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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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is given in against her Sister Aholibah v. 19. See their doom v. 33 34. The cup of astonishment and desolation should be their portion David being sensible both of the sins of his youth and riper age how heavy they would be upon him if God call'd them to remembrance prays earnestly That God would not remember them against him Psal 25. v. 7. Though he was a potent King and an excellent Musitian a Man of a sanguine complexion and such naturally are most chearful yet after he had committed those two scandalous sins Murther and Adultery he lost his former chearfulness he complains of broken bones Psal 51. 8. of restless bone Psal 37. 3. of diseased bones Psal 6. 3. His sad condition is fu●ther aggravated Psal 6. 6 7. 38. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8. You know by experience that some sprains and bruises that you have got in the heat of your youth afflict you sore in your old age old men feel some blows some aches and pains which they have got many years before some over-strain themselves by running wrestling or such like violent Exercises and they feel the smart thereof in their old bones So likewise the sins which young me● venture on their Whoredoms Voluptuousness Carousing and Gaming which they make light of now may lie heavy upon their spirits in old age so that when green sins and gray hairs young sins and old bones meet together there will be more bitterness in the remembrance of them then ever there was pleasure in the commission of them The Devil will let a man alone a great while whil'st he is young and follows his Voluptuousness The Devil thinks he is sure enough of him But when old age comes and a sinner then is awakened from his security then the Devil bestirs himself all that he can bringing all his sins to remembrance and tempting him to d●speration It 's a good note of Estius Estius Insidebit calcaneo The Serpent will be most busie to do us mischief in the end of our life So then take it which way you will when God comes to reckon with sinners there will be bitterness Sin it self is a bitter thing Affliction is the punishment of sin and that is a bitter thing and Repentance which is the instrumental means prescribed is no pleasant potion The issue is indeed sweet because they that sow in tears shall reap in joy Yet the Scripture sets forth Repentance by breaking the heart afflicting the soul going mourning all the day long like the mourning for an onely Son Zech. 12. 10. Sin will cause bitterness in the end That this may appear more evidently I will give in the demonstration of the Point by evidence of Reason The first shall be drawn from the rule of Equity and Justice There is a Commutative and a Distributive Justice in the Commutative R. 1. Drawn from the rule of Equity Justice Justice Inter vendenda emenda equity and good conscience must take place the Commodity sold must be worth the money given and the money given must be worth the Commodity this is most true yet not in that sence which I drive at this present But there is a distributive Justice and the rule thereof is suum cuique Tribuere this serves for my purpose It 's just with God to give a sinner his own to pay him in his own coyn to let him reap what he hath sowed That as in his youth he hath sown the seeds of wickedness so in his old age he should reap the fruits of sorrow and bitterness It 's Eliphaz experience Job 4. 8. They that plow iniquity and sow wickedness reap the same youth will have its swinge No bands will hold them no bounds will keep them in they will have their own ways and its just with God to let them be filled with their own ways Prov. 5. 22 23. His own iniquity shall take the wicked Prov. 5. 22 23. himself and he shall be holden with the cords of his sin he shall die without instruction and in the greatness of his folly he shall go astray Isa 3. 10 11. Rom. 6. 23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pro stipendio quovis salario accipitur Piscut Compare those two different Sentences together Isa 3. 10 11. Sin hath a voice it cries aloud for it's wages and that is a dead pay Rom. 6. 23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Young men rush into sin with greediness but they take not into their thoughts the consideration of a day of an account There will come a day of visitation a day of recompense when God will reckon with thee for thy most delightfull sinnes In thy elder age thou must feel the smart of them and possess a bitter inheritance Read that sacred Irony of the wise man Rejoyce O young man c. Eccles 11. 9. Reas Second drawn from the nature and quality of Sinne. A Second Reason shall be drawn from the nature and quality of sinne every sinne is a pollution a defileing of the conscience there is an abundance of filthiness in every sinne this the Psalmists question implyes wherewithall shall a young man cleanse his ways Psal 119. 9. Sinne in Sctipture is called lewdness folly perversness uncleanness compared to a menstruous cloath to dung vomit mire poyson c. There is nothing so loathsome in our eyes as sinne is in the pure eyes of God sinne is the poyson of the soul sinne is worse then hell then the Devil more black more ugly then either of them Quod efficit tale est magis tale There would be neither hell nor devil were it not for sinne Now then if every sin be thus filthy what shall we say of youthfull sinnes which are committed with vigour greediness alacrity when men sell themselves to work wickedness and spend their marrow and strength in the devills service these though they litle think of it will one day feel the smart of their youthfull vanityes if God open their eyes to see the filthiness of their wayes and to loath themselves their sinnes will cost them many a salt tear Hence will follow an holy self-confusion self-displacency and abhorrence Jer. 13. 