical Exercises For Truants idle lazy persons let 's labour to reform them and if they will not be conformable to Discipline le ts remove them from our Societies lest their evil example may be the ruin of the Community Let not such Pleas be received for they are vain and frivolous That Gentlemen come to learn fashions and intend to stay but a short time and must they be kept to exercises It 's an experimental observation that such manner of Drones and slothfull persons do the greatest mischiefe by their examples unto the place where they live And upon further experience it will be evident that we had farre better bee without such idle company than have them Let Joshuahs resolution be our practise We and our houses we and all our charge will serve the Lord. Le ts quicken our spirits and shake off drowsiness we serve a good Master we cannot take too much pains nor bestow too much sweat in his service Thirdly this Doctrine reproves all such who put off their ●epentance to Old Age what 's this but to offer a corrupt thing a lame and a blind Sacrifice Thy youth marrow vigour strength should be given unto God It 's a Proverb fetcht from hell Angelicus Juvenis senibus satanizat in annis I am sure ●od beganne with Samuel Timothy Josiah in their youth and in their fresh green yeares they gave up themselves to God That rare King Edward the sixth was a mirrour of his Age for parts and piety in his tender yeares Young Bullocks were offered up in Sacrifice Numb 28. 11. Fresh green eares of corn were to be offered up to God Lev. 2. 14. And the soul of God desires the first ripe fruits Mich. 7. 1. Now what a great contempt is it to think that old decrepite age dry bones are good enough for God that I may speak with reverence that is to offer God the Devils leavings I doe not here set a barre against the eldest but invite them to repent and bewaile their mis-spent time But this is to forewarne and caution people not to delay repentance till old age for 't is doubtfull whether ever thou mayst live to be old God may cut thee off in the midst of thy youthfull vanities or if thou livest to be old it is as doubtfull whether thou mayest have grace given thee to repent then There 's a peradventure whether thou mayest repent And God gave Jezabel Rev. 2. 21. space to repent but she repented not Wherefore it is great madnesse and presumption and a most high affront unto God to run a mad careere and follow the swinge of youth and to hope for repentance and mercy in old age But I come to a third Use which is for Examination Three Vse 3. For Examination Inquiries I shall onely make 1. Whether we give God the best in the duties we perform unto him 2. Whether wee give God the best in the exercises of graces 3. Whether wee give God the best in our life and conversation In all these things God requires a Male and the best of that Male in the best of the best duties the best of the best graces the best of the best conversation Let 's as in the
reconciliation to beseech people to be reconciled unto God And having endeavour'd this great work principally in the next place I conjure you and earnestly entreat you as you are Ministers of the Gospell of peace that you would conferre your best endeavours to cement sod●r and unite diss●nting Brethren that they may what in you lies be prevail'd withall to agree together in Unity on Earth who shall agree in Unity in the highest Heavens I plead not in the least for any persons how much soever admired by some who are either unsound in the saith or unholy in life No reconciliation can be expected nor ought to be attempted with * Gal. 5. 20. 21. Idolatries Drunkenesse Heresies and other such like deeds of the flesh I plead only for such as truly fear God who are not only nominall but reall saints Here lyeth the labour and here the work to be reconcilers amongst them and such peace-makers are blessed That I may speak my mind freely for I love plain dealing as for such Reconcilers as Cassander of old and Sancta Clara of late who would joyn together the Ark and Dagon the Ephod and Teraphim I mean Protestantisme and Popery these are to be detested and sent back again to Rome from whence they came † V. Bishop Hall's Treatise No peace with Rome No peace with Rome no quarter ought to be given to Benhadad I may say of them as Jehu said to Ahaziah * 2 King 9. 22. what peace so long as the whoredomes of thy Mother Jezabel and her witchcrafts are so many daies without number As for Ignatius Loyola Father of the Jesuites John of Leyden Ring-leader of the Anabaptists and the rest of their Complices of whose franctick practices we have ample Relations in Print † V. Sleyd Comment Baylyes disswasive they are so farre from any reall endeavours after reconciliation with us as rather like Samsons Foxes they run abroad with firebrands in their tails and so set all the standing corn a fire These are the grand Incendiaries flabella seditionum From Jesuitisme and Anabaptisme all heresies and damnable errors receive their originall At Rome and Munster this counterfeit coine receives it's stamp and impression Hence as out of a Trojan Horse is let out an Ambuscado to destroy the Protestant Religion Therefore ther 's no ground of hopefull successe if we should attempt any reconciliation with them Let them come to us and make serious Confessions and retractations but let not us go to them Let them first abjure their principles and practises though I know not why we should trust a Papist upon his oath till then there can be no possibility of embraceing peace with such who either are of Babylon or for Babylon But what is chiefly in mine eye and aime amounts to this brief issue to perswade all those to unite amongst themselves who are sound in the faith and holy in life Amongst them there are some who come so farre up to us and we hope they may yet come farther if selfe interests make no obstructions as to acknowledge us true Ministers the Church of England a true Church Much is granted to this effect by some * V. Apolog. of the five dissenting Brethren Reverend dissenting Brethren in Print When carnall Interests secular policies and mentall reservations are laid aside and men declare plainly what they would have and when we know once where to finde them and where they will fix then Attempts of Accommodation may attain a happy and comfortable successe That which much concerns us all is to lay to heart and be deeply affected with the divisions of Reuben and to use our utmost endeavour to comprimise differences and make up breaches and animosities lest otherwise we gratify the Jesuit who is the common Enemy who loves to fish in troubled waters or is like an Adder which seeks for shelter in broken walls Let 's leave off contention prius quam sese immisceat so Junius renders the words of Solomon † Prov. 17. 14. Prov. 17. 14. i. e. Let not contention mixe with our affairs For once it being mixed and joyned it 's not easy to unmixe and separate afterwards Wherefore let it be our care and wisdome not to give advantage by our domestick breaches to the wild Boar of Babylon or the subtle Foxes of Munster and Racovia who when they see us a quarrelling one with another they make a prey of us both I well remember about this time 24. yeares ago in the Vespers of our publicke Act there was a Question discuss'd which the * Dr. Wingham of St Johns Respondent held Affirmative An Calviniani quos vocant Lutherani possint in unam Ecclesiam coalescere And in the like solemne Convention another Question 7. yeares ago was affirmed homogeneous to the former by a † Dr. Wilkinson of Christ-Church learned Professor of our University An intersit pacis salutis Ecclesiae vere Evangelicos pium colere syncretismum But especially let 's have recourse unto Scripture What saith the Psalmist * Psal 133. 1. Psal 133. 1. Behold how good and how pleasant it is for Brethren to dwell together in unity I have often fetch 't a ground of hope against many fears from 2. Prophesies The one is † Zeph. 3. 9. Zeph. 3. 9. For then will I turn to the people a pure Language that they may all call upon the name of the Lord to serve him with one consent The other is * Zach. 14. 9. Zach. 14. 9. And the Lord shall be King over all the Earth in that day shall there be one Lord and his name be one † Non satis est si homines agnoscerent unum Deum nisi consentiu●t in re●ta simplici aliqu● fide ita ut celebretur in terrâ nomen unius Dei Calv. in Zeph. 3. 9. Though there be but one Lord yet his name is called on diversly but here is Prophesied an unity of worshipping God And as for unity amongst Brethren this is accounted a fruit of our effectuall calling * Eph. 4. 3. Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace And for the better setting home of this exhortation the Apostle mentions 7. Ones in the following verses viz. One body one Spirit one hope of our calling one Lord one faith one Baptisme one God and Father of all How pathetically doth the Apostle presse unanimity † Phil. 2. 1 2. If saith he there be therefore any Consolation in Christ if any comfort of love if any fellowship of the Spirit if any bowells of mercies fulfill ye my joy that ye be like minded having the fame love being of one accord and one mind * Numerus binarius eo magis infamis quia primus ausus est discedere ab unitate Pythag Pythagoras used to put a brand of infamy upon the number of two because it first departed from unity But the Apostle propounds the Question
in the negative which hath the force of a strong affirmation † 1 Cor. 3. 3. For whereas there is among you envying and strife and divisions are ye not carnall and walk as men Sects and factions have their source and originall from the flesh so * Notandum est etiam hoc loco unde sint factiones sectae in Ecclesia Primum quidem ex carne ut qui sectarii sunt licet videantur esse spiritualissimi revera tamen carnales existant Muscul in 1 Cor. 3. 3. Musculus a judicious Expositor observes Further let me be your remembrancer of that great duty that in an especiall manner concernes the Ministers of the Gospell that is to unite amongst themselves and endeavour to draw in one yoak and as one man † Jude 3. contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the saints Let the Apostles exhortation be as a frontlet before our eyes and as a Phylactery sewed on the hemmes of our garments * Rom. 14. 19. Rom. 14. 19. Let us therefore follow after the things which make for peace and things wherewith one may edify another The Phrase is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we must pursue and run after peace though it may seem to flye from us But we must not take any peace at a venture but that which tends to edification as † Sectemur studium vehemens conservandae pacis requirit Pac● adj●ngitaedificationem mutuam ut non pacem quamvis sed eam tantum praecipi intelligamus quae ad aedificationem pertinet Non aedificat pax in mendacio superstitione idololatria impietate sed in veritate Zech. 8. 19. Veritatem pacem diligite Pareus His duobus concordia aedificatione continentur fere ●m●a charitatis offici● Calv. Pareus and Calvin observe Of all others let the faithfull Ministers of Christ endeavour after a right understanding of each other and a loving correspondence and onenesse of heart and judgment amongst themselves Tell it not in Gath publish it not in the streets of Askelon lest the Popish party triumph when they heare that even the Lords Diamonds cut one another and that there are great animosities evill surmises and bitternesse of speech one towards another amongst some that are truely Godly How sharpe was the contention between two rare men even Paul and Barnabas insomuch as they * Act. 15. 39. departed asunder one from the other In severall Centuries we read of the great variances amongst Euseb L. 5. c. 26. L. 7. c. 3. those who were eminent Lights in the Church as Iraenaeus was at great variance with Victor Cyprian with Stephan Jerome with Austin Basill with Damasus Chrysostome with Epiphanius Cyrill with Theodoret. And their private inconsiderable differences amongst themselves gave great advantage to the common Enemy Satan who as a learned Author observes † Dolebat hoc Diabolus qui semper de fratrum pace torquetur Optat. L. 2. is vexed with the peace of the Brethren but much pleased with their contentions Though it cannot be expected but offences will come and that in the Church militant there will be sounding in our ears the noises of Axes and Hammers and oft times it falls out that Doctors both Godly and learned differ in some things from one another in their judgment Yet every Minister of the Gospell should imitate his Master Christ in being a Reconciler It was storyed of Athanasius that he was in lesser matters dissidentibus Magnes though in weighty affairs he was Adamas an Adamant not to be moved even a Load stone to draw those unto him who differed from him Wherefore abundance of wisdome and candour is required towards such as dissent from us if they keep those Fundamentall Principles of faith and a good conscience Truth ought to be spoke but in * Eph. 4. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hoc est persistentes sinceri in vera doctrina ac fide in charitate Zanch. Love And a lapsed Brother ought to be restored or set in joynt so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imports but it must be done by such as are † spirituall and in the Spirit of meeknesse If matters be circumstantiall abundance of gentlenesse moderation and mutuall forbearance ought to be exercised A flint may sooner be broken on a Pillow then an anvile † Gal. 6. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat rem aliquam resarcire collapsam reparare Tarnov in medull Ev. * Si virtutum finis ille sit maximus qui plurimorum spectat profectum moderatio omnium pulcherrima est Ambr. de Panor l. 1. c. 1. And mildnesse in some cases may prevail where roughnesse cannot But if matters be Fundamentall If some cry down the morall Law as an Almanack out of date as some Antimonian Spirits have endeavoured if others cry down Magistracy and Ministery as some Anabaptisticall Spirits have done if some cry down the Christian Sabbath as some * Tilham a pestilent Antisabbataria● who seduceth multitudes at Colchester and writes for the Jewish Sabbath and D. Heylin who in a late book intitled Respondet Petrus discovers himselfe a profest Adversary to the strict keeping of the Lords day Sabbath and decries strict observers thereof and most unworthily asperseth that eminent Light of the Church D. Vsser A. B. at Armagh who though Orthodox as in other things so in his judgment in the Lords day Sabbath yet cannot escape the abuses of D. P. H. which said P. H. is neare a kin to Ismael whose hand is against every man and every mans hand was against him Antisabbatarians have done with much impudence and profanenesse of spirit in these and such like cases let 's not yeild an inch let 's keep our ground Let Luther's heroicall resolution be our pattern for imitation Hic gero titulum cedo nulli It was the prudent Counsell of Athanasius to the Orthodox Brethren that they should by no means receive any pacificatory Letters from George the Arrian Persecutor and † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil Epist 235. Basil in an Epistle to Epiphanius assigns a strong reason why Athanasius gave such Counsell If once saith he we shake off the simplicity of the faith there will be no end of Disputations However let us all confer our heads and hearts together that we may agree so farre as we can still holding * Heb. 10. 23. fast our profession without wavering Let it be our endeavour † Heb. 12. 14. to follow peace with all men and holynesse Let 's preserve a happy union between truth and peace All the truths of God are more pretious then the Gold of Ophir We are commanded to * Prov. 23. 23. buy the truth but are prohibited from selling the least part of it Wherefore we ought all in our severall places and capacities to be valiant for the truth even all steel to the back The truth of God is a good matter and it 's good to be
