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A30238 An expository comment, doctrinal, controversal, and practical upon the whole first chapter to the second epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1661 (1661) Wing B5647; ESTC R19585 945,529 736

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He may justly expect Gods assisting of him with such qualifications of zeal and courage as are necessary to that work Thus the Apostle speaking of all the Ministers of the Gospel saith We have not received the spirit of fear but of power and love and a sound mind 2 Tim. 1. 7. It 's God that giveth us such a spirit where God calleth to an Office there he giveth suitable assistance For as it is with the general Call of Christians because God calleth them to holiness therefore he furnisheth every one with grace without which happiness cannot be enjoyed So it is in peculiar special Offices if in civil he gives Saul another spirit and much more in holy functions Hence he Isaiah's lips with a coal of fire from the altar Though Jeremiah pleaded he was a child yet God promised to enable him And when Moses did again and again excuse his inability to the Office God put upon him The wrath of God was kindled against him Exod. 4. 11. saying Who hath made mans mouth who maketh the dumb or deaf c Have not I the Lord If then God calleth he can give wisdom mouth and spirit such as none shall be able to withstand Oh then what a comfortable support is here When thou art dejected under the thoughts of thy insufficiency and weakness thinking thou shalt fail under the burden and prove a reproach to the Office Yet because God hath called thee thou mayest imbolden thy self thou mayest say Lord I cam not hither of my own will I am not in this place and Office by my own seeking but all is of thy will and ordering and therefore do thou own thy own servant Though I am weak thou art not who is the Father of Spirits but thou alone Therefore under all imperfections do thou runne unto God who hath set thee in that Office 2. As he may expect assistance so also Protection and Defence in all the dangers they are assaulted with For it cannot be but he that is called of God if he do the work of God zealously and impartially but he will raise up many enemies and find great opposition in his work Now as our Saviour told his Disciples of their danger That they should be haled before Rulers thrown into prisons and cast out of Synagogues yet he bids them Take no thought what they should say viz. not in a sinfull distrustfull manner because at that very time it should be given them what to speak Mark 13. 11. He doth not forbid a lawfull premeditating but that which is accompanied with slavish worldly fears and humane distrust as if the Spirit of God would not be ready to assist Doth not Paul reckon up the several dangers that he was every day in insomuch that his safety was every day miraculous Yet God delivered him out of all He prayed to be delivered from absurd and unreasonable men and God heard him Thus Jeremiah likewise he did undertake a very difficult Province he was to deal with Scorpions and tygers yet Jer. 1. 17 18 19. God bids him Not be dismayed at their faces for he had made him a defenced City an iron pillar and a brazen wall c. They might fight against him but never prevail This then is a blessed reviving when in the midst of all thy assaults all the troubles thou dost conflict with this man reproacheth thee that man revileth thee thou canst appeal to God O Lord Is not all this because I do the work commanded Is not all this because thou hast sent me and because I am an Embassadour in thy Name Certainly if David did so severely avenge himself upon the Ammonites for the injury done to his Embassadours No lesse wi●l God reward those who despise those he sends And therefore it 's one of the great wonders in the world That Christ hath maintained a Ministry in his Church for so many hundred years when all the malice and policy that could be devised hath been imployed to overthrow it Yea God hath in most ages still stirred up some with admirable zeal and courage to withstand the deluge of corruptions that were in those daies and though many have been violently put to death yet some have been wonderfully protected as John the Evangelist Athanasius and Luther 3. They may expect wonderfull success and fruitfulness in their labour For seeing God hath sent them and they come in his Name their labour shall not be in vain The Apostles though few were made salt enough to season the whole world At one Sermon Peter converted three thousand Rom. 15. 19. Paul tels us The Gospel did spread it self by his preaching yea some of Caesars own houshold became converts Thus doth the Lord wonderfully cooperate with his own instruments insomuch that Divines have a Rule Qualis vocatio talis successus yet this must be wisely understood for as in the Scripture many precious godly women went barren and had the reproach of not bearing children as Sarah and Hannah So many eminent servants of God though called by him and owned as it were by name yet have not had such success in converting of souls as others had Yea Christ himself did not convert so many as the Apostles Isa 49. 2. Christ speaks notably to this of this protection by God yet the little success he had So that it 's the Scriptures complaint of stretching out the hands in vain all the day long to a gain-saying people Therefore we are to distinguish of people for they are either such as never had the Word of God preached to them or such who though enjoying of it for many years yet have so universally apostatized that a Reformation is like a new plantation of the Gospel Now to such a people as these commonly the Word hath been successefull and multitudes have been caught in the Net of the Gospel Commonly at such seasons there hath been a preparedness made for the Gospel to run and to be glorified Thus you see the Romans Corinthians and many Heathenish places were converted from their Idols to serve the living God Thus also among the Jews when Christ came as a reformer to that apostate people he saith That the harvest was great but the labourers were few Luk. 10. 2. There were more to be converted but no instruments to do it and therefore he bids them Pray unto God to send labourers into his harvest As with ground new broken up there the labourer hath the greater hopes But in the second place There are a people that have long lived under the means of grace and have often resisted the Spirit of God in the Ministry Now for the most part there is very little conversion wrought on such Not but that Gods arm is as strong as ever and the Word is as powerfull an instrument and God doth approve of his Officers only the unworthiness and unprofitableness of the people have deserved that God should give them up to spiritual judgements and that no
their earthly ends It is true when the faithfull Ministers of Christ do effectually move for the purity of Ordinances and the promoting of godlinesse among their people there are those who will maliciously traduce them for carnal and selfe-seeking ends as if they proceeded wholly upon subtilty and policy but the searcher of hearts witnesseth to their sincerity and so they comfortably proceed in Christs worke maugre all opposition It 's holy prudence then not carnal policy which must manage ministerial power Secondly When we require holy prudence and meeknesse we do not hereby exclude zeal as if a man should not with much fervency and ardour of spirit set himself for the truth of God as also against the kingdome of sinne and Satan No it cannot be heavenly prudence unlesse it be accompanied with this zeale As zeale must be with knowledge and discretion so must knowledge be with zeale They must be as Castor and Pollux alwayes appearing together which was represented in the Sacrifice which was to have salt as well as fire Thus Rom. 12. We are to be fervent in spirit serving the Lord. And it is the Lord Christ who said The zeale of thy house hath eaten me up Joh. 12. 17. Here is a notable example for all godly Ministers The zeale for Gods glory is even to consume them as it were as the fat of the Sacrifice was burnt in the fire to the Lord to which some think our Saviour doth allude in that expression We are to come in the spirit of Elijah even to be carried in a fiery Chariot And truly without this zeale for God a man is but a lump of earth It is true we must distinguish holy zeale from our owne passions and cholerick distempers but that which is the pure fire of Gods Spirit kindled in our hearts as it doth greatly conduce to Gods glory so it doth exceedingly tend to our own comfort Let therefore those be magnified for wise and moderate men let them be admired as so many Angels that live in a lukewarm and neutral way they will reprove no sinne they will provoke no man to frowne upon them but alas the issue will discover their folly Oh the throbs and pangs of conscience some have had when going out of the world for this very particular because they did not with more zeale and forwardnesse appear for God And on the other side that Minister who hath with faithfull zeale according to the words direction behaved himself in his ministerial labours though great ones have frowned at him though malicious people have vexed him yet he dieth full of comfort For they that are filled with the Spirit of God by zeal in their life time are many times filled with heavenly consolations in their death Lastly This holy prudence is not to be confounded with that sinfull man-pleasing which is in many indulging men in their lusts and hardening them thereby in their impieties Though the Apostle said 1 Corinth 10. 33. That he pleased all men in all things not seeking his owne profit yet that is not to be understood in sinfull things for in that respect he saith Galat. 1. 