19. Job 42. 6. as was i● Ephraim and Job Though they wanted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fore witt It s a great mercy if they have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after wit A Third and last Reason shall be drawn from the severall aggravations of those sinnes which are committed in the dayes of our youth Reas Third from the aggravations of youthfull sins 1 Aggravat because youthfull sins are committed with greater violence Job 11. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Arist Eth. l. 1. ● 1. 1. They are commited with a great deal of impetuousness and violence Though the story of Phaeton be fabulous and I purposely wave Poeticall Fictions yet the morall is sound that rash young men may set all in a combustion Job hath a full comparison A young
had in honour when their lying legends shall rot There 's a famous History of the Waldenses of the people of Merindall and Cabryers and of the Parisian Massacre even this last century when the blood of the slaine ranne warme reeking down the streets Peruse the History of the late Marian quinquennium Looke upon the mach●lesse cruelty of the blood-sucking Papists in Ireland And all these are ensamples to us we should not as the Apostle saith 1 Pet. 4. 12. Think it strange concerning the fiery tryall which is to try you as though some strange thing happened unto you Thus we may argue Did such worthies suffer must we looke to be scot-free are we better then they can we plead priviledge to escape others have began to us in Germany and Ireland how soone we may drink of the same Cup who can tell I would not be a Foecialis yet I dare not flatter A blackcloud hangs over our head how soon it may break and showre down blood and involve us in a new War we cannot tell All that I ayme at is to prepare you for what ever comes for the worst of times seeing a storme to make your garments fast about you and retire to a shelter to get your Arke built before the deluge come Praem●niti praemuniti it s the prudent mans practise to foresee evill and hide himselfe so saith Solomon In the second place I shall give in the confirmation of the point 2. The Doctrine confirmed by Reason Amongst others these foure Reasons may confirme the truth delivered 1. Because persecution and suffering is the ordinary lot and portion of true believers The way to Canaan is through the wildernesse and the way to Zion through the valley of Bachah In Reason 1. Pers●cution and and suffering is the Lot and Portion of Believers the world saith Christ you shall have tribulations Joh. 16. 33. Many are the troubles of the Righteous Psal 34. 19. We must through many tribulations enter into the Kingd●me of God Act. 14. 22. Every Disciple of Christ must take up his crosse Matth. 16. 24. Non est Christianus qui non est Crucianus saith Luther The Saints are killed all the day long and accounted as sheep for the slaughter Rom. 8. 36. As soone as Paul was manifested to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a vess●ll of choyce he was shewed how great things he must suffer for Christ Acts 9. 16. and upon experimentall knowledg he layeth down this positive truth That all that will live Godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution 2 Tim. 3. 12. Now this comes to passe 1. By the wisedome of God The Divine hand is in it Persecutors saith Bernard are Gods Goldsmiths to put the righteous into the furnace of affliction and take away their drosse so God permits persecutors to try the faith love and patience of his servants and oft times they doe a great deale of good even against their will Jer. 9. 7. Therefore thus saith the Lord of Hosts behold I will melt them and try them for how shall I doe for the daughter of my people The Sabaeans Chald ans and Satan were instruments of afflictions to Job but God wrought good out of all Jam. 5. 11. Behold we account them happy which endure Ye have heard of the patience of Job and have seen the end of the Lord that he is very pittifull and of tender mercy Had it not been for afflictions we had never read of the patience of Job we should not have left us upon record that excellent booke of Job 2ly This comes to pass by reason of Satan's rage and malice The great Dragon stands by ready to devoure the man-child of reformation Hee is the envious man the accuser of the Brethren the adversary the roaring Lion Pliny speakes of the scorpion that every moment it puts forth his sting the Devill is that Scorpion that every moment assayes to doe mischiese hee will cast some of you into prison Rev. 2. 10. 3ly This comes to pass by reason of the malice of wicked-men they are the Devils agents they have suckt the poyson of this old Serpent and swell with it and are greatly enraged against the power of godliness Ther 's a deadly Fewd and Antipathy in wickedmen against the powerfull workings and breathings of God's spirit in the Saints The great ones and Potentates of the world rages a the godly Psal 2. 1. Why d●e the heathen rage They hate them without cause Tygers as some report rage at the sent of fragrant spices so the wicked at the savour of Godliness As long as ther 's any left of the serpents brood there will not bee wanting opposition and persecution against the godly This is the first head of reasons The 2d reason is because Christ doth expect that the faith of his Reas 2. Christ expects that the faith of his servants should act extraordinarily servants should act so extraordinarily as the faith of hypocrites and Reprobates cannot come near it Temporizers will profess that they have faith but these follow Christ only for the loaves while the Sun shines warme upon them in Halcy●n dayes of peace and tranquility but when it come to fire and faggot or degradation and suspension 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they take offence Now he that hath not learned Christ's Cross hath not learnt his Alphabet The Question was in another case ask't Matth. 