as a correction of the Premises saying It 's the safest way to relye only on the mercies of God in Christ Wherefore let Papists discard their own merits however they distinguish de congruo condigno to elude their consciences and let Socinians abhorre their blasphemy who conceit that their obedience without Christ merits can justify them Yet notwithstanding let us wholly betake our selves to Christs righteousnesse His robes are broad enough to cloath us His merits are of Infinite dignity and estimation The great Apostle desired not † Phil. 3. 9. Deo homines examinante probante inveniar insitus Christo ut p●lmes viti qui non meos ex lege Mosaica sed ex virtute Christi me efficientis fructus proferam deo gratos Arias Mont. in loc to be found in his owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ the righteousnesse which is of God by faith And Job that holy man propounds the Question * Job 9. 2 3. Quasi dicat frustra se defendere apud ipsum prae ipso conetur Nulla comparatio Dei hominis justitiae Mercer in loc How should man be just with God if he will contend with him he cannot answer him one of a thousand Should the holiest of men such as were Enoch Noah Moses Abraham David c. Stand upon their own righteousnesse and joyn issue with Gods Justice not one of them could be able to stand in judgment Wherefore we lay this down for a foundation and a certaine truth That all reconciled Persons account Christ their only Peace-maker their rock and refuge their Counsellour saviour their only Intercessour and * 1 Cor. 1. 30 him who of God is made unto them Wisdome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption This then is the first note of triall whether we come off clear whether we throw away our own reason merits righteousnesse and venture all upon the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ He is a † Isa 27. 16. stone a tryed stone a pretious corner stone a sure foundation Wherefore we must as the Persians when the King was offended brought his Son in their Armes offer Christ unto the Father in the Armes of faith and venture all upon his meritorious satisfaction There 's no danger of miscarrying if with a lively faith we cast our selves upon Jesus Christ Secondly This foundation being necessarily laid a superstructure Charact. 2. The heart is new framed and fashioned may the better be raised on it Therefore another note of triall I shall assigne to be the new framing new moulding and fashioning of the heart For the heart of an unreconciled Person is rebellious against God As it 's recorded of Julian the Apostate that he shot up arrowes into the skie with a malicious intention to hit Christ So every naturall man that lives without God in the World would dethrone God if he could he hates God his wayes his people But as soon as the conquering power of the Spirit of God subdues the heart there is a marvelous change and alteration for the better There 's a * Rev. 3. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to anoint the eyes So that the understanding is inlightned and those that are Gods Children are † Eph. 4. 23. renewed in the Spirit of their minde They are all men and women of a pretious anointing which is that * 1 Joh. 2. 20. unction from the holy one whereby they know all things And as for the wills of these regenerate reconciled Persons they are now yielding obedient and pliable to the will of God For instance Saul before his conversion raved in a distemper'd zeal against the Disciples breathed threatnings slaughter against the Church and through his distemper'd zeal thought he did God good service by persecuting of the Church of God but as soon as ever Christ met him in the way and threw down Horse and Man and told him that † I am Jesus whom thou * Act. 9. 5. persecutest it is hard for thee to kick against the prickes then his will was changed and he wholly devolved himselfe upon Christs will as appears by his humble answer Vers 6. Lord what wilt Vers 6. thou have me to do Further all the affections are changed These a reverend † Mr. Dyke in his book called the Deceit fulnesse of mans heart Divine in an excellent and Singularly usefull book calls the feet of the soul By these the soul is carryed along And indeed the affections are the wings of the soul to help it to soar aloft in Divine raptures and contemplations Now in a reconciled Person all his a fections are alterd for the better His love was formerly upon sin now it is placed upon God and all the wayes of holynesse So that now what God hates a true believer hates and what God love's a true believer loves It 's that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Psalmist gives * Psal 97. 10. Psal 97. 10. Ye that fear the Lord hate evill And the best of Orators tells us That to will and nill Idem velle ac idem nolle est summa pars amicitiae Cic. the same is the chiefest part of Friendship And as for the joy hope desire they are all changed in a regenerate man Whereas formerly they were placed upon worldly vanities now they are placed upon God and the great things of eternity In a word where a Person is reconciled unto Christ there 's a new heart and clean water is sprinkled upon it the proud heart is become humble the hard become soft so that a new vergency and bent of the heart evidenceth it selfe throughout the continuall practice of the life and conversation And this put 's me in mind of the third Character which I Charact. 3. drawn from the fruits of a Reconciled estate intended drawn from the fruits of a reconciled estate which put forth themselves in the whole carriage of the life Now we must know that the selfe same fruits which belong to a justified estate because none are justified but those who are reconciled appertain to a reconciled estate The Apostle set's them forth † Rom. 5. 1 2 3 4. His ostendit competere quaecunque plenissime justificatis in gratiam Dei reposit is tribui possunt eoque probat hac fide Evangelii Domini nostri Jesu Christi justificationem haberi consummatissime Bucer in loc Rom. 5. 1 2 3 4. Therefore being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ By whom also we have accesse by faith into this grace wherein we stand and rejoyce in hope of the glory of God And not only so but we glory in Tribulation also knowing that Tribulation worketh patience and patience experience and experience hope Likewise the fruits of the Spirit belong to every reconciled Person and by them as a touchstone he ought to examine himselfe The Apostle names one Catalogue
* Eph. 5. 9. Eph. 5. 9. Viz. Goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth and he mentions another much larger † Gal. 5. 22 23. Gal. 5. 22 23. Viz. Love joy peace longsuffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith meeknesse temperance Here then is the great triall whether the life and conversation be ordered aright Whether the conversation be in † all holy conversation and Godlinesse Whether the new Creature exert it selfe through a mans whole life Whether a holy profession be adorned by a holy conversation Now if in truth and sincerity affirmative answers can be given to these Questions then without doubt such Persons have Interest in this Reconciliation by Jesus Christ But I shall adde no more to these Characters I conceive that whosoever can produce these tokens hath a sure and undoubted title What yet remains is as I promised you to excite you all by some moving considerations to make it your grand work and businesse to get assurance of your reconciled estate which is the businesse of the greatest concernment Motive 1. Consider the riches of mercy and bowells opened towards fallen man and denyed to the fallen Angels As for Motives 1. Let us consider of the riches of mercy and bowells opened towards fallen man which were utterly denyed towards fallen Angells And this consideration heightneth the great contrivance of this Reconciliation in that it was from all eternity Adde hereunto that God himselfe was first in the tender and contrivance of this great work Man neither could nor would make up so great a breach It transcended the Sphere of his capacity Had Adam and all his posterity joyned all their heads together they could not understand what way and means to undertake to make up so great a breach But God the Father out of the riches of his mercy found out a way even a new and living way by Jesus Christ The Angels were past by they fell once and that irrecoverably without any hope of reinvesting themselves in their first estate For Christ shed not one drop of bloud for them He * Heb. 2. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat arripere apprehendere manum injicere B. Andrews Cura sollicitudo labor festinatio pro salute generis humani ea una voce significatur Hyperius in loc took not upon him saith the Apostle the nature of Angels but the seed of Abraham Yet notwithstanding the riches of Gods mercy are inhanced toward fallen man because the promised seed even that † Gen. 3. 15. the seed of the woman should break the Serpents head was proclaim'd in Paradise and appropriated unto mankind Secondly consider the great and inestimable price paid to purchase Mot. 2. Consider the great price paid to purchase peace and reconciliation peace and Reconciliation And what was that price but the price of bloud And this is called in Scripture * Act. 20. 28. the Bloud of God Yet in such expressions we are to understand a communication of Idioms This bloud was the bloud of sprinkling which † Heb. 12. 24. Speaketh better things then the bloud of Abel This was the bloud of the immaculate Lamb slaine from the Foundation of the World Because * Rev. 13. 8. without shedding of bloud there was no remission Christ therefore took upon him humane nature There are two great significant words which evidently declare his humane nature one word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 † Joh. 1. 14. Joh. 1. 14. He pitcht his Tent or Tabernacle amongst us The other word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Phil. 2. 7. Vers 8. Phil. 2. 7. He emptyed himselfe or made himselfe of no reputation And Vers 8. we read of the highest degree of Christs humiliation in that he became obedient unto death even the death of the Crosse Thus Christ hath made a compleat satisfaction by doing and suffering all that the Father required And now Christ † Rom. 8. 34. sitteth at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us And we have a ground of strong consolation further laid down * Heb. 7. 25. Heb. 7. 25. Wherefore he is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them There 's a word of great importance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which as a † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 omnimodam significat perfectionem Camero in Myroth learned Authour observes signifieth all manner of perfection This sheweth such an absolute perfection that nothing else can be desir'd nothing can be added And wherein doth this all-sufficient Saviour shew himselfe to be so We have an answer and strong proofe drawne from Christs intercession in the following words where it is said That he ever liveth to make * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non dicit ut offerat hoc enim semel fecit sed superest altera sacerdotii pars nempe Interpellatio Beza Intercession for them This Scripture is a fort Royall and impregnable notwithstanding all the batteries that Socinian Hereticks make against it But I proceed to a third motive drawn from the willingnesse Motive 3. Drawn from the willingness of God to be recon●iled of God to be reconciled Wherefore he sends his messengers upon this errand to perswade people to embrace Articles of peace The Lord entrusts his Ministers with the word of reconciliation which is the Doctrine of the everlasting Gospell And they spend their Spirits and lay forth their strength to the uttermost woing intreating exhorting people to submit unto Christs Scepter and through him to make their peace with God the Father Now the Spirit of God strives in the Ministery of the word It 's a most terrible judgment when Gods Spirit refuseth to strive any longer with a people And this is threatned * Gen. 6. 3. Gen. 6. 3. And the Lord said my Spirit shall not alwaies strive with man i. e. The Lord will not alwaies dispute chide and argue the case with a people the Lord will not alwaies strive by the Ministery of his servants such as were Enoch Noah Methusalah who lived the longest and died but the year before the flood God will not alwaies suffer his Spirit to be grieved the motions thereof slighted Neither will God alwaies suffer the faithfull labours of his Ministers to be neglected * Some † Pagninus Grotius render the word Lo-jiddon non vaginabit He will not alwaies put his sword into the scabberd but he will draw it out and fight against his Enemies And oh that you would all consider in your most serious composed thoughts that now you hear as it were a voice behind you saying This is the way walk in it This voyce is the Spirit speaking in the written word for the Spirit speaks according to the word Now by all the woings and whispers of the Spirit and by the unwearied labours of the faithfull Ambassadours of the Gospell you are entreated to
the dore of the Sanctuary is yet opened and a * Ezra 9. 8. nail is yet left in the holy place you have bread in the morning and in the evening and more plenty of spirituall food on the Sabbath day and week daies then heretofore Much is given unto you and much required from you Where God hath sown so liberally he expects as plentifull an harvest Now you hear the joyfull sound even the word of reconciliation and substance of our Embassie is to intreat you to consider the value and dignity of your Heavenly born being soules and to seek after reconciliation otherwise you are undone to all eternity Now Christ holds out a white flag for a parley of peace now the King of Heaven holds out the golden Scepter O come and touch the top thereof and live The Port-cullis is not yet let down The Judge hath not yet vailed his face The dore of hope is not yet shut up the holy Ghost calls † Isa 55. 6. Seek the Lord whilest he may be found call upon him whilest he is neer ‖ 2 Cor. 6 2. Nemo tam divos habuit faventes crastinum ut possit sibi polliceri Senec. Now is the day of salvation None of us can promise to our selves a morrow no not the least moment of time and if we neglect this golden opportunity and season of grace offered we may never live to have another tendred unto us All the World cannot call back the least minute of time when once it is past it 's like a swift stream or an arrow out of a b●w not to be recalled Wherefore as you consult the eternal good of your immortal souls be intreated to improve all the prizes and Talents that God puts into your hands to get Wisdome withall When the Lord bids you seek his face O that your hearts with all readinesse might return this answer * Psal 27. 8. Thy face Lord will I seek God hath put this word into my mouth and here fixt my thoughts after I had severall other subjects in my eye and hath sent me on this very errand to treat on this great Theame of reconciliation unto God And now what message shall I return unto him that hath sent me What account shall I give at the last day of the entertainment of this word What shall I say more You have life and death set before you this day viz. The happinesse of a reconciled estate and the misery of an unreconciled estate O that the Lord would engage you all to make the better choyce by heark●ing unto this word of reconciliation and unfainedly embracing the same and so your souls shall live † 2. Tim. 2. 7. Consider what I have said and the Lord give you understanding in all things THE MINISTERY OF ANGELLS Heb. 1. 14. Are they not all Ministring spirits sent forth to Minister for them who shall be heires of salvation TO draw down the context to the text we are to Sermon 2. Preached at S. Marye's Oxon. Oct. 3. 1658. Vers 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Solis radii sunt ejusdem naturae cum sole ab eodem propagatione distinguuntur avelluntur nunquam hac Metaphorâ divinam filii naturam convenientissime expressit Apostolus Et character ●icitur expressa imago Archetypi Pareus in loc take speciall notice of the Excellency and dignity of Christ represented unto us in this chapter especially Vers 3. Who being the brightness of his glory and the express image of his person and upholding all things by the Word of his Power when he had by himselfe purged our sinnes sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on High And by way of Comparison the Apostle further inhanceth the honour and preheminence of Christ For after he had compared Christ with the Angells he sets the Crown on Christs head his name is more excellent than theirs Vers 4. 5. Being made so much better then the Angells as he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name then they For unto which of the Angells said he at any time Thou art my son this day have I begotten thee And againe I Will be to him a Father and he shall be to me a Son Christ is a Son the Angells his servants they may not be worshipped themselves but they must worship Christ Vers 6. 7. Let all the Angells of God worship him Of his Angells he saith who maketh his Angells spirits and his Ministers a flame of fire And further honour is ascribed to the Son which is not to Angells Vers 8. 9. Vnto the Son he saith Thy throne O God is for ever and ever a scepter of righteousnesse is the scepter of thy Kingdome Thou hast loved righteousnesse and hated iniquity therefore God even thy God hath anointed thee with the oyle of gladnesse above thy fellowes And further Christ is a Lord and Creatour the Angells servants and creatures Christ is advanced to the Throne He is the Soveraign Lord of all Vers 13. The Angells ministering spirits subservient to Christ and at his command and when commissionated by him helpfull and serviceable unto all the children of God It is demanded by way of interrogation in the Text Are they not all Ministring spirits c. Which scripture sets forth clearly the Protection of Angells their Ministery and serviceablenesse unto the children of God A point seldome taught yet very usefull comfortable and of singular concernment unto all the children of God! And being that its the duty of the Minister to declare unto people the whole councell of God that which hath oft been in my intention I shall now endeavour to handle with all the perspicuity that I can The words contain a question Are they not all Ministring spirits Divis which being resolved the answer is obvious that the Angells are all Ministring spirits More particularly we are to observe a Description of Angells 1. From their nature Spirits 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implied 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exprest 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. From their office Ministring 3. Their commission Sent. 4. Whose Ministers they are 1. Primarily Christs And secondarily Christs children 5. The universality All All the Angells Here 's the universality of the object and it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and universality of the subject all the Angells All that are heires none left out none exempted from the benefit of the service of all the Angells of God All that are heires of Salvation all Christs children have interest in their protection Many scruples may be made and many things require explication what requires opening shall be endeavoured in the enlargement of one intire doctrine whereon I purpose to fix Thus I propound it to you That it pleaseth God to make use of the Ministery of Angells for Doct. the good of his Children This is the point I aime at from this