10. If he pleased men he should not be the servant of Christ but in lawfull things he did condescend to those that were weak and would not alwayes use his own liberty which he might being strong in judgement but this doth nothing advantage such who have a flattering complying way with men in their wickednesse like those false prophets of old that daubed with untempered mortar and cryed Peace peace to him whom God hath promised no peace This is highly offending God Yet how many are admired because they have the love of wicked and ungodly men that they can keepe in with them Whereas this is not because they have large parts but a large conscience and that which some make to be a very wise man is indeed to be a man without any conscience But I must not enlarge in this In the second place therefore we are to shew Wherein this holy prudence doth consist And First In discovering our love to their persons to be the ground of all our proceedings If we reprove them it is love if we admonish them it is love if we do not admit them to the dreadfull mysteries of Christ it is love Dilige loquere quod vis saith Austin Love and then say what ye will This made the Apostle use a sacred oath at this time to shew it was his love to them and no sinfull end that made him forbear his coming so great a matter is it to be perswaded that what the Ministers of the Gospel doe though it distaste and displease us yet it is out of their conscience to God and love to us Secondly Holy prudence lieth in this when we observe the fit seasons and opportunities for exercising our power which God hath given us otherwise if unseasonably administred it may doe more hurt than good It is special prudence to time it well in this sense it is good to be a time-server as some read that passage 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 12. applying it to this sense Abigail would not speak to her husband in his drunken senslesse fit Isai 50. 4. The tongue of the learned is to speake a word in season though that be chiefly to be applied to a word of comfort yet a word of reproof in season doth more good than ten thousand unseasonably spoken Such a word so spoken is said to be like Apples of gold in pictures of silver Prov. 25. 11. wherein is implyed both preciousnesse and excellency as also delight and refreshment A fit word is called in the Hebrew A word upon the wheeles as some thinke because of the smoothnesse and readinesse of it to enter into the hearts of others Some render it A word with its two faces as looking on both sides which is the property of prudence and the next verse following sheweth how happy it is when a wise reproof and an obedient ear meet together such an obedient ear is more comely and glorious than any ear-jewel As then the Bee doth not every day but in fit seasons gather its honey so doth a prudent Minister of the Gospel Thus Solomon Eccles 12. 9 10. Because the preacher was wise he sought out acceptable words Some trees that blossome last are yet said to have their fruit first which sheweth that it is not the first or sudden speaking but the most opportune that doth the greatest good especially in reproof this is most necessary because it is said Genus quoddam Martyrii est c. It is a kinde of Martyrdome to take a reproof patiently Thirdly Our prudence is seene when we discerne of sinnes not judging little and great alike To excommunicate for lesser faults is saith Gerson To strike off a flie from a mans fore-head with a beetle The remedy is more dangerous than the disease They were grosse sinnes that the Apostle
of them confess that Paul was peremptorily elected and that we are not to judge of mens ordinary conversion by that which was extraordinary Indeed we grant that many things were wonderfull and extraordinary in Paul's conversion It is not for men now to expect such a Vision and voice from Heaven immediately speaking to them but this we urge That if God could do thus on Paul's heart insuperably and irresistibly working on it making it of unwilling willing and yet not the natural liberty of Paul's will destroyed then God may still demonstrate the same efficacy of grace and yet man in conversion not be turned into a stock or stone as they charge the Orthodox As Paul then had been a sinner above measure so he had also grace exceeding gracious in an overflowing manner to him Therefore how frequently and joyfully doth Paul speak of the riches of grace and Gods unspeakable grace to him alwayes debasing himself as the greatest of sinners and the least of all Saints not worthy to be called an Apostle and magnifying grace alwayes running out like the Sea when he comes to speak of Christ and grace In the third place His serviceableness that was as wonderfull I laboured more than they The Heathens Hercules is not comparable to him To read how much he did and how much he suffered for Christ may make us stand amazed yet still he saith Not I but the grace of God 1 Cor. 15. 10. Chrysostome doth infinitely expatiate upon all occasions in the praise of Paul but Paul himself was like Moses whose face shined gloriously but he did not know it And thus Paul though above all others in doing and suffering for Christ yet accounts of himself as nothing and gives all to the grace of God as none preached more than he did so none wrote more Epistles than he did he took care of all the Churches Thus he who formerly did his utmost to root out the Church of God is now as zealous and active to establish and propagate it So that you see three wonderfull things in Paul his sinne his conversion and his godly life afterwards In the next place let us consider what Reasons there may be why God will choose such great sinners out of their high impieties especially to be Apostles and Officers in the Church of God seeing that the Scripture in those qualifications for an Elder requireth That he be without blame and one of a good report 1 Tim. 3. 5. Therefore in the Apostles who were the chief Officers called by the Ancient Otuli Dei Sedes Christi and Oculi Ecclesiae this was much more to be expected But there are these Reasons may be given First Hereby the power and strength of God is made evident If men of civility only and of ingenuous principles were brought home to Christ it might be thought something of men did promote our salvation but when there is a direct and violent opposition in a mans wayes yet to become converted and obedient this may make us acknowledge with Paul The exceeding greatness of his power to us who believe Ephes 1. 19. And if setting aside some extraordinary circumstances there is the same kind of power seen in every mans conversion that was in Pauls then it 's plain that God doth not onely use moral suasions as Arminians would have it but also efficacious operations So that we may bless God for this president of Paul's conversion we may all by that see what is done in the heart of every man when turned to God We do justly admire the power of God in Creation and in all the wonderfull deliverances the Church hath but the power of God upon mens hearts making them to love and delight in those things which formerly they hated This may make us to sing Psalms in the admiration of Gods great power about the new creation as well as the old creation of the world Secondly As Gods Power is hereby evidenced so also his Wisdom and that in a two-fold respect 1. Converting Paul at that very time when he was in the height of his spirit acting with the greatest violence against Christ. This season was most admirable for hereby it did plainly appear That it was not of Paul that willed or runned but of Gods good pleasure Hence Ephes 1. Paul speaking of Gods predestination doth over and over again resolve all into his good pleasure and that he doth all things according to the goodnesse of his will What then will become of that vocatio congrua so much boasted of by some as if men were converted because God did fore-see that if they were put into such a condition with such circumstances then they would readily consent to Gods Call But was Paul's conversion accompanied with a vocatio congrua Did God stay till he had a fit bait or snare to catch Paul in Now all was here the clean contrary Paul was never in higher opposition against God never were the doors of his heart more fastened up with iron-barres than at this time and then and never till then doth God convert him That as it is with Gods Church he never helps till all things be desperate therefore he is called The God that raiseth the dead 2 Cor. 1. and he that calleth things that are not as if they were Thus many times it falleth out when men are more treasuring up their sin and adding higher degree of opposition even then God takes off their hearts and thereby the Wisdome of God is the more seen of such crooked timber to make so excellent a building To raise up Lazarus when he is not only dead but buried and rot●ing in the grave this makes us astonished at Gods Wisdome And then in a second respect Gods Wisdome is seen Because such fire-brands pluckt out of the fire are fittest to kindle a fire in the hearts of others When we shall be able to say Lo here is a man as prophane as bitter and cruel a scoffer and enemy of all godliness as ever you were He was one of your company you took wicked counsel together you were often drunk or unclean together and now behold what a change is made upon him He prayeth he humbleth himself he cryeth out of his former conversation if he had the whole world given him he would not be such an one as once Certainly when God doth thus it doth wonderfully shame and confound all wicked men What a conviction was this to all other Pharisees when it could be said Behold here Paul a Pharisee one of your own Sect as desperately cruel and malicious as any of you Oh but behold how he is changed he builds up that way he once destroyed Now he counts all those things you dote on so much but dung and dross in comparison of the knowledge of Jesus Christ. 3. In converting of such above all God sheweth the freeness and meer riches of his grace For what can Paul say to justifie himself with Where were