5. 47 what doe you m●re than others and so in this case Christ will aske the question are you willing to glorisy mee both by doing and suffering are you willing not only to believe on me but also to suffer for my sake Such Questions as there will touch the quick Believers must study all advantages and take all opportunities to promote the honour of Jesus Christ they have a battle to fight they are to encounter with b●asts of Ephesus and sonnes of Anak they have a race to runne and many stumbling blocks are layd in the way They have a fiery tryall to endure a Cross to beare they must pass through h●nor and dishonor good report and evill report They must follow the Lambe where ever he goes through thick and thinne through a showre of blood Thy life must not be deare to thee when Christ cals for it Bee not afraid of venturing limbes liberty life it selfe for him that layd down his life for thee It was an heroicall speech of Luther that hee would goe to Wormes and preach the Gospel there though ev●ry Tile was a Devill to oppose him and it was a gallant resolution John Fox Act Mon● ●● Maryes dayes of John A●dly that holy Martyr that if hee had as many lives as hee had haires on his head hee would loose them all for Christ Thus you see how the saith of Believers acts extraordinarily A 3d Reason is drawn from the conformity of Believers unto Reas 3. Believers in a way of suffering are made conformable unto Christ Christ for Believers are
meditatur Sanctius in Loc. quia eum recentium peccatorum non morderet cruciaretque conscientia c. As if Job had not been conscious to himself of late sins therefore he conceives that he now suffers for former sins thus some con●ecture as Sanctius observes on the place But this savors not of Jobs spirit though he was exemplary for holiness yet he was sensible of daily sins he knew himself to be a daily sinner he knew what a sinful nature he had full of pollution yet his youthful sins carryed the greatest filth and guilt in them which in his apprehension made the greatest gashes and wounds upon his conscience he knew that his youthful sins had most aggravating circumstances in them that a Bill of Indictment drawn up against them would be blackest and charge him homest Where upon Judicious Mr. Calvin gives two reasons why he speaks of the sins of his youth one is Because in that age lusts are most predominant the Calvin in l●cum nature of a man which is sinful doth then cast up his greatest froth the passions are most violent and therefore that age hath need of the strongest Bridle Another reason is Because Job meant to declare that God brought all his sins to remembrance as if he should frame an Indictment against him of all that he had done ever since he was a childe And herein he seems to complain of rigor seeing thou hast pardoned them wherefore dost thou lay them before me But we may not finde fault with God he punisheth less then we deserve The Lord is righteous we have sinned against him A fourth Query is what is meant by possessing the sins of Q. 4. Hieronymi translatio Chald. Parap Jun. in Loc. youth Jerome reads it consumere vis youthful sins may bring Consumptions upon old Age. The Chalde Paraphrase reads it Me haereditare facis Thus Junius interprets Efficis ut possideam haereditario jure As if elder years did inherit youthful sins Gray Hairs even old persons gray headed in sins receive the punishment of their youthful green headed sins for their inheritance It 's an observable note of Pineda on the place * Punishment is the Poena est quasi culpe prognata filia atque adeo ipse homo grandevus senex succedit sibi ipsi puero Adol●s●●nti Pineda in Loc. Daughter of sin An old man is successor to himself a young man There is as it were a natural succession and derivation of sins committed in youth to become the inheritance of old age So that a sinner becomes his own Heir the old sinner the young mans Heir The meaning is A man that runs on in a riotous ungodly course following his swinge and full career in wickedness in the days of his youth shall feel the smart and bitterness of his sins in his old crasie bones We render the word in the Text ordinarily to possess and that is Emphatical A man that hath present possession of his Inheritance hath most points in the Law The right next Heir hath a legal Title Now when the Heir hath possession of his Inheritance this adds to the strengthning of his right Now an old sinner doth inherit and take possession of his youthful sins and this is a sad possession to possess the inheritance of sin It was charged upon Ahab for killing and taking possession there is the killing of the soul when there is possession took of sin He then may be said to possess the sins of his youth who feels the smart and pain of them who suffers bitter sorrows for them when the sins committed in his youth even breaks his bones when he comes to be old I have one Query more to propound How is it since Job an holy Q. man whose sins were pardoned yet complains of such an hand-writing against him charging upon himself youthful sins For answer you must know 1. That sins repented of and pardoned A. may yet prove gall and wormwood to the soul They that have repented must renew their repentance The remembrance of the wormwood and the gall the bitterness of sin will cost Gods people many a salt tear 2. Though sins may be pardoned yet the soul may not be able to read that pardon it may want the manifestation of the pardon though there may be a pardon sealed an acquittance a white stone in the Court of the Judge yet it may not appear so in the Court of a mans own Conscience 3. We are to know that Fatherly chastisements are the lot and Heb. 12. 5 6. Rev. 3. 