Scripture For the Inlargement whereof I shall propound severall questions and give in Answers to them that shall constitute the doctrinall part of the Text which done I shall draw inferences for our instruction and practice and those shall constitute the use and application For the resuming the first thing propounded The first question is what Angells are I have read many curious Q. 1. What Angells are observations of Fathers and School-men concerning Angells which I conceive not fit to communicate being altogether unwilling to stu●e a Sermon with Curiosities and conjectures which tend not to edification For if Moses knowing the originall of the world had it not revealed what to write of Angels if Col. 2. 18. Demissio illa animi vitiosa parit cultum superstitiosum Monentur hoc in loco Colossenfes ne decepti ab Impostoribus tribuant Angelis cultum divinum Daven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 à Nuntiando Stephen who had the heavens opened saw not those orders of Angells what they were if Paul who was taken up into the third heaven saw yet so little of Angells that whosoever will teach so curiously of them he saith they be puft up of a fleshly mind to speak of things which they never saw Let no man beguile you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worshipping of Angells intruding into those things which he hath not seen vainly puft up by his fleshly mind If John in all his revelations had no such knowledge revealed of Angells then it 's a duty to be modest and sober in inquisitions to be wise unto Sobriety and to avoyd curious speculations of Schoolmen and confine our selves unto the Word of God Now what they are we shall shew from their names and Nature First from their names they are Messengers who carry a Their Name message they are Gods messengers * This name Angell is attributed unto Christ † Gen. 48. 16 The Angell that delivered me from all evill blesse the lads c. ‖ Ex. 23. 20. Behold I send an Angell before thee to keep thee in the way and to bring thee into the place which I have prepared † Nomen non naturae sed officii Aug. * Isa 63. 9. In all their affliction he was afflicted and the Angell of his presence saved them in his love and in his pitty he redeemed them and he bare them and carried them all the daies of old Christ is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nuntius Dei Steph. the Angell of his presence and the Angell of the Covenant Behold I will send my messenger and he shall prepare the way before me and the Lord whom yee seeke shall suddenly come unto his Temple even the Mal. 3. 1. messenger of the Covenant whom yee delight in This name of Angell is ascribed there unto John Baptist who came in the spirit of Elias and unto Christ also and likewise to our Ministers pastours and teachrs Rev. 2. 12. Rev. 3. 1. Angells are took for Spirits Messengers of God imployed for the fulfilling of his will and commands in Heaven or in earth And so in my Text. For their Nature Damascene giveth this definition of Angells 2. The Nature of Angells 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Damasc A most pure and perfect intellectuall immateriall and immortall creature created and appointed to be Gods attendants and messengers between God and man Not that God hath any necessity of help or cooperation of his creatures but that he is pleased in his will and pleasure to imploy those Instruments So I will and so I command God only can say and we may not question what he doth But to set down their Nature more fully I 'le take notice of these properties 1. Angells are Spirits He maketh his Angells spirits and his Ministers a flaming fire In that they are called spirits that declares 1. Angells are spirits Psal 104. 4. Spiritus vox naturam declarat flammae vero ●orū potentiam Gomarus Facit Deus instar ventorum velocissimos Ministros eosdemque facit flammam ignis hoc est celerrime instar fulg●ris exequendi jussa paratissimos Pareus in loc their Nature and flaming fire that shewes their power Windes and fire are swift in their motion and so are Angells God makes his Ministers swift like wind and like a flame of fire that is most ready like lightning speedily to execute his commands They are not compounded of matter and forme for Luk. 8. 30. Many Devills entred into one man and the Devills themselves were once Angells of light And though we read that they have appeared in bodily shapes yet we must know that those bodies were assumtitious They might assume a body for a time for the discharge of that particular service they went about And whereas we read of their wings faces hands and tongues all those are to be understood Metaphorically The disciples were terrified and afrighted and supposed that they had seen a spirit And he said unto them why are ye troubled and why do thoughts Luk. 24. 37 38 39. arise in your hearts Behold my hands and my feet that it is I my self handle me and see for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as you see me have Angells are incorporeall and though we read of their eating and drinking as the Angells with Abraham Lot and others we must know that when they assumed bodies God might give them those faculties that belonged to bodies or they might consume the foode and work miraculously above mans apprehension 2. Angells are invisible By him were all things created that are 2. Angells are invisible Col. 1. 16. in heaven and that are in earth visible and invisible whether they be Thrones Dominions or Principalities or Powers all things were created by him and for him And they acted invisibly when they took upon them shapes and assumed bodies for a time indeed they appeared unto men but as spirits they are as Invisible as a mans soule Who hath seen a spirit at any time or the soul of man or an Angell 3. They are Immortall Good Angells are so neither can the● 3. They are immortall Luk. 20. 36. dye any more for they are equall unto the Angells and are the children of God being the children of the resurrection Bad Angells are so Then shall we say to them on his left hand depart from me Matt. 25 41. ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Devill an his Angells 4. They neither marry nor are given in marriage Hence Chrysostome 4. They neither marry nor are given in marriage Luk. 10. 33. confutes their opinion who from Gen. 6. 2. by the Sons of God understand the Angells this must needs be a very corrupt exposition because they neither marry nor are given in marriage 5. They are most numerous a great multitude * Gen. 32. 1 2. Jacob went 5. They are most numerous on his way and the Angells of God met him
of Israel I will help thee saith the Lord and thy Redeemer the holy one of Israel 5. The ministery of Angells is imployed for their defence The R. 5. The Ministery of Angells is imployed for the defence of the godly Heb. 1. 14. Angell of the Lord encampeth round about them that feare him and delivereth them Are they not all Ministring Spirits sent forth to Minister for them who shall be heires of Salvation And for the offence of their enemies as in the case of Senacherib and Herod who fell by the Angell of the Lord. 6. The Saints experiences are abundant proofe hereof Pa●l V. Ps 18. t●tle R. 6. Drawn from Saints Experiences speaks how God delivered him out of the hand of the Lion He spake of Nero that cruell Persecutor of the Church What Protections deliverances have Gods people met withall What Providences to supply their wants in the most needfull instant What deliverances from Fire Water Robbers Murtherers Great things can many of Gods children speak in this particular Time would faile me to produce those Instances which Saints experiences have abundantly afforded in this Particular This then being so this Doctrine may be serviceable for these uses 1. To reprove the madnesse and folly of wicked men who Vse 1. For Reproofe Ps 37. 32 33. set themselves in opposition against Gods children They labour to root out their memory and plot their utter ruine and destruction but though the wicked watcheth the righteous and seeketh to s●ay him the Lord will not leave him in his hand nor condemne him when he is judged Wicked men are limitted and can go not a jot further then God will permit them 2. Here 's matter of Instruction to the children of God Doth Vse 2. For Instruction God take the care of them Let them be sure to keep in Gods waies and walke according to the rule of his Word Let none neglect meanes appointed by God under any presumptions of Providence that would be a tempting of God You know how the Devill tempted Christ to leap down the Pinacle when as there was a paire of staires an ordinary way to go up and down Let none upon pretence of secret impulses of their owne spirits act any irregular thing upon Pretence of Providence Gods Providences do not contradict the rule of the word Let none distrust Providence in their greatest straits and difficulties God hath supplyed and is able still to supply He hath delivered and is able still to deliver Read two experiences one of David against the Lion and Beare Thy servant saith David to Saul slew both the Lion and the Beare and this uncircumcised Philistine 1 Sam. 17. 36 shall be as one of them Another deliverance we read is of the children of Israel against Pharaoh Thou didst saith the Psalmist divide the Sea by thy strength thou breakest the heads of the Dragons in Psal 74. 14. the waters Thou breake●t the heads of Leviathan in peices and gavest him to be meat for the people inhabiting the wildernesse This was spoken of Pharaoh and his host These examples drawn from experience and former mercyes should be as so many Ingagements to trust God for the time to come Here 's one Use more and that is for consolation unto Gods Vse 3. For Consolation children They are in Covenant and under the wings of speciall Providence As an Eagle stirreth up her nest fluttereth over her young Deut. 32. 11. spreadeth abroad her wings taketh them beareth them on her wings So the Lord alone did lead him and there was no strange God with him He promiseth to be their Rereward Then shall thy light Isa 58. 8. breake forth as the morning and thine health shall spring forth speedily and thy righteousnesse shall go before thee the glory of the Lord shall be thy Rereward This is an allusion to Gods carrying his children out of Egypt And the Lord went before them by day in a Exo. 13. 21. pillar of a cloude to lead them the way and by night in a pillar of fire to give them light to go by day and night Now against all despondencies feares doubts dangers let Gods children comfort themselves with the consideration of Gods speciall Providence God takes care and makes speciall Provision for them wherefore let them do their duty and leave all issues to God The duties are these 1. To study the Word and be well acquainted with it The Scripture is the sure Word of Prophesy certaine infallible we must trust and venture all upon it 2. To live by faith when sence failes let not faith faile Believe God is as good as his word Believe though sence and reason be non-plusd So did Abraham in the case of Sarah and so in the case of Isaac No life to that mentioned by the Apostle to live by the faith of the Son of God Gal. 2. 20. 3. To set the Spirit of prayer a working Pray for thy daily bread and for daily Protection So that thou maiest feele all coming in as an Answer of Prayer And a Samuel a child of prayer is the most welcome mercy 4. Beware of murmuring and repining when thou art delayed Eligat opportunitatem qui libere dat miseric●rdiam Aug. Learne to wait Gods time His convenient time is the best He helpes in the most needfull time Let him saith Augustine chuse the opportunity who so freely gives the mercy 5. What ever thou wantest be sure to be more thankfull then Efficacissimū pro Candid ato regandi genus est gratias agere Plin. Pan. Trajano dictus ever sor what thou hast received before Thankfulnesse is a cunning way of begging Put thy selfe in other mens cases and consider how thou aboundest in comparison of them Look into Prisons Poore mens cupboards and how oughst thou to pitty them in their wants and be thankfull for what thou enjoyest 6. Sixtly and lastly be still renewing thy title and clearing up thine evidences for heaven for the more thou securest that the more secure thou mayest be of this speciall distinguishing Providence For though I believe not but abhorre that opinion that Dominium temporale fundatur in gratiâ and I am farre from the Anabaptisticall opinion of thinking wicked men usurpers as having no right of Creatures to outward things yet I am fully assured that only the Godly have outward things sanctified through Christ With Christ they have all things And having Christ is that which makes a mercy to be a mercy indeed All Rom. 8. 32. 1 Cor. 3. 20 21. things are Yours saith the Apostle The wicked of the world have outward things ex largitate by common Povidence and bounty the godly have all ex promisso by Promise and Covenant Wherefore here lyes the great duty to get assurance that what ever we have we injoy as a Covenant mercy streaming to us through the blood of Jesus Christ for it is Christ alone that sweetens what ever