writeth to them as if all were Gentiles as Chap. 12. 2. Ye know that ye were Gentiles carried away to dumb Idols c. Hence the same Author saith That it was one Church collected of all the believers in that place Licet esse potuerint in eadem civitate distinctae ut it a dicam parochiae As for the notion of a learned man That the Jewish believers and Gentile believers did make two distinct Churches and had two distinct Bishops which he thinketh would salve some seeming contradictions in Ecclesiastical History that being of an heterogeneous nature to my purpose I passe it by Thus also the Church of Jerusalem is called a Church which yet by many probable Arguments seemeth to be more than one Neither may we think that Christ hath invested one single Congregation ordinarily with all Church power For that president and example of a Councel or Synod mentioned Act. 15. doth inform That there are to be Synods not only by way of advice but by power and that over particular Churches We proceed to the next thing considerable in this description of the Church and that is the efficient Cause the Church of God This distinguisheth the Church from all civil and meer political Assemblies For though the Earth be the Lords and the fulness thereof yet the Church is the Lords in a more peculiar and appropriated manner Sometimes the Church is named absolutely without any addition as when Paul is said to persecute the Church Sometimes it 's restrained to the place Thus the Church of Ephesus the Church of Laodicea but most commonly it is the Church of God or the Church of Christ Sometimes both are put together as 1 Thes 1. 1. To the Church of the Thessalonians which is in God the Father and in Jesus Christ So also 2 Thess 1. 1. And certainly if so be the Apostle considering us meerly as creatures maketh use of and sanctifieth that of the Poet For we are his off-spring how much more is it true of us as members of a Church Observe That a Church is Gods people in a more peculiar and special manner Though he be the God of the world yet in a more special manner he is a God of his Church The consideration of this truth may tend much to our spiritual edification For if we are of God how much should it humble us to see any thing amongst us that is of sin or the Devil Is ignorance or prophaneness of God so are humane superstitions of God But to open this let us consider what is implied in this when a Church is said to be the Church of God First therefore this sheweth That a Church is a supernatural Society it 's spiritual company of men So that a Church is not like a civil Corporation or like Kingdoms and Commonwealths which are by meer humane Institution and agreement though Magistracy it self it be of God but are supernatural and therefore it 's called the Kingdom of Heaven and Jerusalem which is from above so the Church is called Gal. 4. 26. even while it is here on Earth before it is triumphant in Heaven Now the Church is a supernatural Society many wayes in which respect it may be called the Church of God in a more eminent manner For in respect of its Efficient so God alone is the author of it called therefore Ecclesia because God by his Word calls them from their Heathenish Idolatries and practises making of them a Church Thus the people of Corinth when they were securely indulging themselves in all manner of impieties having no thoughts or desires to be a Church God by Paul calls them to be one Even as God by his breath caused the dry bones to gather together and to live or as at the day of Judgment God by the voice of an Arch-angel will raise the dead in the grave who have no life or sense in them Thus it 's the Lord that made Churches every where in the preaching of the Gospel It was the gracious work of God that found us out in Britain and made a Church to himself so that we are loca inaccessa to the grace of God and his Spirit though to humane power It is true indeed God is the God of the world he created Heaven and Earth with all therein yet though God did thus immediately create the world at first we do not say the creatures therein are Gods grace or that they have a supernatural being For it 's not enough to make a thing grace or supernatural that God doth immediately create it but that his power be in a peculiar and extraordinary manner and that for supernatural effects and ends Oh therefore how greatly should we be affected with the grace and power of God in creating to himself a Church out of the world He might have no more made a Church here or there in the Earth then he did in Hell and he that at first planted a curious Garden and put man therein is much more wonderfull in making of a Church to himself yet how bruitish and earthly are we We can bless God for the world and the comforts thereof that the Earth brings forth food for us that we have the Air to breath in the glorious Sunne to be a daily light to us yet we are not thus affected with Church-mercies and Church-ordinances David indeed upon the former consideration cried out Lord what is man that thou art thus mindfull of him c But we may much rather from these supernatural respects Secondly It 's supernatural in respect of the purchase given for them the price paid to make them the Lords For you must know upon Adams fall all mankind was excommunicated unchurched as it were and therefore cast out from Paradise and Gods gracious presence and hence it is that we are said naturally to be without God yea the Devil is said to be the god of the world Thus untill God makes us a Church we are under the power of Satan wholly and therefore to be cast out of the Church is to be delivered to Satan Thus then being fallen off from the Lord and now become the Devils in whom he reigneth we could not be purchased from this thraldom but by the death of Christ and therefore we are called the Church of Christ as well as of God because though conquered by Gods Spirit yet we are bought by his bloud and this the Apostle urgeth That therefore we are none of our own but are to live to him We are to be his peculiar people zealous of good works Tit. 2. 15. Thus it cost more to be Gods Church then to be the world at first for he spake and it was made but here Christ died and so it was purchased What a powerfull ingagement is this for all of a Church to walk holily What did Christ die that you should wallow in the filth of your sins What will you deny the Lord that bought you If thou wilt be ignorant and prophane
against God when grace comes to convert them Therefore let the Use be of Exhortation to all such who have felt this lively power of God raising them out of the grave of sinne who have been taught of God inwardly as well as by the outward Ministry with all joy and thankfulness be astonished at the free and unsearchable riches of Gods grace to thee How many doth God passe by of better parts of greater abilities of higher conditions in the world that might have done him more service and pitch his love upon thee Oh do thou abhorre all those presumptuous and proud opinions of Free-will and power to make Gods grace effectual to thee Do not bid such as bring such Doctrines God speed What doth not thy own experience doth not the wonderfull power of God upon thee subduing and overcoming thy heart when thou wast full of carnal prejudices and sinfull reasonings abundantly convince thee of this Let thy own heart and experience confirm thee more than all their subtill distinctions can unfettle thee But I pass from this and come to a second Observation which Calvin on the place takes notice of He calls it a Church saith he though it were so greatly polluted though both for Doctrine and practice there were such great disorders yet for all that he doth not unchurch it he owneth them still for the people of God though they were greatly to be reformed as to the Church administrations neither are his exhortations to the godly to separate and leave the Church-communions though thus defiled he giveth no command to such a thing but rather exhorts them all in their places to amend and reform To purge out the old leaven that was amongst them Therefore to forsake polluted Assemblies and leave them hopeless seemeth to be a great neglect of our duty we are rather to stay that by our abode and presence we may rectifie things that are crooked The Doctrine is That a Church may be a true Church of God although it be defiled with many corruptions several wayes As a godly man may be truly godly and yet subject to many failings Thus a Church also may be truly Gods Church the Body of Christ yet many distempers and sad confusions amongst them This truth is worthy of all diligent prosecution because many men though otherwise good out of a tenderness and misguided zeal may separate from our Congregations deny them to be true Churches and all because they see many things amongst us that are matter of grief and a great stumbling block to them This I confess is and hath been a sad temptation but a particular Christian is is not to excommunicate and unchurch a Church till God hath given a Bill of Divorce to it and hath cast it quite off An impatiency to bear any evil or disorders in a Church is not presently to be commended and yielded to to the utmost A Christian must have wisdom and a sound mind as well as zeal and a tender conscience Even the Reformed Churches did not wilfully and voluntarily depart from the Church of Rome but did stay to cure and heal Babylon untill they drave them away with fire and sword So that our leaving the Roman Church was not a Schismatical separation but a forced discession or departure from them But of this it may be more afterwards Let us for the present take notice of what corruptions and disorders were here at Corinth which yet he calls the Church of God And First Whereas the Apostle comprehends all Religion in these things Tit. 2. 12. Righteously soberly and godly Righteously in respect of religious duties towards God We may see how the Corinthians were blame-worthy in all And 1. For their sinnes of unrighteousnesse The Apostle sharply reproveth them for their contentions and quarrellings even so farre that they went to Law with one another and that in the Heathen Judicatories which was a great and grievous reproach to the Christian Religion How would the Heathens deride and scoff to see those that were Christians and out of appearance from love to heavenly things forsaking the world and earthly advantages thus to implead one another about meum and tuum about money matters or other civil rights to sue one another before Heathens Judges What could this produce but to make the Heathens say They talk of leaving all and following a crucified Christ but they will not abate of their earthly rights to one another not in the least measure Which did so grieve the Apostle that he conjureth them What have ye never a wise man to be an arbitrator amongst you Why doe ye not rather suffer wrong Nay they were so farre from such meek self-denying spirits that they rather did wrong and defraud one another Now see how zealous the Apostle is in this 1 Cor. 6. 1 2 3. he saith Dare any of you having a matter against another goe to Law Dare any of you supposing the Gospel the meekness of Christ the self-denial and contempt of earthly things with the scandal redounding to Religion would sufficiently awe their consciences Again vers 4. he tells them that the things pertaining to this life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for about them they quarrelled so much were so inconsiderable that they should appoint the least esteemed in the Church for to end such inferiour work Again vers 5. I speak it to your shame And vers 7. There is utterly a fault amongst you Thus you see that in matters of Justice between man and man there were great offences Only by the way let none gather from these expressions of Paul that it is unlawfull to go to Law or appeal to the Civil Magistrate to know his due right when that is detained from him For that is many times so farre from being a sinne that it 's a duty it would be a sinne not to pursue it as you see Paul pleaded his right and would not go out of prison when they had done it against Law till the Magistrates came to intreat him provided that there be those qualifications which Paul insinuateth 1. That this impleading be not before Heathens and Pagans who hate the Christian Religion 2. That we have such Meeknesse of spirit as willingly to suffer wrong did not the Gospel of Christ or the Law of the Land or the good of others require it of us And Lastly That we be willing to referre all our controversies to any just and wise arbitratours If these things be premised and yet unreasonable and absurd men will make a spoil and a scoff of men then both Religion and Justice calls them to defend themselves and it would be a sin to neglect it In the second place for Sobriety which is the expression of such graces as belong to our selves viz. Temperance and Chastity How grosly did the Corinthians offend here There were some that had repented of their fornication and uncleanness and for drunkenness some did presume to come to the Lords Table not