19. portion of Gods dearest Children as the Scripture plainly sheweth There is a Judgement of Revenge and a Judgement of Chastisement Judgements of Revenge are the portion of the wicked Judgements of Chastisement are incident to the generation of the righteous As a Judge God will not pass an eternal Judgement against his people They are the beloved of his Soul and he loves them to the end but as a Father he may and doth pronounce many temporal Judgements as Chastisements against them The fruit whereof is to take away their Dross and Tin and to make them partakers of his holyness 4. It is wisdom in a godly man when present sufferings are upon him to call former sins to remembrance Afflictions brings sins to remembrance Job lookt back upon his former failings he was not unmindeful of his present failings but his former in an especial manner might call for a rod of correction to whip out his folly When afflictions befall us we should inquire into the cause and search out our sins and be humbled for them So Josephs Brethren when distress befell them in Aegypt called to minde their Gen. 42. 21. cruelty against Joseph many years before committed Thus you have heard the Explication of the words from which I 'le draw one Point of Doctrine which I take to be the fundamental Doctrine of the Text That sins committed in our youth will cause much smart and bitterness Doct. in our elder years This Point lies plainly in the Text I shall make it the ground-work of my ensuing Meditations In the prosecution whereof I shall pursue my plain and accustomed method by proving the Point from Method of handling the Doctrine Scripture confirming it by evidenc● of Reason and reducing all to point of practice by way of Use and particular Application For Scripture proof Job speaking of the momentary joy of wicked men cap. 20. v. 5. sets forth his judgement v. 11. His bones are full of the sins of his youth Hos 12. 14. He shall leave his blood upon him as Diodate and others observe God will not pardon him his sin nor cleanse him from it but will keep it still in remembrance to punish him for it at his appointed time God makes a grievous complaint against Samaria and Jerusalem under the names of Aholah and Aholibah Aholahs youthful Whoredoms are charged upon her Ezek. 23. v. 8. And likewise the same charge
exprest It 's wrote in such legible Characters 2. A Mercy as he that runs may read it Yet his days c. The words have need of a Paraphrase I shall open them briefly in their order By Spirit Ainsworth understands that holy Spirit of Christ by which he Preached in the Patriarchs and especially in Noah to the disobedient spirits of the old World and exhorted them by the Fathers to amend their lives so I take the Lo-iiddon Non vaginabit Pagninus Grotius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 70. Lo-jadon sense to be It followeth Shall not strive The 70 read it My spirit shall not abide But this I take not to be the meaning the word hath many significations it signifies to judge to chide and dispute As if the Spirit of God should say I have set Judges over you I have chid you reproved you argued the case with you sent my servants Noah Enoch Methuselah exhorting you to come and repent but you are incorrigible impenitent you are never the better notwithstanding all my patience forbearance waiting on you trying you therefore now my spirit shall no longer strive with you I will take no more pains with you I will dispute the case no longer but send a Deluge to decide the controversie And so I understand the words In seculum so the 70 read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here you may see an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Abyss of kindness to mankinde So Chrysostome That the Spirit hath ever strove with any is a great mercy But if the Spirit strive by Messengers rising early and going to bed late and by its motions and whispers if the Spirit be still resisted and abused it will leave striving and leave a people inexcusable Luther speaking of this Text saith This was a publick Sermon preached in a Fuit publica concio in publica Synodo proposita Luth. publick Assembly When those that were Gods Messengers spent their spirts in vain and saw that the people were desperate past all hopes of reclaiming they let them alone to take their course and to be filled with their own ways Then here 's a Reason given For that he also is flesh The word sets forth the corrupt nature of mankinde and is here put by way of opposition unto the Spirit It is the same with Animalis or Conqueritur Deus tantopere turbatū esse ordinem d●se positum ut image sua in carnem transformata esset Calv. Centum viginti annos si fo●te conver●antur Cald Paraph Carnalis homo Man that was created after the Image of God hath defaced that Image hath corrupted his way and is become fleshly This God complains of That the order which he put is inverted and his Image transformed into flesh as Judicious Calvin observes Lastly Here 's a gracious reprieval and space allowed for repentance Yet his days c. This is not to be understood as if an hundred and twenty years were the limited term of years for mankinde to live in this world It 's apparent that many after the Flood lived longer But the meaning is that an hundred and twenty years shall be given them if haply they be converted This space God allows them for repentance and they had Noah a Preacher of righteousness and they saw the Ark a building and every stroke strucken The building of the Ark should have been a Monitor of repentance this was great and wonderful long-suffering as we read 1 Pet. 3. 