Testament unto the New we shall find the whole Church earnest for one man Act. 12. 5. Peter therefore was kept in Prison but prayer was made without ceasing of the Church unto God for him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Intentae So Beza referring to the ardor of the mind Sine intermissione so Erasmus And how speed these prayers Vers 7. The Angell of the Lord came upon him and a light shined in the Prison and he smote Peter on the side and raised him up saying Arise up quickly And his chaines fell off from his hands Upon this Scripture I l'e give you that observation of an excellent Divine lately gone Dr Harris Pet. Enlargement from us to heaven in that rare Sermon called Peters enlargement The Enemies saith he shuts the Prison dore the Church opens Heavens dores so there 's old tugging for the prisoner but the Church will not let him go saith God if you will take no deniall there he is And as the whole Church prayed for the Apostle so did one Apostle Paul pray much for the whole Church Rom. 1. 9. For God is my witnesse whom I serve with my spirit in the Gospell of his Son that without ceasing I make mention of you alwaies in my prayers And Eph. 1. 16 17. I cease not to give thanks for you making mention of you in my prayers that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledge of him 2. To these examples I l'e adde in the next place Scripture precepts for Proofe Ministers are in a peculiar manner in joynd this 2. The Doctrine proved by Scripture Precepts duty Joel 2. 17. Let the Priests the Ministers of the Lord weep between the porch and the Altar and let them say spare thy people O Lord and give not thine heritage to reproach that the Heathen should rule over them wherefore should they say among the people where is their God All are in joyn'd Psal 122. 7. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem they shall prosper that love thee peace be within thy walls and prosperity he within thy Palaces And James 5. 16. Confesse your faults one unto another and pray one for another c. In the third place I l'e assign some grounds and reasons for confirmation and these I shall reduce unto three Heads 3. The Doctrine confirmed by Reasons 1. In respect of God 2. Of prayer 3. Of Jerusalem All these are strong Arguments to perswade 1. In respect of God who both expects and promiseth a blessing R. 1. In respect of God upon the meanes The Lord so expects prayer as that he will not grant great mercyes unto his Church but in and by his peoples prayers God hath ingaged himselfe in a Bond. His promise is his Bond and he will have it put in suit before he pay it See what God promiseth Psal 50. 15. Call upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorify me And Jer. 33. 6. Behold I will cure them and reveale unto them the abundance of peace and truth And I will cause the captivity of Judah and the captivity of Israel to returne and will build them as at the first So Zeph. 3. 20. In that time I will bring you again even in the time that I gather you For I will make you a name and a praise among all people of the earth when I turne back your captivity before your eyes saith the Lord. What a glorious Church is Prophecied and what transcendent beauty will the Lord put upon them Isai 54. 11 12. O thou afflicted tossed with tempest and not comforted behold I will lay thy stones with faire colours and lay thy foundation with Saphirs and I will make thy windowes of Agates and thy gates of Carbuncles and all thy borders of pleasant stones By all these Hyperbolicall similitudes is set forth the glorious condition of the Church in the daies of the Gospell These are great Beauties and excellencies prophesied of the Church yet as they are worth praying for so in good earnest they must be sought of God Jer. 33. 3. Call unto me and I will answer thee and shew thee great and mighty things which thou knowest not c. 36. Ezek. 37. Thus saith the Lord I will yet for this be enquired of by the House of Israel to do it for them I will increase them with men like a flock Now prayer is Gods Ordinance the language of his Spirit the musick which he loveth no Melody in Gods account like unto the prayers of his people Wherefore though God promiseth great things unto his people who will not faile one jot of his word yet he will have his Children plye the Throne of grace He is the great Master of Requests and loves to see his Court full of Suitors He is the great God that heareth prayers and delighteth in prayers and it is his pleasure that his people should be his remembrancers even to spread before him the condition of his Church For though it 's best known to him already yet he will have them call cry and seek with Importunity for the accomplishment of those good and great things which he intends for his own people Though deliverance was promised out of the Babylonish captivity at the expiation of 70 yeares yet they must pray for it Psal 126. vers 4. Turne again our captivity O Lord as the streames in the South A second Reason shall be taken from the great benefit of prayer R. 2. From the great Benefit of prayer It is an instrumentall meanes under God to obtain a blessing By some it is called Clavis viscerum Dei virtus omnipotens Their intentions are good I doubt not who use these expressions yet it is not safe to use them without an explanation of their sence Without question great help comes by prayer yet the help depends not upon what we do but upon God that gives to will and to do It is our duty to pray and the praise and glory of the successe and issue coming of prayer we must ascribe wholly unto the Lord that heareth prayers Now what helpes prayer affords may be represented in these following particular Instances 1. Prayer is an Universall help It 's Solomons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Prayer is an universall help when raine is wanting when enemies get the victory when there is death famine and pestilence then is a speciall time to pray and God promiseth audience 1 Chron. 7. 13 14. If I shut up Heaven that there be no raine or if I command the Locust to devour the Land and if I send Pestilence among my people If my people which are called by my name shall humble themselves and pray and seeke my face and turn from their wicked waies then will I heare from Heaven forgive their sinne and heale their Land This is a Soveraigne medicine of Gods owne appointment for all diseases
seale of their Apostleship and make their Ministry instrumentall to convert and build up soules unto Jesus Christ And we must likewise be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Advocates and Patrons of their maintenance It was the saying of an eminent Gentleman in Sr. Benjamin Rudiard the long Parliament that a scandalous maintenance would cause a scandalous Ministry It 's to be observed that Dioclesian did not do so much mischiefe to the Ministry it selfe as Julian did Dioclesian put many to death which was an horrid wickednesse But the Devill put another designe into Julians head to take away all the maintenance of Ministers and put downe Schooles of Learning and Ecclesiasticall Histories will informe us that by consequent Julian did the greater mischiefe For though some particular persons were took out of the way through Dioclesian's persecution yet there arose up others in their stead But the taking away of all their lands and revenues did hinder a succession of Ministers And the robbing of Schooles of learning discouraged many from the study of learned Arts and Sciences 3. Let us all pray for the continuance of Gospell Ordinances 3. Pray for the Continuance of the Gospell in their Liberty and purity This is that which made Israel praise-worthy in the eyes of the Nations Deut. 46. 7. Keep therefore and do them for this is your wisdome and your understanding in the sight of the Nations which shall heare all these statutes and say surely this great Nation is a wise and understanding people For what Nation is there so great who hath God so nigh unto them as the Lord our God is in all things that we call upon him for ●he Gospell of Christ the Word and Sacraments administred in their purity the Sabbath kept strictly all these will be the praise and glory of our Nation 4. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem both for Civill and Ecclesiasticall peace Pray for Civill peace It 's to me a great wonder that 4. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem amidst all the concussions and revolutions of these times we in joy peace that we ●it under our own Vines and Fig-trees that meum tuum are in some measure preserved that publick Courts of Justice are opened and that the sword is not put to the decision of all controversies We should pray that peace may be continued that all our Officers may be peace and exactors righteousnesse I know none that hath his eyes in his head or grace in his heart that is willing to imbroyl Isai 60. 17. the Nation in another civill war We know by sad experi●n●e the Calamities of War how thankfull ought we to be for the peace we yet in joy and how ought we to pray for the continuance of it that Peace may be extended as a river and righteousnesse like a mighty streame For Ecclesiasticall peace we must pray there are two great Prophecies Zeph. 3. 9. Then will I turn to the people a pure language that they may all call upon the name of the Lord to serve him with one consent And Zach. 13. 9. I will bring the third part through the fire Isai 66. 12. and will r●f●ne them as Sylver is refined and trye them as Gold is tryed they shall call upon my name and I will heare them I will say it is my people and they shall say the Lord is my God There is an Unity of the spirit which we must endeavour to keep and there are seaven Ones mentioned Eph. 4. 4 5 6. One body one spirit one hope one God one faith one baptisme one God and Father of all c. I remember a patheticall speech which Luther useth to the Pastors of the Church of Strusburg Vobis oro perswadeatis c. i. e. I pray you sath he be perswaded that I shall alwaies be as desirous to embrace unity and concord as I am desirous to have the Lord Jesus to be propitious to me Martin Bucer writes to a Godly Minister Quis non vitâ etiam sua redimat submorum isthuc infinitum dissidii scandalum Bucer very high expressions Who would not saith he purchase with his life the removing of that infinite scandall that comes by dissention Wherefore let us study the things that make for peace and edification Let dividing names be laid aside amongst sound Christian Quirites once named Cesars souldiers were pacified O that Christian being named union and reconciliation might be obtained Let us all labour to approve our selves members of the Church of Jesus Christ as living stones in that building The Apostle blames the Corinthians for siding and making partyes 1 Cor. 1. 11 12. It hath been declared to me of you my brethren by them which are of the House of Cloe that there are contentions among you Now this I say that every one of you saith I am of Paul and I am of Apollo and I of Cephas and I of Christ The name of Christian should swallow up names of division Now for Motives the second thing propounded here I shall 1 Motive God will make Jerusalem a praise adde two only 1. That God will make Jerusalem a praise in the earth For first Believe it God will not faile one tittle of his word All the promises made unto Jerusalem shall every one be fulfilled 1. Because he promiseth in their season Psal 48. 1 2. Great is the Lord and greatly to be praised in the City of our God in the mountain of his Holynesse beautifull for situation the joy of the whole earth is Mount Zion on the sides of the North the City of the great King And Psal 50. 2. Out of Sion the perfection of beauty God hath shined For Instance Greater shall be the light of knowledge of the Church in the Gospell Isai 11. 9. The earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the Sea Isai 60. 1 19. Arise shine for thy light is come and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee Vers 19. The Sun shall be no more thy light by day neither for brightnesse shall the Moon give light unto thee but the Lord shall be unto thee an everlasting light and thy God thy glory These great Promises referre unto the Gospell 2. The Church shall be enlarged Isai 51. 1 2 3. Hearken unto me ye that follow after righteousnesse ye that seek the Lord look to the rockes whence ye are hewen c. Look unto Abraham your Father and Sarah that bare you for I called him alone and blessed and increased him For the Lord will comfort Zion he will make her wildernesse like Eden and her desert like the garden of God c. 3. Holynesse shall be improved Deut. 26. 18 19. The Lord hath avouched thee this day to be his peculiar people c. To make thee high above all Nations which he hath made in praise in name and in honour that thou mayest be an holy people unto the Lord thy God as he hath
Perkins of three things 1. The nature of Man 2. The faculties of Nature 3. And corruption of both Now this distinction must be without seperation of nature from faculties or of corruption from either so as we may say truly that the nature and powers of the soule are corrupted Now this corruption consists 1. In the depravation of Gods image man was created after Gods image but by reason of sin he hath defaced the same 2. In a pronenesse to all wickednesse so that the nature of man is evill continually and the seeds of all rebellion are sowne in the corrupt nature of mankind wherefore the Lord threatens That Gen. 6. 3. his spirit should no longer strive with man for that he is but flesh i. e. he is become corrupted he hath fallen from his Creator and become fleshly and sinfull what this flesh is the Apostle tells Rom. 7. 18. Gal. 6. 8. Eph. 2. 3. 2. In the next place we are to inquire what 's meant by affections Q 2. What 's meant by Affections and lusts and lust's Ans By affections we are to understand inordinate affections which beare sway in carnall men their affections are out of order irregular immoderate and they are set upon the wrong object they love where they should hate and hate where they should love Anger is sometimes an inordinate affection and it bared sway in Cain against Abell Envy is sometime an inordinate affection and it prevailed in Saul against David Sorrow is sometimes immoderate and inordinate in Ahab when he could not get Naboths Vineyard he was heavy and displeased 1 King 21. 4. Love was an inordinate affection in the men of the last times Lovers of pleasures more then lovers of God 2 Tim. 3. 4. 2. By Lusts we are to understand inordinate and insatiable desires after the things of the world as Riches Honours Pleasures of this sort of inordinate affections are coveteousnesse pride gluttony c. 3. In the third place what 's meant by crucifying the flesh with Q. 3. What 's meant by crucifying the flesh c. its affections and lusts Ans For answer hereunto we are to distinguish of crucifying either as the action of Christ or as the action of a Christian 1. Le ts consider Crucifixion as the action of Christ and this 1. Crucifixion as the Action of Christ consists in three particulars 1. Upon the Crosse Christ stood in our Roome and bared the burthen of our sinnes and made an expiation for them in this respect we are said to be crucified with him Gal. 2. 20. 2. The second is in us when Christ conveyes the vertue of his death in us to cause the death of sinne when Christ gives us his spirit to mortify the deeds of the body Rom. 8. 13. 3. The third is in Baptisme whereby Christ sealed the two former to them that believe Rom. 6. 3 6. 2. Le ts consider crucifixon as the Action of a Christian and 2. Crucifixion as the Action of a Christian this consists in the imitation of Christ crucified after this manner Christ was attached apprehended and brought into the presence of Pilate so must we bring our selves into the presence of God Christ was arraigned at the Tribunall of Pilate so must we arraigne our selves at the barre of Christs judgment seate Christ was indited and accused so must we indite and accuse our selves Christ was condemned so must we condemne and judge our selves after sentence past there followed execution Christ was crucified so must we proceed to the execution of our sinnes and corruptions We must labour to be the death of every sinne to give every lust a mortifying blow we must not spare any Ruling sinne that was Sauls sinne in sparing Agag but we must destroy all both great and small we must not only mourne for sin but hate it not only hate it but endeavour the destruction of it But the further Inlargement of these things I shall leave to the use of Examination 4. In the fourth place it remaines that I prove the assertion 4. The Doctrine proved that those that are Christs are such crucified persons St Paul thus professeth of himselfe That he was crucified with Christ But I will prove the point by reason 1. Because the flesh is enmity against God Rom. 8. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 R. 1. The fleshly mind is enmity against God and naturall men are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 5. 10. Now flesh and blood corrupt nature unregeneracy the old man cannot enter into the Kingdome of God To be carnally minded is death Rom. 8. 6. and such cann●t please God Rom. 8. 8. now we may not spare Gods enemies The Children of Babylon were to be dasht in peices Amaleck was to be utterly overthrowne these were Gods enemies Likewise the affections and lusts of the flesh are Gods enemies these must be slaine these must be crucified 2. Because Christians ought to be conformable unto Christs R. 2. Christians ought to be conformable unto Christs death death Phil. 2. 10. Rom. 6. 5 6. As Christ died for our sinnes so we must be a mortifying of sinne sinne must not be suffered to live we are in this world in a dying condition we must never give over fighting till we returne away conquerors though we sinne as long as we be in this world and have flesh as well as spirit yet we must never give over striving for mastery over the flesh 3. God will have us exercised in a continuall warfare and R. 3. God will have us exercised in continuall warfare combat against the flesh it 's an inbred enemy and it hath many lurking holes many Apologies many pretences we must be continually resisting the flesh even unto blood striving against sinne Heb. 12. 4. Here only a deadly Feud is lawfull This must be transmitted from Generation to Generation sinne must be crucified Rom. 6. 6. Sinne must be subdued Mich. 7. 18 19. And above all sinnes we had need fight most violently against fleshly lusts they being grand enemies unto the soule 1 Pet. 2. 11. 'T is true the Canaanite will be in the Land sinne will be in our mortall bodies whilst we be in this world but we must never let it reigne never suffer it to have any peace never give it quarter but be continually resisting of and fighting against it Now to apply what hath been said particularly to every ones Applicat Conscience here are six Uses to be made 1. Information 2. Reprehension 3. Exhortation 4. Examination 5. Direction And 6. Consolation 1. For Information and that in two particulars Vse 1. For Information First Hereby we are informed what a carnall man is namely one that is carried away with some inordinate affections or some inordinate lust Herod did many good things as the Text saith he heard John Baptist 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sweetly yet he was but a carnall man Joh. 6. 20. for he was possest with