God ruleth in our heart The fire doth not more easily dissolve the frost and ice then this peace of God in our souls doth chase away all slothfulness and negligence if this grace and peace of God were shed abroad in thy heart thou wouldst like a Gyant runne thy race of Christianity whereas now thou art but a Dwarf feeble hands and weak knees will not go through much work especially if difficult and laborious Now the way of Christianity is compared to a race to fighting and combating there are thousands of discouragements and oppositions in the way it behoveth thee therefore to have this peace within that so the work of grace begun in thee may go on more prosperously But you will say This indeed is a mercy like that Pearl in the Parable we may well fell all to have it But how may we be directed to obtain it Take notice of these things briefly First Distinguish between carnal presumption and this peace from God Many have been deluded by taking one for the other The Jews and Pharisees did confidently boast in God as their Father and that they were Abrahams seed the Covenants of Grace did belong to them yet who were further off from it than they were When the Pharisees said Lord I thank thee I am not like other men he might have boldness and confidence upon his soul but yet here was no true peace And thus there are many hundreds who have quiet still and it may be feared stupified consciences Now these find no trouble no aches or pains of heart because of sinne but thank their good God all is well with them when yet alas they are miserable being upon the very borders of Hell in which they may fall every moment Secondly Take heed of living in sinne or omitting of those Duties God requireth of thee For although these be not the cause of this peace in thee yet without these no peace can either be obtained or preserved This is to be throwing water upon the fire till it quite go out Thirdly Perswade thy self of those Doctrinal Truths against the contrary Errours which help to establish this peace Such as the Nature of Justifying Faith in the particular application of it as also not only the possibility but the duty of Assurance the certain and unchangeable love of God to all those who are his as also the acceptablenesse of such a quiet and joyfull spirit unto God himself Fourthly Regard Gods promises as well as precepts Look upon the Gospel as well as the Law let not one destroy the other but make them to be subservient in thy whole life Lastly Pray much for the Spirit of Adoption For it is not thy own power or meditation upon all the Rules that Ministers may give which will give this peace of God till the Spirit of Adoption doe reigne in thee SERM. XXVII Of the Names of God 't is he alone who can give Grace and Peace to his People He is a Father to all Believers even the weakest as well as the strongest 2 COR. 1. 2. From God our Father VVE have dispatched the choice and special mercies here prayed for we now come to the Original and Spring of them The Efficient Cause who alone can vouchsafe this to us and that is two-sold God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ Let us consider the first and there we have a description of him 1. Absolutely God 2. Relatively a Father 3. The Community of this to all Believers or the Extension of it Our Father We shall dispatch all these particulars briefly The first head is the absolute consideration of God expressed in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whether that word come from fear or to runne or to behold is doubted of In the Hebrew there are several Names given to God insomuch that the Rabbins call him Hashem the Name Whether God himself revealed his Name to Adam or Adam imposed a name upon him it is hard to determine This is certain that the Scripture names do very emphatically represent the Nature of God especially those two Jehovah and Elohim The word Jehovah is commonly rendred by the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet in the New Testament Christ is commonly called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and God the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 especially when named together as is to be shewed in the verses following Now of these two mentioned words one in the singular the other is in the plural which doth denote especially having light from other places of Scripture that there is One Divine Nature and Three Persons Hence sometimes Jehovah Elohim is put together although also the former word signifieth the fulness of Gods being and giving being to other things For which reason say some he is not named Jehovah till the second Chapter in Genesis when all things were compleated and in another place God is said Not to be known by the Name Jehovah Exod. 6. 3. because they had not seen the great things promised accomplished and Elohim denoteth God as governing and ruling the world in which sense the fool is said to affirm There is no God no Elohim Psal 14. 1. Yet having light from other places of Scripture especially from the New Testament we ought not to reject this consideration that therefore Jehovah is in the singular number and Elohim in the plural to signifie the One Nature and Three Persons For though from the plural number meerly we cannot pitch upon the number three more than four yet from other places joyned to this we may So then as God in making of man spake in the plural number so we shall find in the Scripture in other places speaking of God as Makers in the plural number Isa 54. 5. Psal 149. 2. Job 35. 9. for this reason Though some Divines dare not say Tres Jehovae Three Jehovahs yet they say Three Elohims as Zanchy nameth a piece of his works Indeed there are others who do wholly reject and dislike that expression The word God is applied sometimes properly sometimes improperly Improperly so it is given to Angels and Magistrates The Apostle saith They are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 called Gods in Heaven and Earth Though a learned man observes That never any Angel or Magistrate is called a god in the singular number but they are said to be gods in the plural number now the Apostle sometimes layeth an argument even upon the number Improperly also it is given to Magistrates Moses is said to be made a god to Pharaoh here is the singular number but the respective limitation is added because of his dominion God gave him over Pharaoh to bring judgements upon him Yea the Devil is called the god of this world who is said to blind the minds of disobedient persons Although some expound that of the true and eternal God who doth in just judgement harden the hearts of wicked men Non impertiendo malitiam sed denegando gratiam But properly and truly it is
threaten persecution yet from and in Christ he can abundantly rejoyce And indeed this is the wine the carnal man never drinketh of the honey he never tasted of The world is a stranger to this joy in Christ They rejoyce in riches in honours in worldly advantages but they know not what it is to rejoyce in Christ as our Mediator and treasure of all fulnesse Phil. 3. 3. They are said to be the circumcision who rejoyce in Jesus Christ and have no confidence in the flesh As therefore in the day time we see the Sunne only and no Stars Thus the people of God in their sufferings behold Christ the Sunne of Righteousnesse and as for the Stars of the creatures they do not afford any light What made the Martyrs leap for joy Could they take any comfort from the world No that was an Aegypt to them a valley of tears so that it was in Christ only that they did rejoyce For want of the knowledge and experience of this it is that the unsound professor will deny Christ and his truth rather then suffer the losse of any thing because he feeleth more sweetnesse more pleasure in his goods in his pleasures in this world then he can do in Christ It is the gracious heart that can thus rejoyce in Christ In the next place Let us consider How many wayes Christ doth make our consolations in sufferings for his sake to abound And First Christ doth it by assuring and perswading of our hearts concerning those truths and righteous actions we do suffer for If comfort arise from suffering for Christ then the more assured we are that we do suffer for him the greater is our consolation If a man have great doubts in his heart whether he suffers for Christ or not Whether it be a truth or an errour that he is troubled for Whether he was a busie-body or not Whether he did keep within his calling and bounds or not If I say there be these hesitances and disceptations in his mind How can he have any comfort Therefore that our comfort may be full Christ giveth us the riches of assurance in our understanding Faith becomes the evidence and strong conviction Heb. 11. upon their souls insomuch that they know they are in the truth They know it's righteousnesse they suffer for Thus you may observe the Apostles in all the oppositions they met with from the world and all the malice of Satan yet never questioning or doubting whether they were deluded or no but were fully assured of those things they did preach Now this consideration is the more to be taken notice of because the sufferings for Christ in the latter age of the Church have differed wonderfully from the former For in the primitive persecutions their sufferings did arise from Heathens and Pagans it was for professing of Christ and opposing of Idolatry Now these things were plain here was no disputing