19 20. By which he went and preached unto the spirits in prison which sometime were disobedient when once the long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah The words thus opened contain two fundamental Doctrines 1. That it is a most dreadful judgement upon a people when the Doct. 1 Spirit of God refuseth to strive any longer with them 2. That it is an exceeding great mercy to a people when the Lord Doct. 2 vouchsafeth them time and space for repentance I resume the first and I shall cast the Heads of my Meditations Method of handling the Doctrine into this plain and familiar method 1. I shall assert the truth of the Doctrine from Scripture Testimonies 2. I shall particularly represent unto you how the Spirit may be said to strive with man 3. I shall enquire into the Grounds and Reasons for confirmation of the truth And lastly Conclude with particular Application unto our selves 1. To prosecute the first Head propounded time would fail me 1. The Doctrine proved by Scripture Testimony in Scripture Quotations but I shall gather sparingly from so great a cloud of Witnesses mentioning some select Proofs and leaving the rest to be supplyed in your Meditations Now that this is so great a Judgement for the Spirit of God to leave striving with a people may be exemplified in several persons recorded in Scripture as signal Spectacles of Divine vengeance to Posterity The Lord spared Sodom and Gomorrah a long time Abraham undertakes though dust and ashes to intercede for them He intreats That if fifty righteous persons be found there that they may not be destroyed His request is granted he abates five of fifty and then comes down to forty after that to thirty from thirty to twenty and at last to ten and it is to be observed that God never left off granting till Abraham left off begging They had good Lot to reprove and exhort them and they vexed his righteous soul day by day with their unclean conversation he spent his spirits his counsels admonitions all in vain Now God will spare them no longer the Angel delivered Lot from them and as soon as ever he was gone the Lord destroyed Sodom Gomorrah with Fire and Brimstone Gen. 19. 24 25. The Lord rained upon Sodom and Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the Lord out of Heaven and he over-threw those cities and all the plain and all the inhabitants of the cities and that which grew upon the ground The Lord waited a long time upon Jerusalem sending his Prophets and warning them he puts them in remembrance of his exemplary Judgements upon others Jer. 7. 13. I spake unto you rising up early and speaking but ye heard not and I call'd you but you answered not therefore I will do to this house c. as I have done to Shiloh He expostulates the case with them Jer. 13. 27. I have seen thine adulteries and thy neighings the lewdness of thy whoredom and thine abominations on the hills in the fields Wo unto thee O Jerusalem Wilt thou not be made clean When shall it once be and Ezek. 18. 32. I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth saith the Lord God wherefore turn your selves and live ye The House of Israel was the Vineyard upon which God had bestowed so much pains cost and charges Isa 5. 1 2 3 4. My well-beloved hath a vineyard in a very fruitful Haec omnia usu venisse populo Judaico cum in Babylonica
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
the lowest Scholar ought to know it And therefore its insufferable that hee who professeth himself a Doctor in the church should be ignorant of that doctrine Cogitemus hic quanta caecitas necessario obtineat in eo populo in quo Doctoribus ipsis Musculus in loc potest objici rerum ad ingressum Regni Dei necessariarum ignorantia so Musculus What blindness must there be in that people when their very teachers are ignorant of the most necessary things These things being p●emised for the opening of my text I shall ground my discourse upon this experimental truth of doctrine That There may be and are many men otherwise of great Learning Doct. yet grosly ●gnorant in the maine Fundamentall Doctrine of Regeneration The instance of my Text is instar omnium and it sufficiently proves my assertion yet notwith●●anding I 'le adde thereunto other instances out of the word of God Paul was bred at the feet of Gamaliel of the strictest sect a Pharisee as touching the law blamelesse and yet all this while he knew nothing of Christ and Regen●ration until Christ me●t with him by the way as he was going to Damascus His confession is upon record That he was a Blasphemer 1 Tim. 1. 13. a Persecuter and injurious 1 Tim. 1. 3. The Pharisees were of great learning and knowledge in the Lawes they stood strictly upon outward washings yet were unacquainted with the washing of the heart Luke 11. 39. The Pharisees were the Rabbies and learned Doctors of their time they boasted much of outward righteousness 1 Cor. 1. 20 21. 1 Cor. 3. 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 17. 18. yet their righteousness came short and was exceedingly defective Our Saviour tels them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 5. 20. Those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Greece who attained a great measure of knowledg were ignorant of this great point and therefore their wisdome hath the brand of foolishness put upon it by the learned Doctor of the Gentiles I Cor. 3. 19. 1 Cor. 20 21. Simon Magus did so bewitch the people and was accounted of such great abilities as he was esteemed the great power of God Act. 8. 