borne neither having done any good or evill that the purpose of God according to election might stand not of workes but of him that calleth It was said unto her the elder shall serve the younger as it is written Jacob have I loved but Esau have I hated 4. This love is incomprehensible inexpressible Eph. 3. 18 19. 4. This love is incomprehensible That yee may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge that yee might be filled with all the fulnesse of God 5. It is an eternall love Joh. 13. 1. Now before the feast of the 5. This love is eternall passeover when Jesus knew that his houre was come that he should depart out of this world unto the Father having loved his owne which were in the world he loved them unto the end Jer. 31. 3. The Lord hath appeared of old unto me saying Yea I have loved thee with an everlasting love therefore with loving kindnesse have I drawne thee The second Use is for Examination whether we are of that Vse 4. For Examination number which hath interest in this love We are to distinguish of severall sorts of love There 's Amor benevolentiae Complacentiae For that there is Amor benevolentiae hence appeares munificentia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God doth good to all makes the Sun to shine on the just and unjust That which we are to inquire of is that which is called Amor complacentiae appropriated only unto Gods children What evidences may be given that we have interest in this distinguishing love The 1. Signe is Sanctification it 's God's order and we may Signe 1. Sanctification not break it Rev. 1. 5. Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sinnes in his blood If thou canst prove that thy nature is changed by the sanctifying vertue of God's spirit thou maiest conclude that thou art one that hath interest in the speciall love of God 2. Those that have interest in this speciall love of God feele a Signe 2. Constraining love of Christ constraining power in this love to ingage them to obedience to Gods commands 2 Cor. 5. 14. For the love of Christ constraines us because we thus judge that if one died for all then we are all dead 3. By the sincerity of our love to God we may conclude his Signe 3. Sincerity of love to God love towards us 1 Joh. 4. 19. We love him because he first loved us Gods love to us is the ground of our Assurance our love to him is the ground of our Evidence Let Gods children as Bradford that pretious man of God used to advise lay this down for a foundation That God loves them and where this love is it will shed abroad love in their hearts even love to God love to the brethren love to the Ordinances love and longing for the appearance of Christ 4. Christ manifests his love to his people Joh. 14. 21. He that Signe 4. Christ manifests his Love to his people hath my commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will love him and will manifest my selfe to him Though he may hide himselfe for a time yet he will embrace them with everlasting kindnesse Isai 54 8. In a little wrath I hid my face from them for a moment but with everlasting kindnesse will I have mercy on thee saith the Lord thy Redeemer 5. Those whom God loves with a speciall distinguishing love Signe 5. Christ is Lord and King have Christ their redeemer their Lord King and Ruler their Prophet to instruct them their Priest to make satisfaction and intercession for them This is the greatest evidence of Gods love in giving thee his son as in the place forecited Joh. 3. 16. For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life Which is plainly applyed to believers and takes not in all universally but a peculiar select company even such only as believe And Rom. 8. 32. He that spareth not his own son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things 6. Those who have interest in this great speciall love have Signe 6. Gods spirit dwells in them Gods spirit and this dwells in them Rom. 8. 9. But yee are not in the flesh but in the spirit if so be that the spirit of God dwell in you Now if any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Christs spirit dwells as an Inhabitant and Ruler and this is a witnesse Rom. 8. 16. The spirit it selfe beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the children of God And this sealeth and giveth earnest 2 Cor. 1. 22. Who hath also sealed us and given us the earnest of the spirit in our hearts and where this dwells it may be knowne by the fruits which it bringeth forth Gal. 5. 22 23. But the fruit of the spirit is love joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith meeknesse temperance The third Use is for Exhortation and your duty I shall branch Vse 2. For Exhortat into these following particulars 1. Stand admiring contemplating this great love of God the 1. Admire Gods love Father to give thee Christ and that Christ should becomeman be made sin a curse whilst that greater and nobler richer learneder then thy selfe should be past by and God should give Christ for thee that he should love thee and wash thee and make thee a King and a Priest unto God thou can'st never admire enough this unparralleld love of God Eternity would even be too little to set forth this wonderfull love of God As there is a depth of wisdome so there is a depth of mercy in God which cannot be fathom'd 2. Let thy heart be filled with the praises of the Lord. Lift up 2. Be filled with the praises of God advance what in thee lyeth the honour of God the love of God the Father and of the Lord Jesus Christ God gives his Son Christ's merits are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a price meritorious and the Holy Spirit maketh application How then ought we for ever to abound in praises to the Lord The Samaritan returned back and gave God thanks for his cleansing So should we blesse God that he hath made a difference by his grace between us and the very vilest of men what ever Thus did Paul 1 Tim. 1. 12. And I thank Christ Jesus our Lord who hath enabled me for that he counted me faithfull putting me into the Ministery Now unto the King Eternall immortall invisible the only wise God be honour and glory for ever and ever Amen 3. Love should beget reciprocall love even Love unto God the 3. Love should
profession because they are baptized Christians borne in the bosome of the Church where Christ is knowne descended of Christian Par●nts and yet notwithstanding are ignorant of the life of Christ of the Laver of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost Some crye up their Baptisme too much though Infant-Baptisme in my judgment without question is Gods Ordinance as the Jewes did the Temple Templum Domini Templum Domini And yet were altogether unacquainted with the God of the Temple Let such remember He is not a Jew which is one outwardly Rom. 2. 28 29. neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh But he is a Jew who is inwardly and circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit and not in the letter But there are others who go yet higher in their own conceits and because they are admitted into Church-fellowship and called Saints and reputed Church Members therefore they think all 's well with them and their condition is very safe But who knoweth not that there are many Nominall Saints which are farre from being Reall Saints Many there are that think it religion enough to joyne in such or such a Society under such or such a Teacher who is a leading Popular man and yet many of them are acted by no other Principle but selfe-interest Compliance with men for carnall advantages Many Matth. 7. 20. shall say saith Christ in that day Lord we have prophecied in thy name and in thy name cast out Devills and in thy name done Luk. 13. 26. wonderfull workes We have eate and drunke in thy presence and thou hast taught in our streets but he shall say I tell you I know not whence you are How many Protestants have we at large who are contented with the bare name of Christians yet in their lives are Antichristians To bid such deny their Baptisme renounce Christ they will tell you they would spit in your faces and yet their lives declare them no better then Turkes Jewes Atheists without God in the world It 's a sad thing to consider that the Profession of religion hath amongst many Ti●ular Professors justled out the practice and a bare forme and an outside profession many think sufficient just like one of Machivells principles Take the profession that will do no harme but not the practice of Religion Psal 51. 6. But be not deceived God is not God will not be mocked The Lord requireth truth in the inward parts God will be worshipped in spirit Joh. 4. 24. and in truth All the painted glosses faire outsides formall pretences will be accounted no better than chaffe straw or stubble at the great day of account I am fully perswaded that since Adams Creation there were never so many false conversions as now a daies Many think they are converted when only they are of such or such an opinion Some are turned from Brownists to Semi-Brownists and from Brownists to Anabaptists from them to Familists and afterwards to Quakers Ranters c. And all these boast themselves to be Saints and to be of the Church of Christ though many I censure not all are of the Synagogue of Satan Some poore soules are seduced by false teachers and run like Absoloms followers in their simplicity knowing nothing Such God may in mercy bring home by a thorough change and reformation and make them sensible of their evill waies and back-slidings and in due time deliver them out of Satans snare But multitudes there are which call themselves Saints and Christians and have nothing but the bare name witnesse their lives farre from Saintship and Christianity How greedy are some of filthy lucre ambitious proud boasters idle drones sleepy sluggards eating the bread of idlenesse when they were in a poorer condition they were industrious and laboured abundantly in their callings now being advanced they grow lazie Some in their younger yeares preached often but now they are elder they are more lazie neither preaching frequently themselves nor hearing frequently others that doe and yet none of these but will take it ill if you call them not Christians and Saints too But where 's any thing of the life of Christ Christ watched prayed went about doing good Can they count themselves Disciples who are so unsutable to their Master Is it lawfull to take a Writ of ease and to rest from our labours before we be dead But leaving them hopeing better things of you I proceed to a second Use viz. Examination 2. For Examination The question is wherein consists that Vse 2. For Examination conversa●ion which is answerable unto our profession I shall give an Answer in these distinguishing Characters 1. This Conversation must be a holy Conversation As he that Char. 1. This Conversation must be holy 1 Pet. 1. 15. Mat. 5. 8. Heb. 12. 14. Char. 2. This Conversation must be s●n●●ere 2 Cor. 1. 12. hath called you is holy So be yee holy in all manner of Conversation Gods people are an holy people Heaven is an holy place The Society there an holy Society the imployment an holy imployment and only holy persons shall see the blessed vision Bless●d are the pure in heart for they shall see God Follow peace and ●olinesse without the which no man shall see God 2. This Conversation must be sincere This is our rejoycing even the testimony of a good Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity we have had our Conversation in the world It 's called there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I shall not overcuriously stand upon Criticismes whether sincerus sine cerâ or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But yet I cannot let passe the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sol 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 judicio an Allusion to the custome of Eagles who held their young ones before the Sun if they could not look up unto the Sun then were they accompted spurious Surely if our actions cannot endure the test and triall of the Sun of righteousnesse they are to be accompted spurious and illegitimate altogether Sincerity is the constitutive difference of a Child of God and a divisive difference which distingui●●eth one that feareth God from him that feareth him not This is that which will comfort a man in life and in death So it did Enoch whose commendation it was that he walked with God and Gen. 5. 24. Gen. 6. 9. was not for God took him It was Noahs comfort that he was a just man and perfect in his generation And it will comfort us in death if we can sincerely professe with Hezekiah Remember O Lord 2 King 20. 3. how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart Wherefore it especially concernes us all to labour after sincerity even truth in the inward parts that so we may approve our hearts unto God and make it our daily exercise to keep Consciences void of offence both towards God and towards men 3. This Conversation must be pruden●