But then in the after-ages of the Church when Hereticks got power especially when Antichrist was exalted and the Papacy lifted up with all strength then those that did persecute pretended Christ that what they did they did for the honour and glory of Christ and those who did suffer though indeed for Christ yet were reputed enemies to Christ And this is that which makes suffering for Christ to be a more difficult thing in these later dayes The Papists that have put to death so many Protestants defend themselves with these glorious Titles That they are onely the Church of Christ That Christ is onely amongst them That all who withdraw obedience from the Pope are out of the Ark out of hope of Salvation That it is service to Christ to root them out and therefore the Doctrines suffered for were not about the Trinity the Incarnation of Christ the Resurrection for which of old believers suffered from Pagans but about Transubstantiation the Universal Jurisdiction of the Pope the Infallibility of the Church the worshipping of Images and praying to Saints The Popish party pleading for these as allowed of by Christ The Protestant abhorring of them as Idolatry and also injurious to Christ Now on the Papists side was the whole Christien world almost all the learned men all the great men all the devout religious men they were zealous this way and the Martyrs they were but few comparatively many of them private men and women What a temptation was here to those that suffered How easily might they think what am I wiser than all Is it likely God would reveal that to me which he denieth to others more learned Besides they dispute they bring Scripture and Fathers May not I be deluded May not the Devil transforme himself into an Angel of light and so deceive me Truly such temptations would quickly have blown down the house had it been built onely upon sand but the Martyrs were established upon a Rock Christ gave them full assurance of those truths they lost all for and this made way for their great comfort This conviction then and assurance of faith wrought by the Spirit of God is that which is the root of our comfort whereas doubtings and fears would disquiet all It is true Luther speaketh of himself That he had many times such thoughts Tunè solus sapis Art thou onely wise What if thou art damned and drawest others to Hell with thee And when a grave Divine came to him complaining of this temptation That of the Evangelical Doctrine which he preached he could not find that Faith and Assurance upon his soul he desired which was a bitter trouble to him Luther upon the disclosing of this brake out saying I think God I have met with one tempted as I am tempted There were it may be some temptations and doubts sometimes upon the spirits of those who did suffer for there was flesh still remaining in them and the Devil was desirous to winnow them but yet the power of Faith and the evidence of Divine Authority in the truths they suffered for would at last like the Sunne break forth and dissipate those mists Therefore pray much for the guidance of Gods Spirit herein through the Word that thy comfort may be sure The Heretick that suffers because he hath a false and erroneous perswasion therefore he hath a false and a deceitfull comfort and therefore is but like one in a dream pleasing himself with great imaginations when he awakeneth poor and hungry but the true sufferer he hath joy and he knoweth his joy is good and upon ●ound grounds which never can be taken away Secondly Christ doth comfort by informing of us aforehand of all the troubles and sufferings which will necessarily accompany the true profession of faith in his Name Is not our Saviour often upon this subject Doth he not frequently fore-tell his Disciples what reproach and hatred they shall meet with Doth not the Scripture also in several places insist upon this point That all who will live godly must suffer many tribulations That the
them So that their sufferings were not for the salvation but the destruction of many through the sinne and indiscretion of after ages It is true there is a lawfull and due honouring of God for his graces bestowed on those Worthies yet they were but the pens Gods Spirit was the ready writer they were but the vessels God poured that curious ointment in them It was not they so much as God in and by them for they were men like us subject to carnal and worldly fears they were reeds of themselves ready to be shaken by every wind but God established them So that it is our duty to blesse God who gave such power and grace to men yea and we are in a civil way to honour and love them to desire to imitate them to make them examples for us to follow If the Papists had gone no further we and they should have been at concord in this point but from imitation they fall to adoration And although they heap up as many distinctions as Samson did men by his slaughter Heap upon heap to clear themselves in this matter yet it is but vitreum acumen these glasses are quickly broken That the name of such who suffer for Christ should be like a precious ointment and an honourable esteem of them be had alwayes in the Church none can deny Therefore those moral respects vouchsafed to them in the primitive times are not to be blamed as the regarding of the judgement of a Martyr as much or more than any Bishop or Doctor As also when any had fallen by infirmity in times of persecution such repenting did first go to the Confessours in prisons that were Candidates or designed Martyrs intreating their favour and desiring liberty of admission into Church-communion from them which the Church received they making publick satisfaction in respect of scandal by serious humiliation but this afterwards began to be greatly abused and Cyprian complaineth of it therefore it was at last justly abrogated howsoever such respects as were meerly moral are to be allowed but for religious considerations to do any thing to them that is unjustifiable A learned man thinketh that the Prophecy spoken of by Peter 2 Tim. 4. 1. which tels of an Apostasie bringing in Doctrines of daimons as he explains it is the worshipping of these Saints departed and that this was the great Apostasie of the Church Whether that be the intent of the holy Ghost is not here to be disputed Certainly there was great Apostasie in the Church from primitive simplicity when they began to worship such who had been Martyrs yea their reliques they would in a religious manner preserve and adore praying also unto them and expecting both soul-mercies and body-mercies from them Here this wine did begin to turn into vinegar and contrary to Christ they turned wine into water that which was only for example and imitation they turned to Adoration and worship wherein they did not only derogate from the glory due to Christ but even those Confessors and glorious Martyrs themselves were they corporally present would with Paul and Barnabas rend their cloaths and refuse such worship Certainly if the Angel did forbid John from worshipping him saying He was his fellow-servant and therefore he must worship God How much more would the Martyrs who were subject to like passions as we are Though therefore the godly are afflicted and persecuted for our comfort and salvation yet take heed of superstitious excesse about them turning imitation into religious adoration Thirdly Those that suffer may be very usefull to encourage us but then we must be sure they be such who do indeed suffer for Christ. For no doubt all those who have suffered in any false way The Heretick for his heresies the Papist for his Idolatry and superstition have greatly confirmed those that were of that perswasion They did greatly comfort and animate others that did believe them to be the true Martyrs of Christ So that we may say of such contrary to that in the Text They are afflicted for the destruction and damnation of others Others are hardened in their Idolatries and Heresies by their sufferings Look we then that we do propound right paterns to our selves that we be not deceived as sometimes in Popery they have worshipped the bone of an Asse or an horse for a Saints relique for the Devil hath his Martyrs Heresie hath her Martyrs yea vain-glory hath had many Martyrs And Austin saith It is possible for a man who dieth for the truth yet to have no other motive but vain-glory The Apostle affirmeth it also 1 Cor. 13. when he supposeth a man may give his body to be burnt and yet for want of charity be a tinkling cymbal or it will profit him nothing This is so secret a sinne and we are so prone to it that the Heathens did charge it upon all the Christians though falsly and maliciously that they suffered only for vain-glory being the more induced to think so because the Christians did in such an excessive manner give honour and praise to them These things premised let us consider how the afflictions of others for Christs cause work to our comfort and salvation First We shall have the greater assurance and perswasion of those Divine Truths upon our souls that they are not the meer inventions of men or delusions of our own souls For how can it but greatly assure us that if this were not the truth of God they could never have that comfort that courage that evidence and demonstration upon their hearts the presence of God with them in those exquisite sufferings do demonstrate that the truths are of God as well as the power and comforts to be of him It is true indeed the meer suffering and that with some joy the most exquisite torments For a religious opinion doth not presently argue that it is a divine truth that it hath Gods superscription upon it For many heretical and deluded spirits have demonstrated much confidence and comfort yet on the other side there cannot be an external greater sign of our love to the truth and that it is of God then by patient suffering for it And therefore though Hereticks die though Papists die for their Religion as well as the true Martyr yet the frame of their spirits and concomitant dispositions are greatly different For as their minds are corrupted with error so also are their hearts and affections unsanctified and therefore discover not the sweet and gracious workings of Gods Spirit upon them as the true sufferer doth So that it was not meerly suffering it was not meerly torments but the patience faith and heavenly mindednesse their love even to their very enemies that did draw out others to love them So that when we see others can be imprisoned executed for such Doctrines and they be full of an heavenly mortified gracious heart at that time this must needs work in us a greater assurance of the truth especially this doth confirm the