10. and yet he was a man unregenerate for he was in the Gall of bitterness and Bond of iniquity v. 23. Tertullus was an eloquent Orator yet never did man abuse his parts more then he who pleaded with strength of eloquence in so bad a cause against Paul What need I adde more The Magicians of Aegypt the Wise men of Babylon the old Heathen Philosophers the Epicureans and Stoicks were all ignorant of Christ and the great work of of his spirit to regenerate souls They accounted Paul but a Babler and they would in all probability have asked the same absurd question as Nicodemus did can a man enter into his mothers womb the second time By all their ratiocinations they could never evince a second birth this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This subject came not as a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in their disputations it was beyond their ken and cognizance and this was never spoken of in Aristotles Lycaeum Zeno's Stoa nor in Plato's Academy I shall now descend to the Reasons of the point and then conclude Reas 1. Drawn from the nature of Regeneration with some usefull Application There are 3 Reasons or Arguments drawn a fortiori viz. From the Nature of Regeneration Of unregeneracy and the free working of Gods spirit and in relation to these three you will clearly see the assertion proved abundantly 1. ●et's consider the nature of Regeneration what it is which being discovered it will plainly appear that there may be a great deal of Learning and other kinds of Knowledge even to admiration Jer. 4. 4. Rom. 12 2. Rom. 12. 2. Ephes 4. 23. 2 Cor. 5. 17. 2 Pet. 1. 4. 1 Cor. 5 7. Gal. 4. 19. Joh 3 6. Mat. 3. 11. 1 Pet. 2. 2. of the world whilest in the mean time men may be mere strangers to this great work of Regeneration Let 's enquire how the scripture speakes of Regeneration Sometimes it s compared to circumcision Jer 4. 4. its called the renovation of the mind Rom. 12. 2. The renewing in the spirit of the mind Eph. 4. 23. The new creature 2 Cor. 5. 17. The divine nature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 1. 4. a new Lumpe 1 Cor. 5. 7. The forming of Christ in the soul Gal. 4. 19. To be regenerate is to be born of the spirit Joh 3. 6. to be baptized with the Holy Ghost and fire Matth. 3. 11. And these are new born babes 1 Pet. 2. 2. This gives a man esse supernaturale a supernatural heavenly-born being Regeneration lookes at the inward man the hidden man and there makes a blessed change All the documenta principia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as they are called of the strictest Philosophers could never bring any to understand what Regeneration meant Their counsells tended only to the re●ormation of the outward man to keep men in a decorum and within bounds of morality to follow those dictates which were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but they never aimed at heart-pollution heart-reformation the searc●ing out of Spiritual filthiness vain thoughs c. The best of your heathen Philosophers were Mole-ey'd bat-ey'd they could not see nor understand what purification of the heart meant Now then Regeneration being a supernatural work as is forementioned by plain scripture Testimony it s no wonder that many men of excellent parts who act upon dictates and principles of nature only that they are strangers unto this great mystery of the new birth 2. Another argument may be drawn from the nature of unregeneracy Reason 2. Drawn from the nature of unregeneracy The state of unregeneracy is a state of impurity enmity blindness and deadness First it s a state of impurity Original sin is an universal pollution Psal 51. 5. Job 14. 4. An unregenerate man is a compound of all sin he is a Cage of unclean Birds a Sink of impurity He is as a Reverend Divine gives a fit expression A Pitcher of earth fill'd up to the brim with the poysonfull liquor of Hell Originall sinne is Mr. Wheatly of Banbury on the new Birth that spawn whence is multiplied an innumerable fry of actuall rebellions What is corrupt nature but a filthy dunghill of all abominations The heart is the Devills Magazine to store up all manner of wickedness the tongue is set on fire of hell a fountaine of all sorts of evil communication The hand an instrument of deceipt and violence The eyes windowes and thorowfaires to let in all sorts of impurities the feet swift to run the divels errand and the whole life is a continued trade in sin to use the expression of the same pretious Divine now with God The life of an unregenerate man is one continued Webbe of wickedness made up by the divell and the flesh an
so farre and many there are that come short of him But besides this speculative there is an experimentall knowledge of Regeneration when a man findes the sweetness and lively power thereof upon his own soul when a man apprehends the image of Christ which consists in righteousness and holyness stampt upon him when a man findes a reall powerfull and effectuall change upon his heart and life this is the knowledge a minister ought cheifly to have Let him study the Theory and be able to instruct others what this new birth is but above all let him labour for the practical and experimentall knowledge thereof in his own heart that he may feel it operative and active in his own heart and so be more able to discourse from observations out of the book of his own heart 2 Teachers should teach frequently doctrine rather then out of the choicest writers that handle that subject 2. You that are Teachers of others let me beseech you in the bowells of Jesus Christ to preach frequently this fundamentall Doctrine of Regeneration ●his is a most needfull Lesson which can be never enough taught never enough learned Christ crucified Faith Repentance Holiness Regeneration are maine necessary doctrines to be Preach't in season and out of season doe not throw away and wast your time about unnecessary controversies vaine ●●nglings doubtfull and curious disputations where the scripture it silent It was said of old Elias cum venerit solvet dub●um And we say now that where Gods spirit is silent our curiosity deserves a check Let such as bend their wits to force blood out of the Scriptures and coyn new interpretations at the Mint of a whimsical brain let them be convinced of their great folly and O that for the future such would preach Regeneration more and in all their Preaching hold fast the forme of sound words A preacher will doe more good through Gods blessing by preaching one Sermon on this Argument from an experimentall