For every wise man Char. 3. this Conversation must be prudent must order his affaires with discretion We usually say Ignis in foco is good but not in tecto Many have a good cause but through indiscretion spoile it in the carriage There is required as well the wisdome of the Serpent as the innocency of the Dove Every wise woman saith Solomon buildeth her house but the foolish pulleth Prov. 14. 1. it downe with her hands Now by wisdome I meane not the wisdome of the times we see too much of that Machiavilian wisdome which is a turning and returning and complying with all times and humours be they never so bad for personall interest This wisdome hath no portion in this businesse But I understand spirituall wisdome that which cometh from above such as the Apostle mentioneth with distinguishing qualifications which is pure peaceable gentle easy to be intreated full of mercy and good Jam. 3. 17. fruits without partiality and without hypocrisy Neither would I be mistaken I count not that wisdome which alwaies joynes with the winning side at a venture nor that which suites with the fashion of ancient Persians now adaies revived to worship the rising sun Too many we have of that temper in these times whom we account wise though indeed they be errand fooles and their wisdome like Achitophels may in time be turned into foolishnesse But that I account wisdome which hath a spirit of discerning to understand the things that differ to understand what is the right rule and to walk accordingly And to adde no more I l'e rest in the determination of Job The feare of the Lord that is wisdome and to Job 28. 28. depart from evill is understanding 4. And lastly This Conversation that consists in the departing Char 4 this Conversation consi●ts in departing from iniquity from iniquity and accords with a holy profession is Universall thorough-paced and every way compleat There 's a threefold Universality of Subject Object and Time 1. For the Subject The whole man is ingaged to Obedience all the members of the body and faculties of the soule With my whole heart have I sought thee saith David O let me not wander Psal 119. 10. from thy Commandments 2. There must be Universality of the Object Then shall I not Psal 119. 6. be ashamed when I have respect unto all thy Commandments 3. Universality of Time Being delivered out of the hands of Luk. 1. 74. our enemies We must serve him without feare in holinesse und righteousnesse before him all the daies of our lives 3. I proceed to a third Use for Exhortation to presse home Vse 2. For Exhortation unto us all the duty of the Text To depart from Iniquity If we be Christians let 's evidence it by our Conversations let 's walke as becometh Christians What will Heathens Turkes and Jewes say when Christians walke loosely and carelesly they will blesse themselves in their owne erroneous waies and thus by our loose walking we give advantage unto the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme Amongst others take two or three motives to perswade you to your duty 1. Consider the eye of God his omniscience and omnipresence Mot. 1. Consider Gods Omniscience Job 10. 14 15. His eye-lids try the Children of men The eyes of the Lord are every where beholding the evill and the good This was a monitor to Joseph to David to Job If I sinne then thou markest me c. The Lord knoweth all hearts seeth the inmost recesse and diverticles of thy spirit All things are naked unto him with whom thou hast to deale 2. Consider the eyes of men Good men observe our carriages Mot. 2. Consider the eyes of men professours are much observed how they walke They are Beacons set upon a hill top multitudes behold them Good men observe that they may gaine some spirituall advantage They expect the performance of our duty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to stirre up and exuscitate graces to quicken or inliven them and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is expected to edify and build them up in their holy faith Now if we are not what we pretend if we be no more but formall professours if our practice accord not with our profession we sadden the hearts of the righteous And likewise bad mens eyes are upon us they watch for our haltings as Benhadads servants they lye at the catch Now if we do not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 walk with a straight foot if we are loose in our lives and carelesse in ordering our footsteps notwithstanding our profession be never so strict we strengthen the hands of the wicked A bad life is a confutation of a good profession Although the Profession it selfe is not the worse because there are some hypocriticall professours yet ignorant and malicious men endeavour to wound the profession it selfe and asperse it by reason of scandalous professours 3. Integrity and uprightnesse of heart and life will comfort us Mot. 3. Integrity of life will comfort u● when pretences cannot help us 2 Cor. 1. 12. when all pretences formes outside professions will no whit availe us This was the ground of the Saints rejoycing O●r rejoycing is this the Te●timony of a good Conscience This was the Apostles exercise 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Duties of both Tables must be regarded respectively To pretend to the duties of the first and neglect righteousnesse and equity to thy Brother as the second table injoynes this discovers thee to be an hypocrite To pretend just dealing according to the second table and neglect keeping the sabbath Act. 24. 12. and other duties of the first this sheweth thee to be only a Formalist But in the last place The fourth Use is for direction in two Vse 4. For Direction particulars 1. How we ought to depart from iniquity Q. 1. How we must depart from iniquity 1. We must depart speedily Ezek. 47. 3 4 5. 2. What meanes may be of speciall Use conducing thereunto 1. For the first particular how we ought to depart from iniquity 1. We must depart speedily We must not excuse sinne and say at such a time I hope to leave it Give not quarter to Benhadad sinne reprived resembles Ezekie'ls waters first up to the ankles then to the knees then up to the loines and afterward a River not to be passed over If thou delayest to depart from sinne to day it gaines ground and gets more and more advantage against thee to morrow 2. Depart willingly Do not leave a sinne as Phaltiel was forced 2. We must depart willingly to leave Michal and afterwards followed her weeping that he could not injoy her Some are restrained against their wills who for feare of the law dare not sweare in some companies neither dare be drunk and yet their hearts are as bad as ever 3. We must depart from sinne thoroughly Ps 119. 110. 4. We must depart constantly 2 Pet. 2. 22. 3. We must
Prophet promised Gen. 49. 10. Shiloh a starre coming out of Jacob the Messiah the Saviour of the world the Redeemer unto whom all the Prophets beare witnesse because you believe not that I am he but despise the Dan. 9. 25. great Salvation which I tender unto you You shall dye in your sinnes i. e. in your impenitency and Infidelity This I said before and I will repeate now I said therefore unto you that yee shall dye in your sinnes for if ye believe not that I am he yee shall dye in your sinnes From the words thus divided and expounded I shall lay down one only point of Doctrine for the Foundation of my ensueing Meditations That of all sinnes Infidelity especially is a grand-damning sinne Doct. against the Gospell For the Inlargment of this Doctrine my method shall be Method 1. To shew what Infidelity is 2. To produce Scripture Testimony for proofe of the Doctrine 3. To Confirme the same by Demonstrative Arguments 4. To inferre some practicall uses and apply them particularly My first inquiry is what Infidelity is or wherein it chiefly consists 1. What Infidelity is For Answer by way of Character I shall endeavour to represent the nature of Infidelity in these Particulars 1. Infidelity consists in not knowing of nor believing that there 1. Infidelity is the not knowing of a Christ is a Christ This is a Negative ignorance which is called Ignorantia purae negationis By beholding of the Sun Moon and starres even by this naturall light or book of nature they may be convinced that there is one God Creator and Governour of all things that this God is the absolute Being Firfi cause Being of Beings But without the Book of Scriptures we cannot know nor believe that there is a Christ This mysterie of Christ incarnate Christ crucified Christs merits Christs purchases is only revealed in the Gospell which is hidden unto Infidells a book sealed unto them above the ken apprehension and faith of the most learned Heathens Wherefore all such opinions that hold that the Sun Moon and Starres are sufficient to teach them Christ and faith in him are abhominable and cursed opinions We must fetch our faith out of the Book of Scripture Faith in Christ is a mysterie it 's of a spirituall cognizance beyond the capacity of a naturall man 1 Cor. 2. 14. And notwithstanding the negative ignorance and unbeliefe of Heathens they are not excusable T is true that those that sinne against knowledge shall have a hotter Hell but all ignorant persons are under a dreadfull curse Jer. 10. 25. 2. Infidelity consists and this is the height of it in not believing Jesus to be the Christ the Turkes account Christ as a great 2. Infidelity consists in not believing Jesus to be the Christ Prophet and will not suffer him to be reviled and blasphemed but they account him not a Jesus a Christ for they preferre Mahomet that grand Impostor before Christ The Jewes believe that a Messias shall come that then shall come that Prophet Moses prophesied of that Shilo that Messias that Jacob and Daniel foretold but as for Christ that they crucified at Jerusalem they reject him altogeather and account him no better then a deceiver and the veyle to this day is yet upon their hearts and their eyes are blinded and God hath given them the spirit of slumber Some Atheisticall scepticks we have now adaies that fancy to themselves a Platonick Christ a Chim●●ra of their own addle braines these are better skill'd in the books of Plato then in the Bookes of holy Scripture this is but what Christ long agoe foretold that there should arise false Christs Mat. 24. 24. Insomuch that if it were possible they should deceive the very elect But there is a comfortable Parenthesis My soule trembles to think of the blasphemies heresies and all sorts of abominations that springs from this cursed fountaine of Platonick scepticisme I shall remind you of these speciall Scriptures which if the Lord set home upon your hearts will abundantly throw downe the Devils great strong holds of new devised whinsicall opinions hammerd upon the Anvill of an Atheisticall spirit Read them deliberately Act. 2. 39. Act. 4. 12. Joh. 17. 3. 1 Tim. 2. 5. And this is the very scope of this Text. Where it is said if yee believe not that I am he yee shall dye in your sinnes Is videlicet quem esse me dico verus ille vobis promissus Liberator So Beza on the place i. e. the same I say I Beza am the promised Redeemer Quaecunque scriptura Messiae tribuit ab ipso sperare jubet so Calvin Regula fidei est ut non modo credamus Calvin esse Christum sed eum quem scriptura docet verum sc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gualter so Gualter We must not only believe that there is a Christ but that he is the true Christ God and man which the scripture teacheth and expresseth to be the only Physitian Saviour Fountaine of living water bread of life our great high Priest the Messiah the annointed of God Piscator gives one Piscator short but pithy note Eum sc quem dico me esse videlicet Christum Now the not believing this Christ here teaching in my Text who was afterward crucified at Jerusalem to be the only Christ the only Mediator the only price of our redemption is a grand damning sinne against the Gospell 3. Infidelity consists in not believing of the Word of God Joh. 3. Infidelity consists in not believing Gods word 5. 38. Psal 106. 24. Neither believed they his wondrous works Ps 78. 22. A strange unbelieving people who neither for the Word nor for the workes of God would yet believe Every threatning and commination in the Word must be believed yet notwithstanding how many blesse themselves as Deut. 29. 19. That they shall have peace c. Every promise must be believed but what a great questioning of and what disputing against promises by unbelievers Many professe that Jesus is the Christ yet when it comes to particulars they walke not answerably to their profession For instance do they believe that they must be redeemed from their vaine conversation that they must be in Christ and be new creatures and be pertakers of the divine nature they must be borne againe if ever they expect to come to heaven These things they believe not these are hard sayings say they who can heare them yet the Word of God is resolute and peremptory and not the least tittle thereof shall fall unto the ground Is this Scripture believed Isa 3. 10. Say yee to the righteous it shall be well with him and Vers 11. Woe unto the wicked for it shall be ill with him Did men believe the Word and cleave to it Did men believe that the Judgments against the wicked and the promises made to the godly should be fulfilled they would not lead such lives as they
Children they are true believers and must needs be such as to whom comfort appertaines for they have great priviledges As first Accesse unto the Throne of Grace Rom. 5. 2. By whom also we have accesse by saith Secondly They have Interest in all the promises 2 Cor. 1. 20. For all the Promises of God in him are yea and in him Amen Thirdly They have Interest in speciall providences distinguishing mercies viz. 1. For their provision Psal 34. 9 10. They shall want no good thing 2. For their Protection Heb. 1. ult The Angells are their Guardians 3. For their direction Christ is a Counsellour and he directs them 4. For their Consolation he comforts them Joh. 14. 18 26 27 5. They have all sanctified what ever they injoy The Creatures are sanctified unto them Fourthly Christ is theirs 1 Cor. 3. 20 21. Rom. 8. 32. And with Christ they have all things Fifthly They shall injoy the presence of God and be made pertakers of the blessed vision Mat. 5. 8. 1 Joh. 3. 2. Here they injoy God in his Ordinances they have Communion with him and feele spirituall Illapses upon their soules but this Ebbes and flowes they have many Interruptions and Intermissions but hereafter they shall injoy an uninterrupted Communion with God to all Eternity Yet notwithstanding what hath been said there are many doubts and scruples raised for there are three sorts of persons who make objections viz. 1. Vnbelievers 2. Misbelievers 3. Weak-believers 1. I begin with Unbelievers and these are to be considered under a double capacity Either such as are Heathens to whom the Gospell hath not been preached in whose land the voice of the Turtle hath not been heard i. e. no publick preaching of the Gospell or else such as live under the sound of the Gospell who have heard of Christ and his Gospell preached and yet they remaine in a state of unbeliefe Obj. Concerning the first sort of unbelievers it 's objected that Obj. 1 the Heathens and Infidells have not had the meanes how then shall they believe on him on whom they have not heard can it agree with the Justice of God to damne them for their unbeliefe seeing they never had the meanes of grace afforded and never heard the Gospell preached Ans I answer God is a most free agent he is bound to none Ans On whom he will he hath mercy and whom he will he hardeneth Faith is Gods free gift to some he gives it to others he denies it And God may do what he pleaseth with his owne God is said to conclude some under unbeliefe Rom. 11. 32. The Phrase is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shut them up hampered them And the God of this world hath blinded their minds 2 Cor. 4. 4. See what their Conversation is Eph. 4. 17 18 19. And see their doome Jer. 10. 25. Ignorance excuseth not nor exempeth from Judgment though Ignorance may sometimes extenuate and make a sinne lesse comparatively yet it is a damnable sinne For a sinne of Ignorance there was an offering to be offered unto God Lev. 4. 27. And a blind mind is both a sinne and a dreadfull judgment Act. 28. 25 26 27. Let none therefore lavish charity upon Heathens If ever they be saved they cease to be Heathens and become Christians For assuredly there 's no salvation but by Christ Act. 4. 12. And no coming to Christ but by faith Joh. 5. 40. Let God be true and every man a lyer God is Just in all his waies and proceedings Shall not the Judge of all the world do right Concerning the second sort of Believers who live under the meanes it 's commonly objected It is not in our own power we Obj. 2 cannot believe God commands things impossible for us to doe For Answer hereunto Those who thus argue do not say they Ans would believe if they could they lay not the fault upon their own will which is refractory and disobedient but they lay the fault upon God To give a full Answer I le lay downe these Propositions Prop. 1. Man cannot by his owne power turne himselfe to God Prop. 2. Conversion and all the fruits thereof are the Graces of Gods spirit Prop. 3. Good inclinations come from God Prop. 4. We may not neglect our duty Prop. 5. There is no Injustice in God to command things impossible 1. It is not in the power of man to turne himselfe unto God O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe c. Jer. 10. 23. 2. Conversion and all the fruits thereof even all the Graces of the Spirit are the gift of God so is faith and love Every good and perfect gift comes from above 3. Our wills and inclinations to any good all come from God He giveth to will and to do Phil. 2. 13. 4. Yet we are called upon to do our duty to thirst come to the waters buy and eate Isa 55. 1. We are called upon to believe and repent Mat. 4. 17. We must use the meanes that God hath appointed we must do all we can and put forth our endeavours to the utmost and yet expect no salvation from what we can do but when we have done all we can we must confesse we are unprofitable servants some complaine I cannot profit by a Sermon Will this be a sufficient excuse to say I can not profit thou must go to God and pray him to reach thee to profit dost thou pray and meditate and call thy selfe to an account and examination of what thou hearest let me aske such as complaine that they have no power to believe would you believe and do you study Scripture Do you read the promises Are you swift to heare Do you use the meanes to get faith If you neglect Gods meanes and Gods waies your destruction will be from your selves altogether Hos 13. 9. 5. It 's no injustice in God to command things which are impossible to flesh and blood to performe and that I will evince by these Arguments 1. God is not bound to give and keep a stock both he gave us power and liberty of will in Adam we lost it and therefore it s our duty to be made sensible of that great losse and to be thoroughly humbled for it 2. God hereby sheweth us our duty what we ought to do 3. Hereby we are put in mind to use the right remedy i. e. going to Jesus Christ for strength of assistance For through his strength we can do our duties and without him we can do nothing Let none therefore plead that they are not able to believe nor repent but though they are not able of themselves they ought to goe to Christ for strength for God hath laid help on one that is mighty Christ is mighty to save he it is that gives grace and glory Let men examine their wills are they not unwilling to come unto Christ though life and salvation is tendred yet they will not come unto Christ they frame multitudes of