16. 9. where he said A great door and effectual was opened to him at Ephesus that was in Asia the lesse but there were many adversaries and these no doubt did endeavour to bring him into much danger So 1 Cor. 15. 32. he is said there To fight with beasts at Ephesus whether he understand beasts truly and properly or metaphorically men as wild and as savage as beasts all sheweth the extream danger he was in It may seem probable that the Apostle related to this only it is objected That the trouble here mentioned was but lately done and such as the Corinthians had not yet heard of Therefore the general current of most Interpreters do conclude that the Apostle meaneth that danger he was in mentioned Acts 19. by Demetrius and others when the whole City of Ephesus was in an uproar because of the Temple of Diana concerning which they so vehemently accused Paul for there we read was a popular sedition and the City was in a great confusion Demetrius and his company were in a mad rage against Paul So that although Luke doth not in particular mention the extream and grievous danger Paul was in yet it may well be concluded from the general Thus Calvin and many others So that this foundation being laid and this supposed to be the trouble We may observe That the faithfull Ministers of the Gospel are sure to meet with much opposition from all such who regard Religion no further than it maketh for their carnal advantage and interest A necessary truth this is for hereby every one whose heart riseth against the powerfull preaching of the Word may examine himself What is the motive thereof What is the cause thereof Though he may pretend this specious colour and that fair glosse yet it is some lust or other some carnal advantage or other that doth indeed kindle that flame in his brest That this Doctrine may be the better conceived let us take notice What was the cause that brought this trouble upon Paul at Ephesus and we shall there see how the same causes do still make men mad and bitter enemies against the wayes of God The History we have related Acts 19. from vers 23. to the end of the Chapter it is there declared That no small stirre did arise about that way that is the Evangelical way the Gospel way preached by Paul The occasion whereof was by one Demetrius a silver-smith which made-silver shrines for Diana that is little Images made for the worship of Diana which was a trade of very great profit and advantage to him and others of the like craft therefore he consults with them and useth two arguments to enrage them First That their craft would be in danger The trade they lived upon would fall to the ground And this certainly was that which did most prevail with him and by this we see how hard a matter it is to part with a profession or way of life though never so sinfull if it be a profitable way The matter of profit will be like dust in our eyes to hinder our sight it is ready to put out all spiritual discerning in the conscience between good and evil just and unjust So that we are greatly to suspect our hearts in those things that are matter of profit to us lest they deceive us therein The second Argument is religious Though his heart be carnal yet he runneth to the Sanctuary of Religion The former Argument was too grosse if it had been alone and therefore he maketh Religion the greatest The great Goddesse Diana shall be despised her magnificence destroyed Now this he maketh a very hainous sinne because all Asia and the world worshipped her Thus you see multitude universality and the custome of others that is the great reason he hath to perswade for the worshipping of Diana which is the same argument that carnal and superstitious people do still possesse their souls with So that from this historical passage you see the Doctrine genuinely deduced That men who regard Religion no further than they have carnal advantages are like so many Toads full of poison full of rage against such as do faithfully preach the Gospel Therefore in this very Chapter we have a notable instance of the work of Gods grace upon some who believed for they brought their Books of curious Arts which had been gainfull and profitable to them and burnt them before all men though the price of them was found to be fifty pieces of silver They mattered not their gain nor their profit they would part with all now they had received the Gospel in the power of it We have a parallel History with this of Demetrius Act. 16. 19. where there was a possessed Damsel that had a spirit of divination which brought her Masters much gain by soothsaying but Paul adjureth and dispossesseth that spirit whereupon it is said When her Masters saw that the hope of their gain was gone They took Paul and Silas and carried them to the Rulers laying great crimes to their charge Thus if we do search to the true ground of all that malice which the Chief-priests vented against Christ never ceasing till they had crucified him although they pretended Religion and because he spake blasphemy and did break the Sabbath yet the real cause was because he discovered their hypocrisie and covetousnesse manifesting that they sought only great things for themselves This also Paul chargeth upon his enemies the false Apostles who did create so much trouble and grief to him That they were enemies to the crosse of Christ and did mind earthly things Phil. 3. 19. Thus also Gal. 6. 12. They made a shew in the flesh that they might not suffer persecution But we come more more particularly to enlarge this And First You may take notice That there are two sorts of persons who do with much violence and despite oppose the holy truths and wayes of Christ First Such who may have such an absolute blindnesse and meer errour upon their mind that they take the true Religion to be blasphemy and horrible reproach to God and on the other side they take Idolatry and superstition to be the onely true service of God and therefore that they cannot do more acceptable service unto God then to oppose that way of Religion which yet indeed is only approved of by God Of such our Saviour spake to his Disciples John 16. 2. Whosoever killeth you will think that he doth God service and of this number was Paul who professeth that he once thought himself bound to set against the Name of Jesus of Nazareth Act. 26. 9. Here we see Paul so convinced in his judgement that if he did not with all his power and might oppose the way of Christ he thought it would have been his great sinne And thus no doubt it may be the case of many deluded Hereticks and Papists so that they shall be perswaded there cannot be more acceptable work unto God then that they should
imprison and destroy those that do yet truly fear God This ignorance upon them though it may excuse in some degree and make them lesse sinners then such who do wilfully oppose and do despite maliciously against the Spirit of grace yet it doth not totally free them nay they are persecutours for all that as you see Paul acknowledged concerning himself Now such enemies as these are acted by religious principles but in a false way they commonly are more zealous and implacable than any other Paul because it was not any carnal advantage or profit he sought after but a meer zeal for the Religion he had by tradition from his fathers therefore did he pursue the Christians in such a bloody furious manner Tantum Religio potuit c. said the Poet Oppositions against the wayes of God from such who are zealous and devout in their false wayes are constantly more dreadfull and terrible than any others So that we are again and again to try what spirit we are of to examine Whether it be the true Religion indeed that we give our selves up to the profession thereof For if it be not the greater zeal the greater forwardnesse therein is but the greater condemnation and like the Traveller out of the way the more thou runnest the further thou goest from the true way But The second sort of enemies to the truths of Christ which are farre the more numerous part is of such Who are addicted to such a way and perswasion in Religion not because of any Divine worke of Gods Spirit upon them but because it suiteth with their carnal interest it agreeth with their external profit and therefore they cry out Great is Diana when indeed in their heart they say Great is their wealth great is their gain this is the Diana We may justly charge this upon Popery What was it that made Luther and the other Reformers so odious to the Popish party What made the Pope with his adherents to breath nothing but fire and sword Was it not because they touched the Popes Crowne and the Monkes belly Hence Secondly The faithfull Ministers of the Gospel meet with opposition not from the Pagans only that are without but from the sonnes of the Church which are within from those who professe the same God the same faith the same Christ with them And the reason is because many that professe Christ do so for earthly and carnal respects and such titular and counterfeit Christians as these cannot but hate those that are genuine The Apostle in the large Catalogue of his manifold sufferings reckoneth this up amongst the rest Perils from false brethren 2 Cor. 11. 26. Thus in Abrahams family there will be an Ishmael to persecute Isaac because one is of the bond-woman and the other of the free Think not then that the Pagan or Jew will become enemies to the powerfull preaching of the Gospel for every false Christian will Every one that followeth Christ onely because of loaves or with Judas becometh a Disciple because of the bagge Doth not experience confirme this that the prophane Christian doth as bitterly rage at and oppose the holy wayes of Christ as any Heathen would doe Thus the godly Ministers have trouble as it were from their own flock their Sheep sometimes becomes Wolves and Beares to them and with Ezekiel They dwell among Scorpions Ezekiel 2. 