feeling of Gods spirit upon his heart then if to pleasure any w●n●on ears of Athens he preach a thousand Sermons full of high-flown Poeticall expressions Fathers and Brethren suffer the word of Exhortation Round about the country neere to the Vniversity the poore people cry for your help as the man of Macedonia come and help us Charity binds you Conscience binds you In some places you have Impropriations these help to feed you with corporall food and in conscience you are bound to feed them with spirituall food Why then stand any of you idle in the Market Why doe not you arise be doing and travel East West North and South preaching of the Gospel of Jesus Christ And when you goe doe not stuffe up your Sermons with fragments of Poets and fag-ends of Philosophicall distinctions It was the ●●nne of your Predecessours removed lately sometimes to preach strong lines uncouth Phrases at some Neibouring Parish and this they call'd Ayring of a Pauls or a Court Sermon and so they seemed to the people no better then Barbarians preaching in an unknown tongue High-flown Poets formerly and Familists of late both unsit for a Pulpit amuse the people with sublime non-sensical straines speaking as the Apostle Jude ●ude 16. saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Take heed none of you be such Therefore let it be the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to preach Christ crucified Shew men their misery by nature the necessity of Regeneration The excellency of Christ thisis that unum necessarium Governours Tutors Masters Parents all in their places had need take more paines in examining those under them concerning the Doctrine of a new birth You will upon search find many men that can discourse of State Controversies and Church Controversies that can discourse of Discipline that can readily fall upon the Ministry and Vehemently cry down their maintenance as Jewish or Antichristian c. and yet oft times such are very ignorant in the maine necessary Point of Regeneration This is the grand point that should be more preach't then it is now adayes 2. To Disciples the other part of the Use respects them Let me beseech you to lay aside itching Ears after novell Doctrines 2. To Disciples come not here with an appetite to have your fancy tickled Be not like those of old Athens of our Athens we hope better things ever expecting some new thing some Brain Fancy some Chimara or Ens rationis some new coyn'd Interpretation besides and against the rule of the word of God But rejoyce in plain preaching and delight in that which tells you plainly of the necessity of holyness new creature interest in Jesus Christ This is the life of preaching to preach Christ crucified in the demonstration of the Spirit And this is the life of hearing to yeild ready obedience thereunto Let every one say let the plain powerfull profitable preaching come let it come let it come closly particularly and effectually into my soul let Gods word finde me out divide unto me my portion and separate between the joynts and marrow even between my self and my bosome corruptions Some of you are the sonnes of Nobles Antient Families O remember wherein consists your best Nobility and that 's in this New Birth The Bereans were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Kings Daughter is said to be glorious within her clothing is of Act. 11. 12 Psal 45. 13. wrought Gold The graces of Gods spirit Faith love meekness temperance goodness and the like these ennoble your soules these make Nobility it self truely noble And these will last when honorable persons shall be degraded and all honours lye in the dust Therefore labour for this true Nobility It was Ignatius his saying Nobilitas Antiquitas mea Jesus Christus It was an excellent saying of Lewis of Bavyer Emperour of Germany Hujusmodi comparandae sunt opes quae cum naufragio simul enatent Such goods are worth getting that when a shipwrack happens will swimme along with us And these are the riches of Christ the graces of his spirit this great grace of Regeneration When stormes and tempest even Euroclydons the most blustering windes come when concussions overturnings and hurlyburlyes come there 's safety for that man who hath made God his portion who hath an interest in Christ he shall not be afraid of evil tidings because his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord he hath the name of the Lord to go unto a rock of ages to shelter himself upon and so shall be safe Brethren I speak to many men of great learning well skill'd in Arts and Sciences I acknowledge singular use of them and I know none that will speak against them unlesse such of whom the Apostle speakes they speak evil of that which they know not yet notwithstanding here is a Science that out bids all your Sciences and that is the knowledge of Christ Paul the learned Doctor of the Gentiles thus determines 1 Cor. 2. 2. I determined to know nothing amongst you save Jesus
is very convenient and not hurtfull Let us observe the Apostles censure They are Gangrens destructive to many pretious soules and therefore may not be tolerated and connived at Observe how the Apostle brands them for erring from the truth The Originall is more emphaticall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In ‖ Significat Apostolus eos à scopo Christianae veritatis ad quam collimare debebant aberrasse Estius Estius his commentaries on the place I find he followeth both Ambrose and Austine and renders his own sence accordingly The Apostle doth signify that they erred from that mark of Christian truth at which they ought to aime And * Qui à veritatis scopo aberrarunt Gerrh Gerrhard concurres in his judgment i. e. they have swerved or missed the mark It 's † Non quodvis Erratum significatur sed quod est ejusmodi ut fundamentum non retineatur Reza Beza's observation on the place that the Apostle used