the heart of a man glad and oyle makes him have a chearfull countenance and the field is so pretious as Solomon tells us Eccles 5. 9. The King himselfe is served by the field Moreover flocks in the fold and herds in the stalls are of continuall use and service unto man weigh them together and they will proove too light they will frustrate thy hope and renew thy feares and griefes Let me instruct thee in this truth that Gods owne people may be brought unto such great streights and miseries as all creature comforts may faile them Now it 's the time of their triall for the time of miserie tries the truth and sincerity of their faith when they are almost ready to sinke and to be overwhelmed with sorrowes then most opportunely the Lord reacheth out a Cable to draw them out In the most tempestuous weather hope remaines the Anchor of their soules be their hearts never so much over-clowded with sorrow they are revived by the joy of Gods reconciled countenance It 's God alone who is the supporter of the sinking soule they feele sweetnesse in God surpassing the sweetnesse of the fig-tree they feele refreshings in him incomparably more delightfull then those which the Vine and Olive affords and they feed on food which the world knowes not of even the bread of life which yeilds more nutritive and reall sustenance then all the flocks and herds in the universe The Lord is the Godly mans food comfort rejoycing his only joy God is all in all nay better then all unto him Hee 's a Portion Treasure Rock what not to his Children Whereupon out of the strength of faith he breakes forth with my Prophet into this heroicall resolution yet I will rejoyce c. My Text is the Triumph of a Christian or the sanctuary of an Divis afflicted soule in the very 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or highest pitch of afflictions The first word in my Text is a redditive particle tamen yet this resembles a prop and a supporter to a house which holds it up against blustering winds and stormess Secondly Here 's the person I i. e. the Prophet Habakkuk Thirdly His resolution expressing strength of affection I will rejoyce I will joy the Septuagint renders them by two words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The joy is more then ordinary for here 's an exaltation he leapes for joy and takes much delight and comfort in it Fourthly The object which is described by his names topfull of power comfort and mercy a Lord a God and a God of salvation Each Title is a severall forcible argument to excite and elevate the affection Fifthly and lastly here 's the Propriety hee 's mine The pronoune possessive mine appropriates the divine goodnesse unto a mans selfe in particular and this makes Application of this most comfortable doctrine The version of the septuagint is most Emphaticall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Each name hath an Article prefixt to make the Emphasis greater The summe and scope of all comes to this effect the prophet was very sensible of the ●violls of Gods wrath powred down upon the Nations the whole world was in a combustion one misery fell upon the neck of another as one billow in a tempestuous sea followed another how could he think himselfe secure why might not instruments of death be prepared against him and he have his share in these common calamities but this prudent man hath a remedy to apply to these sores amidst these stormes he can find a hiding place for shelter though sorrowes come thick and threefold yet heel 'e have recourse unto his God and fetch down joy and consolation from him in abundance From hence observe this experimentall truth of Doctrine which shall constitute the subject of my ensuing meditations That when all creature comforts faile us and render our outward Doct. condition disconsolate then there appeares sure mercies and comforts superabundant matter of Consolation of joy and rejoycing in the Lord our God Or take the point more briefly thus Amidst all sorrowes losses and crosses joyes supplies and comforts are to be found in the Lord our God Yet saith my Prophet I will rejoyce in the Lord. The verse immediatly following set's out the exuberance of joy pressed by strength of Argument The Lord God is my strength Look for no strength else-where in him it 's most eminent Admit thou art exceeding weake yet God is strong and his strength will be manifested in thy weaknesse The consideration of the divine supportation that it is sufficient for thee should animate thee to trust thy God with all thy comforts he goes on and he will make thy feet like hinds feet and he will make me to walke upon mine high places i. e. he will give me strength and agility to break through all oppositions and therefore the last breath he puts out is Eucharisticall To the chiefe singer on my stringed instruments You see it cleare in my Text the Prophet David professed out of universall experience that Gods rod and his staffe did comfort him and in the multitude of his sorrowes Gods comforts refresht his soule He had fainted but for the goodnesse of the Lord. This holy man was a man of sorrowes and yet a man of comforts the wrath of Saul was inkindled against him and The wrath of a King saith Salomon is like the roaring of a Lion He pursued him like a Partridge on the mountaines and when he was at the brinke of danger then appeares a method of deliverances when he was hemm'd in and compassed round about then the divine providence contrived a way to escape then there came a messenger unto Saul saying Hast thee and come for the Philistines have invaded the land wherefore Saul returned from pursuing after David and went against the Phylistines In this streight an unexpected providence procures his preservation Indeed if we had leisure to inquire into the passages of the divine disposing hand concerning this one man we should conclude them to be as so many continued Acts of the Finger of God When Ziglag was burnt and the people wept till they could weepe no more even then in that lamentable condition David encouraged himselfe 1 Sam. 30. 6. in the Lord his God His God refresht his drooping spirit he was more pretious more sweet unto his soule then a goodly habitation the wife of his bosome a numerous posterity The least glimpse of comfort from the blessed Trinity makes amends for all Not to passe by poore Hagar when her bottle was spent and she cast under a shrub her child expecting ever and anon his death and in the bitternesse of her soule she lift up her voyce and wept then God opened her eyes and she saw a w●ll of water and over and above God promiseth to make him a great nation Gen. 21. 18 19. Here 's sorrow turn'd into joy and God himselfe becomes the comforter The three children had the presence of God for their preservation in the flames Daniel
to justify fulnesse of holinesse to sanctify fulnesse of mercy to pardon Hee 's stil'd in Scripture a Rock for his strength to support us a Counsellour for his wisdome to guide us a fountaine opened Isa 9. 6. Zech. 13. 1. Rom. 27. 2. for his readinesse and preparednesse to wash away our uncleannesse a Tree of life bearing twelve sorts of fruits every month for the plenty and perpetuity of joy and gladnesse and other fruits of the spirit which he ministers unto true believers Hence is he compared in the Revelations to a pure River of living water Rev. 22. 1. as cleare as Christall for that inestimable purity perfection comfort and satisfaction which Christ minister unto the soules of his children Likewise to a pretious pearle for his superlative worth Matth. 13. 45 46. and value and to a storehouse for his fulnesse of all spirituall treasures Omnia habemus in Christo omnia in nobis Christus saith Jerome Jerome and the same Father proposeth particular Instances Si à vulnere curari desideras medicus est c. If thou desirest to be cured of thy wounds Chist is thy Physitian if thou burne with feavers he is a fountaine if thou art burthe●ed with iniquity he is righteousnesse if thou wantest help he is strength if thou fearest death he is life if thou flyest from darknesse he is light if thou desirest heaven he is the way Therefore make thy wants knowne to God though he knowes them all already yet he will have them knowne unto thy selfe better and God loves to heare from his children the expressions of his own spirit When out of a sense and apprehension of thy owne vilenesse thou unbarest thy sores and confessest thy sinnes then God in mercy may remit them A poore soule complaines of its ignorance and folly so foolish was I and ignorant saith David even as a beast before thee O make hast unto Christ In him are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge When the depth saith it is not in me and the sea it is not in me when all the lamps of Philosophers can give no light when all their penetrating braines cannot sound these misteries Job instructs thee where thou must go to schoole Job 28. 23. God understands the way thereof and he knowes the place thereof from God cometh wisdome and from the Lord cometh understanding Another is of a sorrowfull spirit and goes mourning all the day long The remembrance of their sinnes is exceedingly afflictive unto their soules still it presents unto them gall and wormewood terrors and feares which almost drives them unto desperation these would prize one glimpse of Gods reconciled countenance beyond the Empire of the world but alas they can apprehend no comfort as appertaining unto them mark then what seasonable counsell the Prophet gives in this kind Isa 50. 10. Who is among you that feareth the Lord that obeyeth the voyce of his servants that walketh in darknesse and hath no light let him trust in the name of the Lord and stay upon his God A child of light for a time may walke in darknesse he may possesse his soule in bitternesse he may be wonderfully tost and troubled in a tempestuous sea of sorrow ever and anon ready to perish yet when Christ comes and rebukes the winds and the seas there will be a great calme One of his love tokens and spirituall illapses will wipe away their teares and make them go away full of comfort with Hannah and be no more sad A poore doubting Christian must not be his owne Judge he can easilier discerne what makes against him then what makes for him O then hearken what God saith unto thee what comfort his messengers proclaime unto thee wait upon God in his Ordinances stand upon thy watch act faith upon Promises and in Gods due time comfort may come like Noahs Dove with an Olive branch in her mouth in token that the waters of Marah are abated When God hath fitted thee for a mercy then he will give unto it a quick dispatch and send unto thy soule tidings of peace thus I have made it good unto you that all comforts are to be found in God 2. There 's no reall comfort to be found else-where If you will 2. Demonst there 's no reall comfort to be found else-where not believe this truth but hunt after the creature as if that can comfort you to your perill be it you may goe further and speed worse what said Saul to the Benjamites will the son of Jesse give you fields and vine-yards and make you all Captaines of Thousands and Captaines of Hundreds So let me expostulate can the Creature give you any reall satisfaction and contentment in that you so hugge your selves in the fruition of it If these be your humors I know not better how to resemble you then to the men of Shechem in Jothams parable Judg. 9. vers 9. Who leaving the Vine Olive and Figg-tree addrest themselves unto the bramble for shelter and security and since they put their trust in it's shadow which can Minister no safety nor defence what can be expected but that fire should come out of the bramble and devoure the Cedars of Lebanon I meane since they expect so much from the Creature by woefull experience they will find it to be the greatest scourge and plague unto them Creature comforts carry a brave port and come with Agag delicately but they are not aware of their approaching ruines Pleasures of the world make faire promises presenting unto us as Jaell did Sisera butter and milke in a lordly dish but there 's a hammer and a nayle instruments of death are prepared against us i. e. sowre sauce for sweet meate What 's all the mirth of the wicked but madnesse For their hearts are full of gravell and the terrors of God affright them amidst their Carrowsing and jollity Saul could not be merry without a Musitian Whereas Plato told the musitians that Philosophers knew how to dine and sup without them Dost thou think to recreate thy selfe by learning a lascivious scurrilous Ballads by healthing it in Ale-Houses and Tavernes and revelling it ●in Balls and such like Idolized vanities will the remembrance of these sinfull jollities make thee hold up thy head with comfort when God le ts loose the ●ord of thy conscience against thee Then thou wilt curse the day that ever thou cast in thy lot amongst them to be a companion of fooles and by woefull experience thou wilt find that thou hast all this while sought the living amongst the dead Ahab could not be merry without Naboths Vineyard and when he had unrighteously took possession of it his sorrowes were renewed abundantly Haman could not comfortably enjoy himselfe because he wanted Mordecais bended knee suppose he had obtain'd it yet his restlesse ambitious humour could not be satisfied For it is not within the sphaere of any sublunary thing any created power to afford comfort and satisfaction
soule 4. The least of Gods comforts will make a superabundant recompense 4. Demonst The least of Gods comforts will make amends for all discomforts compense for all the discomforts in the world A cup of cold water shall not loose its reward and you know there 's a vast disproportion betweene a cup of cold water and the Kingdome of Heaven God takes notice of every teare that the Saints shed and and he exhales them into his bottle and when the time of refreshing shall come from his presence he will wipe away all teares from their eyes Admit a man hath endured a scoffe or a taunt an approbrious nickname for Christ or admit that he hath resisted unto blood fryed at a stake for the Gospell of Christ could a man I say dye ten thousand kinds of death yet all these sufferings are not worthy to be compared with the joy that shall be revealed for one moment in heaven will make amends for all With this meditation Christ cheared up his disciples Matth. 19. 29. Every one that hath forsaken houses or brethren or sisters or father or mother or wife or children or Lands for my names sake shall receive an hundred fold and shall inherit everlasting life When Peter told Christ that they had forsaken all and what was that A poore all a few rotten poles and fishers nets or some such like thing our Saviour acquaints them of their thriving bargaine of their happy exchange which they had made by the losse of earth to gaine heaven O do not inhance thy griefe saying that no mans sorrow is like thine there cannot be a more Emphaticall Antithesis then in 2 Cor. 4. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our Translation cannot reach these sublime expressions Our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a farre more exceeding and eternall weight of glory Suppose thou art afflicted with outward crossesse and in the meane time God settles the tranquility of thy soule in liev of outward God vouchsafes unto thee inward comforts how art thou a looser by this Suppose thou hast run in a greedy pursuit of some desiderable object thou hast pursued thy pleasure with as much violence as Rachell did her children Give me saith shee children or else I dye Now God in wisdome crosseth thee he knowes what 's better for thee then thou dost for thy selfe God opens thy eyes and then thou discernest what a singular mercy it is that God disappointed thee of thy desire We must not carve out waies of comfort to our selves if we be our owne chusers we shall dearely smart for it When the children of Israel lusted for meate God sent them Quailes but they had better have been without them for whilst the meate was in their mouths the wrath of the Lord came upon them The Israelites would have no nay but must have a King The Lord gave them a King in his anger and took him away in his wrath Hos 13. 