6. Thirdly The carnal interest and earthy sinfull respects are of divers sorts even as the creeping things that are produced from the earth are innumerable As 1. He knoweth Religion onely for carnal ends though it be the true one that turns the grace of God into wantonnesse That cryes up Gospel truths onely to encourage themselves in a licentious way As many of the mixed multitude went out with the Israelites from Aegypt yet kept their old and corrupt natures still So in the first Reformation many came out of Rome with the blessed Reformers many gloried in the name of Evangelici that they had shaken off the yoke of Antichristianisme but at the same time they did not cast off the yoke of sinne The first Reformers sadly complained of such that looked upon the Gospel as the casting off not onely the Popes Laws but Gods Law also as if to renounce the Images and Masse had been enough though in the mean time they did securely sleep in all wickednesse Now from such as these the Ministers of the Gospel have found as much unkindnesse and malice as from their Popish adversaries So that both ot home and abroad the Prophets of the Lord have been greatly afflicted These spots in our feasts these lovers of pleasures more than God these are they that have in all places withstood the power and life of godlinesse the holy Order and Discipline Christ hath instituted as if the liberty Paul bids us stand fast in were a liberty to sinne without controll and an indulgence in all licentiousnesse Such as these when they come into the warme Sunne when they have Summer an opportunity in their hand will discover that they are Serpents and will sting Tertullian apologized of old That the Christian Religion had her greatest enemies in Ale-houses and Brothel-houses and thus still the powerfull way of godlinesse is opposed by those monsters in Christianity that have the head of a Christian but the heart and life of beasts Mulier formosa supernè desinit in piscem Like those Locusts Revel 9. 6. that had faces like men but teeth like Lions and tailes like Scorpions Thus how many have the face of Christians but in heart in lives are beasts all over From these the Ministers of God have received much opposition 2. They know Religion onely after carnal respects who intend to enrich and to advance themselves by it take up the profession of it for no other end but to gain thereby As this Demetrius made him shrines not so much out of devotion to Diana as to increase his wealth Our Saviour knowing such a self-seeking disposition was predominant in many who proffered to be his Disciples he therefore prevents their Hypocrisie and Apostasie by telling them The Foxes have holes but the Sonne of man hath not where to lay his head and requireth it as a fundamental qualification That he who would be his Disciple must loue Christ more than father and mother and life it self Yea must not venture to winne the whole world if thereby he should lose his soul Oh take heed of this Judas this treacherous disposition in thee to be of the mind with those Paul speaketh of who supposed That gain is Godlinesse 1 Tim. 6. 5. Yea such are worse than Judas for he sold Christ but once thou doest continually and he was grieved and troubled for what he had done but thou though thou preferrest earthy things all the day long before Christ yet art not grieved in heart Well such as these are will in case of profit and advantage make all opposition against the preaching of
enlighten our minds to give us tenderness and lowliness of mind that we be not led aside with the errour of the wicked for errour and heresie will break out into enmity and make men think they do God good service while they destroy you Thirdly Then we regard Religion after a carnal manner When we make parties in it when we promote factions and divisions and such as do so are filled with much spite and malice against those that are contrary to them This is a sinne the members of the Church are prone to and nothing inclineth more to oppositions and contentions then such a frame upon mens spirits The Apostle speaketh very clearly to this 1 Cor. 3. 3. Whereas there is among you envying and strife one is for Paul another for Apollo are ye not carnal And vers 4. Again are ye not carnal So that this doth plainly discover men not to be led by divine and holy principles who are apt to foment differences who are ready to set up one Minister against another to admire the gifts and abilities of one to the contempt of others This was the great sinne of these Corinthians that as they discovered much pride and ambition in the names which they gave persons Capellus Histor A. M. 3168. sometimes delighting in words which signified power and principality as Hegemon c. Or such as denoted victory as Nicolaus c. Or such as declared glory as Polycletus c. Thus such a carnal ambition did still remain in them though made Christians setting up and admiring mens persons looking after gifts which brought applause more than grace and sanctification Now those that are thus carnally affected they do continually throw balls of fire into the Church and make it a Babylon in stead of a Jerusalem Jude speaketh vers 16. Of having mens persons in admiration because of advantage It is some carnal advantage or other that maketh them advance this and that man against others What the issue of such divisionsis appeareth Jam. 3. 14 15 16. viz. To bring in all confusion and every evil work As also he sheweth the nature and cause of this It is earthly sensual and devilish though men may judge it zeal and think they are active for Gods glory yet it 's sensual and cometh from the Devil and it is good to observe how largely the Apostle expatiateth about the sinfulnesse of the tongue That a world of evil is in it and from that exhortation Be not many Masters that is do not take upon you to be Teachers and so to reprove and censure others in a carnal and sinfull way It is this that maketh not only the tongue but the pen also to be full of gall and wormwood it maketh the pen to be an unruly evil that none can tame Take we heed then of minding Religion onely to make parties and different wayes therein for this will at last break into an open enmity against the truely godly Fourthly Then we look after Religion in a carnal way When we make use of the Doctrine thereof onely to shew our parts or learning when we earnestly contend about it as it is our opinion not as it is Gods truth For this reason the Apostle doth so frequently exhort Timothy To take heed of disputes and vain janglings 1 Tim. 1. 6. where the end of the preaching of the Gospel is said to be Charity out of a pure heart and a good conscience with faith unfeigned but from these some did swerve by turning aside unto vaine jangling Here you see that those who have not pure and unfeigned hearts in the things of God they fall into vain disputes and quarrels So 2 Tim. 6. 4. it is called Doting about questions and strifes of words whereof cometh envy railings and evil surmises And he addeth their character Supposing that gain is godlinesse Here you see that in all these disputes and controversies there is no pure heart no good conscience all is to advantage themselves by it yea if this be not discovered in any sordid or worldly manner yet if thy pride the loftiness of thy spirit be hereby advanced and thou doest not mind Religion to exercise thy self to godlinesse but to have men admire thy gifts and to wonder at thy abilities Thy heart is a corrupt heart and thou wilt manifest thy enmity against the wayes of Christ when opposed therein Thy wit thy parts thy applause thou mayest make thy great Diana and oppose all that would destroy this Goddesse Lastly That we may conclude all and leave nothing out Whosoever doth not own the Christian faith from divine principles and holy pure motives this man is but a titular and a false Christian and so cannot but when occasion serveth manifest his opposition to Christs wayes And therefore it is that as amongst the people of Israel there was an irreconcilable division between Israel and Judah and a great opposition between Davids house and Sauls though all pretending to the onely true God So it is in the Church of God though there may be an agreement in the same Doctrine in the same Profession of faith come to the same Ordinances together yet because one hath not a supernatural life of grace within hath no experimental feeling of the power of sanctification upon his soul hence it is that he hath a spirit of antipathy and contrariety to those who are indeed born of God and walk in wayes of mortification So that we may conclude Whosoever is not regenerated regardeth Religion no further than carnal and earthly respects let his pretences be never so high and plausible And therefore there is no unconverted man though he hath never so high an Office never so great repute in the Church of God but he serveth Christ for loaves some insincere and insufficient motive or other worketh upon him he hath his shrines that he liveth by And therefore as it was with that rich man who boasted He had kept all Gods Commandments from the youth when he was tryed in one instance where his heart was greatly affected viz. To part with all and follow Christ it is said He went away exceeding sorrowfull Thus when any such empty nominal Christians are put upon such duties and wayes which are contrary to their lusts they will go away not it may be exceedingly grieved but greatly enraged and disquieted This will be like the jealousie-water to discover the adulteresse To pull out their right eyes and to cut off their right hands will be like the pronouncing of Shibboleth to discover what they are And the ground of this whole truth is from the exceeding great purity and exactnesse that is in the word of God truly preached it cometh to new mould and change the whole man All old things must passe away This will not abide either a corrupt mind or a carnal heart and therefore one being contrary to the other as light to darknesse and fire to water No wonder if then the hypocrite be