this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thrice in this Epistle which is mentioned to shew That not every errour in Religion is signified but an errour of that Kind that destroyeth the foundation 3. Thirdly The Apostle declares the issue and mischievous successe of these Seducers that they gaine Proselites and followers in the verse preceding my Text They overthrew the faith of some Some hereby conceive that they destroyed not the grace but the profession of their faith For by this heresy in denying of the resurrection making it imaginary or spirituall they subvert the Orthodox faith However here 's our strong hold that Gods foundation is firme Mens wickednesse cannot shake that firme foundation which God hath laid Here 's a neverthelesse to support us against the Apostacies of men of corrupt minds Although they relinquish their old Principles and turne Hereticks yet we have a firme Ground of Incouragement for the foundation of God standeth sure against all the underminings of Apostates and Heretickes The decree of Gods election stands sure notwithstanding the malice of the vilest men who have a spirit of contradiction In this Proposition of eternall truth That Gods foundation stands sure Here are five things remarkable and they carry a great deale of weight in them requiring our most deliberate consideration 1. Here is a foundation 2. A firme and sure foundation 3. It is the foundation of the great God unchangeable 4. It hath a seale put to it Things sealed are more sure and authentique 5. Here is the omniscience of God ingaged He knowes who are his All true believers have their names wrote in the book of life They are all known unto God But as in sealing there useth to be a Counterpart when both parties seale so God sealeth and man sealeth Gods eternall decree is his seale sure and unalterable Man's seale is his holy life and conversation Because God knoweth who are his and his foundation is sure and certaine therefore a stronger ingagement lyeth upon us all to look to our lives and conversations From the doctrine of the unchangeable decree of God my Text inferres this practicall Use And which hath a connexion with what went before Let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity Wherein you have considerable Divis the Name and the Thing or the Profession and Practice of Christianity 1. You have the name or Profession specified in these words 1. The name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every one that nameth i. e. whoever would be reputed a Christian who takes upon him the name of Christ and calls Qui invocat Christi n●men in eo sese Christianum ●ppellat Beza Isa● 4. 1. Gen. 48. 18. himself after the name of Christ Christian So we read In that day seven women shall take hold of one man saying we will eate our owne bread and weare our own apparell only let us be called by thy name to take away our reproach And Jacob gave in chargeth this name should be named upon Ephraim and Manasseth i. e. that they should be called the Children of Israel Such then as take upon them the Profession of Christianity are said to name the name of Christ 2. Here 's the thing it selfe or practice required for an evidence 2. Here is the thing it selfe Jewells Apology of the truth of the profession 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let him depart from iniquity This is a well-grounded Apostacy to be an Apostate from ●inne and Satan Learned Jewell tells us in his Apology that Papists accuse the Protestants of Apo●tacy and saith he It 's true we are Apostates but such Apostates who are godly Apostates even from Rome from Errours Heresies and Idolatries And this Apostacy and Secession from them is our glory and honour And although this is mentioned Negatively only yet the Positive acts are necessarily included We must abhorre that which is evill and cleave to that which is good We must cast off the workes of darknesse and put on the armour of light So * Non solum nomine crederet quoque ab iniquitate de clinat à malo faciat bonum Arias Montanus Arias Montanus expounds the place And judicious † Quisquis ergo Deum invocat hoc est se ex populo Dei esse profitetur ac censeri vult ab omni impietate procul absit Calv. Doct. Mr Calvin thus interprets the place Whosoever therefore calls upon God i. e. professeth himselfe to be of the people of God and would be so thought to be let him depart from all Iniquity The summe and substance of the Words amount to this issue It is not sufficient to be Christians in name unlesse we be so in deed and in truth Notwithstanding the foundation is firme Gods eternall decree like himselfe is ununchangeable yet upon presumption of our interest in the Decree of God we may not let loose the reynes to licentiousnesse but we must walke in all holy Conversation and Godlinesse we must as we are exhorted depart from iniquity The Words thus explained containe this obvious and fundamentall Doctrine That wheresoever there is the profession of Christianity there ought to be a Godly life and Conversation every way sutable and correspondent therewith Or Whoever professeth thename of Christ ought by a thorough practice to answer his profession and prove the sincerity thereof by an answerable walking thereunto For the unfolding of this needfull and great Point I shall select Method propounded some choice Testimonies of Scripture and then confirme the Assertion by strength of reason and hope so to conclude in a practicall Application as through the grace of God I may leave such deepe impressions upon your hearts as to ingage you to reduce the Doctrine of the Text into practice throughout your whole lives and conversations To resume the Inlargement of these 1 Scripture Testimonies Phil. 1. 27. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tit. 2. 11 12. 1 Joh. 3. 3. Gal. 5. 24. Jam. 3. 13. Col. 2. 6. Heads of discourse according