11. It 's farre better to have a crosse in mercy and so sanctified as we may discerne the opened bowells of God then the greatest confluence of riches and revenues when they are sent in judgment and in Gods displeasure John Ardley a blessed Martyr griev'd that he had but one life to lay downe for Christ if I had saith he as many life 's as there are heyres of my head they should all goe for Christ It was the strength of faith that made Gordius another Godly Martyr believe that all the threats of his enemies were but as seeds from which he should reape immortality and eternall joyes Here 's the comfort that those which sow in teares shall reape in joy Let not us shrink then at any difficult service which Christ puts us upon For all the troubles and hard-ships which befall us in this vale of misery provided we suffer for Christs sake will augment our future joyes in the kingdome of heaven When thou comest thither it will never repent thee in the least that thou ever sufferest any thing for the name of Christ Thy sufferings and sorrowes here are but finite and limited but the joyes of Gods kingdome are infinite and incomprehensible wherefore the Apostle describes them by way of negation neither eye hath seen nor eare hath heard neither hath it entred into the heart of man to conceive the things that God hath prepared for them that love him 5. And lastly all the waies of God are comfortable and abouud 5. Demonst All the ways of God are waies of joy and comfort in joy The waies of wisdome are waies of pleasantnesse and all her paths are peace Prov. 3. 17. O what ravishing delight and pleasure is there in the law of God O how I love thy law saith David the law of thy mouth is better unto me then thousands of Gold and Silver Psal 119. 127. I love saith he thy commandments above Gold yea above fine Gold They were sweeter unto him then honey and the honey combe Oh! what a sweet thing is it to heare God speaking unto us in his word and for us to speake unto him by our prayers herein consists the life of a Christians life Oh! what a sweet thing is it to be fed with spirituall viands when we are admitted unto the Lords Table Oh! what sweetnesse is to be extracted out of the Communion of Saints There be many saith the Psalmist that say who will shew us any good Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us thou hast put gladnesse in our heart more then in the time that their corne and wine increased Psal 4. 6 7. One beame of Gods reconciled countenance more cheares up a Godly mans spirit then barnes full of corne and coffers cramm'd with Gold Oh! that I could perswade you in the feare of God to the beliefe of this truth that all the paths of God are full of joy and comfort It 's an horrid aspersion cast upon the waies of Godlinesse that religion makes men of melancholy and dumpish spirits the joy whereof they are pertakers is inconceivable Spe gaudent they rejoyce in hope saith St Paul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They that hope rejoyce saith Aristotle Seneca tells us what joy he would have Seneca Volo illam laetitiam tibi domi I would have thy joy to be at home The joy of the Godly is abundant in their owne breast and in their own soule and conscience The spirit witnesseth to their spirits that thy are reconeiled to God The apprehension whereof fills their hearts with joy and peace which passeth all understanding They have here the first fruits and earnest of those in expressible joyes of heaven this makes them to be a calling for their Robes and Crownes which Christ purchased for them by effusion of his pretious blood Therefore trust God with thy joyes and pleasures without God the sweetest thing is bitter As Abner said to Joab so say I of all thy sinfull lusts and pleasures will there
so said the unbelieving Prince so we are apt to say Things aregone so farre as a Recovery is desperate To settle affaires in peace and tranquillity upon firme-covenant Foundations is a work impossible what Is any thing impossible with God and all things are possible to the believer O let not go thy faith it is thy life what wilt thou distrust thy God Infidelity is the giving of God the lye remoove then this stumbling block out of the way if thou remoovest not Infidelity thou canst not rejoyce in God 3. Remoove impatience and murmuring Fret not thy selfe because of the ungodly neither be thou envious at the evill doers as the Psalmist exhorts Psal 37. 1. Repining and grudging are the cankers of the soule they eate out all it's peace and tranquillity An impatient man is the worst enemy to himselfe he adds weight to his burthen and makes it insupportable take heed of impatience and murmuring when Gods hand lyes heavy on thee Many there are who with Mary cannot see Christ for teares in their eyes and being overwhel'd with sorrowes they can discerne no comforts approaching 4. Remoove remisnesse and negligence in duties Their condition 4. Imped Remisnesse and negligence in duties is Lamentable who when things suite not with their humors say it is in vaine to serve the Lord Hence they give to themselves the Reynes and slacken the pace of their duties whereas on the contrary had men their eyes in their heads they would see more need of Duties that they ought to adde more oyle to the flame when things go worst with them Job makes it the character of a wicked man not to pray alwaies Remisnesse and negligence in Duty is an Argument of a rotten heart Though there be no appearance of comfort yet we must not slacken our duties Spirituall duties are pabula animae the food and nutriment of the Soule Prayer meditation and divine conference are vehicula animae and elevate the soule and revive thy drooping spirit they adde a miraculous rigour and alacrity amidst all the crossesse and discomforts in the world If then thou wouldst retaine thy joy take heed of remisnesse and negligence in duties Now having remooved these impediments I shall exhort you to set upon some Duties I shall set downe three only which I shall but name them and so conclude 1. You must labour to live by faith Had we more experience Dut. 1. Live by faith of this sweet and pretious life of faith our hearts would be established we should cast our selves upon the divine providence and stay upon his covenant and resolve with holy Job though the Lord should kill us yet we would trust in him What ever crossesse Job 13. 15. came upon us yet we should never let goe our faith We should believe against beliefe and hope against hope and now when sense and reason failes us we must leave of disputing and learne to believe Oh! then support thy spirit upon a promise Believe that all things shall work together for the best to them that love God Faith Rom. 8. 28. made Stephen see Christ even through a shower of stones and faith made Job see a redeemer upon the Dunghill Faith makes any condition comfortable It is the sweetest life in all the world to live by the faith of the Son of God 2. Labour for a sacred communion and intimacy with Jesus Dut. 2. Labour for a sacred communion with Christ Christ One moment of communion with Christ will transport thee with joy unspeakable which a stranger intermeddles not with all None can reveale these joyes but those that feele them These are the white stones the hidden Mannah the new Name which no man can read but him that hath it Oh! what ravishing love tokens are those which Christ vouchsafes unto his children one of these spirituall illapses into the soule is to be preferred before the Empire of the world 3. And lastly be much exercised in meditation and prayer By Dut. 3. Be much exercised in Meditation and Prayer prayer thou confer'st with him that is invisible and meditation is the wing of the soule to carry up its services as a sweet smelling sacrifice into the Almighties nostrills If we would pray more and spend our time as Isaac did in meditation if we would wrestle with God by prayer and supplication if we would imitate Hezekiah and spread the letrer before the Lord and daily poure out our spirits before him Oh! what comfortable lives should we lead even a heaven upon earth And such a heavenly life would be as a Bulwarke of defence to ward of the Batteries of the worst of enemies Could we get such a sacred acquaintance with God and have our Conversation in heaven we would not feare what men and Devills could do against us We should not feare the Combinations of such who are profest Adversaries to the Universities and Ministery For God will say unto these most desperate Adversaries destroy not those Clusters for there is a blessing in them REALL CONVERSION DISCOVERED from Rom. 12. 2. But be yee transformed by the renewing of your mind THE Apostle having dehorted the Romans from Sermon 10. Preached at St. Marye's Oxon. Feb 5. 1659 60. all conformity to and Compliance with the garbes fashions and evill practices of the men of the world presseth home by way of exhortation the maine fundamentall duty To be transformed in the renewing of their mind Which words though few are a full Character and an essentiall definition of a truely Converted Person viz He is one that Divis is transformed in the renovation of his mind More particularly we may observe 1. A duty Be ye transformed 2. The subject the mind 3. The Qualification of that subject By the renewing What 's needfull for explication of these Particulars I shall endeavour to make good by the Inlargement of this fundamentall Doctrine That Doct. Every Person who is really Converted is transformed and changed in the renovation of his mind Method propounded For the Methodicall unfolding of this poynt of Doctrine I shall thus proceed 1. By inquiring what 's to be understood by transformation 2. What by renovation of the mind which premised then 3. I shall endeavour to make good the Proofe of the Assertion 4. And lastly make particular improvement of all by some usefull Application 1. We are to make Inquiry What it is to be transformed For 1. What it is to be transformed a Resolution thereunto we are first to take notice of the Quid nominis i. e. the name them the Quid rei i. e. the thing it selfe First Let 's consider the Notation of the name The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which in a proper sense is to lay aside one forme and assume another The Radix is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and according to the Judgment of the * Suidas Learned Masters of that language 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are used as Synonimous
only yet by a Synecdoche totius comprehends the whole man so that the understanding will affections and heart all must be renewed changed and regenerated The reason which judicious Mr Calvin gives is very apposite Calv. in loc to our purpose Quandoquidem mente corde alieni sumus à Dei Justitiâ Estius gives a good Note Studeto quotidianae renovationis Estius in loc mentis vestrae per mortificationem malorum affectum cupiditatum To him I l'e only adde the exposition of Oecumenius Oecumenius in loc on the place Q●ia homo cum quispiam est non potest non peccare ideo semper renova te ipsum inquit per poenitentiam The result of all is this that in transformation and renovation no new substance is added to the regenerate man but only new spirituall Qualities are infused into him The Faculties of heart and life are all put into a new frame I acquiesce in the Apostles exposition being instar omnium 1 Thes 5. 23. And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly and I pray God your whole spirit and soule and body be preserved blamelesse unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ 3. I proceed in the third place to make good the proofe of the 3. The Doctrine prooved Doctrine That every really converted person is transformed and changed in the renovation of his mind This I shall endeavour to proove by Scripture and Reason 1. For Scripture proofe the Apostles Exhortation is Eph. 4. 23. 1. Prooved by Scripture And be renewed in the spirit of your mind The same Apostle professeth 2 Cor. 4. 16. Though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day This is the Laver of Regeneration mentioned Tit. 2. 5. It is the washing of the Ethiopian and the cleansing of the Leopards spots Of this the Apostle James speaks Jam. 4. 8. Cleanse your hands yee sinners and purify your hearts yee double minded And what their happy change is the Apostle mentions 1 Cor. 6. 11. And such were some of you But yee are washed but yee are sanctified but yee are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the spirit of our God 2. Prooved confirmed by Scripture Reas 1. This change is wrought only by the Power of God 2. For fuller Proofe and Confirmation by Evidence of Reason Amongst others some Reasons may be these Especially 1. Every Converted person is changed and renewed in his mind by vertue of the power and irresistable operation of the spirit of God which bloweth where and when it listeth and when it worketh none can hinder It was Gods spirit that breathed upon those dry bones mentioned by the Prophet Ezekiel chap. 37. That had sinewes flesh and life given them So in our Regeneration it 's Gods spirit that breatheth life into us and quickeneth us Who were dead in trespasses and sinnes So saith the Apostle You hath he quickned who were dead in trespasses and sinnes And Rom. 8. 13. Eph. 1. 2. If yee live after the flesh yee shall dye but if yee through the spirit do mortify the deeds of the body yee shall live This the Apostle further expresseth 1 Cor. 6. 11. And such were some of you but yee are washed but yee are sanctified but yee are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the spirit of our God 2. The Word of God is an Instrumentall meanes to work Reas 2. The Word is an Instrumentall means of Renovation this Change It 's an immortall seed 1 Pet. 1. 18. It 's the arme of the Lord Isai 53. 1. The power of God unto Salvation Rom. 1. 16. 3. Without this Renovation and change there can be no Salvation For whoever hath Interest in Christ is a new Creature 2 Cor. 5. 17. Whoever comes to Heaven must be borne againe R. 3. Without Renovation there can be no Salvation Joh. 3. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. He must be borne from above whoever is saved hath put off the old Adam and put on the new he is cut off the old stock i. e. the old Adam and implanted in the new Adam But before I come to Application I l'e lay down a few Cautions 1. We must know that every by Nature is blind and ignorant Caut. 1. We must know that every man is blind by nature of God Eph. 4. 8. Having the understanding darkened being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them because of the blindnesse of their heart Even the mind the noblest part is depraved with ignorance vanity unbeliefe doubtings and errours 1 Cor. 2. 14. The naturall man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned Col. 1. 21. And you that were sometimes alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked workes yet now hath he reconciled The state of unregeneracy Eph. 5. 8. is a state of darknesse even darknesse in the abstract Cau. 2. This work of Illumination is not attained by mans Industry 2. That this great work of Illumination the opening of the eyes is not attained by the studies and endeavours of mans industry This is the work of the great God to bring a soule from darknesse to light from the power of Satan unto God Phil. 2. 13. For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure Caut. 3. The best of believers are but sanctified and renewed in part 3. The best of Believers are but sanctified and renewed in part still there is some blindnesse some ignorance in the best This imperfection Paul himselfe although the chiefest of the Apostles acknowledgeth Phil. 3. 12. Not as though I had already attained either were already perfect but I follow after if I may apprehend that for which I also am apprehended of Christ Jesus 1 Cor. 13. 9. For we know in part and we prophecy in part These Cautions premised I proceed to particular Application of all For Application I shall fix on foure Uses Applicat 1. For Information 2. For Examination 3. For Exhortation And 4. For Consolation 1. For Information Be informed of the miserable condition Vse 1. For Information of all unconverted Persons and they are such as are not transformed in the Renovation of their mind Some there are that lye in darknesse even are darknesse it selfe as Eph. 5. 8. For yee were sometimes darknesse but now are yee light in the Lord walk as children of light These neither perceive nor receive the things of God 1 Cor. 2. 14. The naturall man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned Now let none think that Ignorance will excuse them The wise man tells us without knowledge the heart is not good Others there are who