no more then à Spiders Web to trust in To trust then in sinfull wayes is the highest degree of folly 2. The Scripture informeth of another sinfull object we are apt to trust in and that is humane power and strength Who would not think that where the greatest might is there is the greatest cause of confidence Yet how often doth God infeeble the greatest power and blast the greatest strength and all that men should not trust in themselves God would have the Symbole of Sampsons strength to be in his haire the weakest part about him that so he might see his power was from God only How often doth God complaine of Israel of his sinnefull confidence Isaiah 36. 7. They would go down to Aegypt they would rest in the Chariots and Horses of Aegypt when yet they were but flesh and not spirit Nothing that is weak must we lean upon least it break under us Psalme 146. 3. Put not your trust in Princes and the reason is because his breath goeth forth he returneth to the earth Jerem. 17. 5 6. You have there a curse pronounced against every one that shall trust in man the unpr●ofitableness also and ill success of all such trusting in man yet how naturall is this sinne to us To think if we have the favour the helpe of those who are great in the world to trust in this more then in God though it be such a sinne that the Scripture doth scarce speake more terribly against any other There is a politicall and civill Idolatry as well as a spirituall and ecclesiasticall one and never did superstitious soules more devoutly pray to their Saints and adore those Images than these do flatter and attend upon such humane helps and powers that may outwardly advance them As it hath been the high impiety of some Potentates in the world to arrogate a deity to themselves no lesse impiety is it in inferiors to depend upon them for their help as if they were Gods and to fear to offend them more then God himself 3. Another sinfull way of trusting Is when we put our confidence in our wealth and riches and such outward greatness It is so hard to have riches and not to trust in them that what our Evangelist calleth having riches Mark calleth it trusting in them It is the mighty work of Gods grace if thou dost not trust in these when God maketh them increase and not to say of them as the Israelites of their molten Calf these are thy gods O Israel Hence it is that Paul 1 Tim. 6. 17. will have the Ministers of God deale with great zeale and boldness to such Charge them that are rich in this world that they be not high minded nor trust in uncertain riches but in the living God Though they be uncertain riches though they make themselves wings and flye away yet how apt are we to put trust in them but God is the living God alwayes the same whether thou art living or dying he is the same God for this end covetousness is called Idolatry Col. 3. 5. There is no rich man unless made humble by grace and rich in God but his wealth is his God No godly man can so heartily trust in God as he doth in his wealth Job was forced to purge himself from this sinne as that which could not stand with integrity If I have made Gold my hope or have said to fine Gold thou art my confidence If I have rejoyced because my wealth was great Job 3. 25 26. If Job had done thus he must have acknowledged then he had been an Hypocrite Take heed then of this close lurking sinne It would be endless to reckon up all the externall objects that we may sinfully trust in Therefore the next kind of sinfull trusting to be named is concerning that which is spirituall and more subtilly carryed on for Paul could not trust in himself after this manner he had no outward power nor wealth to put confidence in It was therefore something more close and refined SERM. LXIX What are those secret and inward objects that men are apt to place their Confidence in and wherein even the Saints themselves may be guilty of that sinne 2 COR. 1. 9. That we should not trust in our selves THe Lord we heard doth so greatly abhorre self-trusting that the end of these manifold troubles which are brought on the godly is to mortifie and kill this sinne There are two streams into which this sinfull trusting doth empty it self The first is External and visible such as power and riches for this may be called trusting in our selves partly because we look upon them as ours and partly it is opposite to trusting in God Thesecond stream into which sinfull trusting conveys it self is that which is Internal and invisible and of this Paul doth principally speak So that it will be very usefull to enquire into those secret and soul-things which a man may put his trust in No man can live without trusting in some thing or other any more than a man can walk without legs or a bird flie without wings But of all trustings those are most dangerous and unobservable which are put forth about that which lieth latent in us And First The Scripture speaketh of that sinfull trusting which every natural man is in an high manner guilty of and that is To trust in a mans own heart Pro. 28. 26. He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool Now is not the world full of such fools Yea the Church of God Is not every unregenerate man this fool Can you perswade him that his heart is naught that he is in a state of gall and bitternesse What is the reason that under so many powerfull discoveries out of Gods word every hearer doth not wring his hands smite upon the brest cry out he is undone he is found out to be a sinner he cannot flatter and deceive himself any longer Whence I say is it that most do sit so sottishly so securely and senslesly under the preaching of the Word Is it not because they trust in their hearts They thank God they have a good heart their heart is right and all this while if they did truly know what true grace meaneth and how short they come of it they would be amazed and not able to open their mouths for their justification any longer And the truth is we may call this the damning sin This is that which destroyeth soul and body that though men are afar off from the way of grace though they wallow in their lusts yet they trust in their hearts for all this Prov. 21. 2. Every mans way is right in his own eyes but the Lord poudereth the hearts It is no matter what thy thoughts thy perswasions are but how doth the Lord account thee Men are subject to a two-fold great mistake 1. They mistake about the Nature of Godlinesse they understand not what it is how high and rare a thing that few
of glory and rejoycing to us So likewise Gal. 6. 4. the Apostle pressing every man to try his own works to examine his intentions therein giveth this as the consequent fruit thereof That then he shall have rejoycing in himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a kind of glorying and boasting in himself To clear this truth let us first shew what is required to this glorying and then in what respects it is lawfull and allowed us And for the former First It is necessary to this rejoycing and glorying in the first place That we have an high esteem of the excellency and worth of that grace we discover to be in us If so be we are to rejoyce in these outward mercies which yet are only for the body what matter of joy should it be to find those spiritual workings of Gods Spirit in us which are of eternal concernment What Solomon saith concerning the esteem of wisdom which is indeed nothing but grace we should all make good Prov. 2. 4. If thou seekest her as silver and searchest for her as for hid treasures That soul then which can rejoyce in the discovery of grace must esteem of it more than all the treasures of the world To say O Lord I had rather find my self sanctified I had rather see the powerfull workings of grace upon me then to be made the greatest or richest man in the world we have many exhortations to examine our selves and try our hearts to see if we can find this precious jewel in our souls Now none will be cordial to examine and search herein but those who look upon it as the greatest treasure Did the woman in the Gospel make such diligent search for a lost groat only and call her neighbours to rejoyce with her when she had found it How large and boundless then should our thoughts be about the excellency of grace And indeed to the godly soul this is the great question it labours to study and to resolve Whether it be in the state of grace or no knowing that this onely is the most blessed and happy estate in the world Secondly As we must highly esteem this work of grace so we must have a Certainty and perswasion that we have obtained it Had not Paul known that his heart had been sincere that he was not acted by carnal wisdome he could never have rejoyced For Philosophers make joy to be in that good thing we do possesse and also the knowledge thereof This Text then doth abundantly declare that the people of God may have a certain knowledge of the work of grace So that although the heart be indeed deceitfull and full of hypocrisie yet when sanctified it hath some measure of truth and sincerity in it and so far doth not deceive us He then that would rejoyce in the grace of God wrought in him must presse after assurance must endeavour after a certain perswasion of the truth of grace in him And although this perswasion be not justifying faith yea it is separable from it A man may be justified may be sanctified and not know it yet it is such a priviledge yea and duty also that we should diligently take heed of all those things that may weaken our assurance that may make us to doubt and question whether Jesus Christ be in us or no. Thirdly A sure perswasion of the goodnesse and integrity of our hearts is not enough but it must be upon right grounds and in a Scripture-demonstration For if it be a false perswasion it may produce indeed a rejoycing but a false rejoycing also It is more than probable that Paul while a persecutor being zealously affected to the tradition of his fathers and thinking himself bound as he professeth to do what he did against Christ and his members could then say His rejoycing was the testimony of his conscience being perswaded that in those wayes he glorified God And therefore some do extend that profession of his before the Council That he had lived in all good conscience before God untill that day And if this be so then we see plainly That every perswasion though never so confident is not enough to make us rejoyce but we must look to Scripture-grounds Doth not experience confirm this Take any heretical person any erroneous person though it be to the destruction of the very fundamentals of Religion yet he will proclaim a rejoycing in his heart from the good testimony of his conscience So that an erroneous conscience satisfied doth bring peace and rejoycing but it is an erroneous joy It is either from meer humane principles or from diabolical delusions But this will come in more properly when we come to the ground or reason it self of Paul's rejoycing Fourthly To this rejoycing there is required The Spirit of God enabling us thereunto So that the same spirit which doth seal to us the assurance of our estate doth also cause comfort in us The Spirit of God doth enlighten and sanctifie after this it doth seal and comfort And this latter work of Gods Spirit is necessary as well as the other For we see it lieth not in the power of Gods people to have comfort when they will Hence Gal. 5. Joy is the fruit of the Spirit and it 's called Joy in the holy Ghost not only objectively because it is a joy in spiritual objects but also efficiently because it is wrought by him Hence it is that the Spirit of God mouldeth the heart for comfort removeth fears and doubts restraineth and keepeth off Satan whereby no sinne no Devil is able to deject and cast down because God comforteth ●Thus you see what goeth to rejoycing in the graces of God and thereby an holy glorying in them Now let us see in what respect it is lawfull thus to rejoyce And First It is lawfull to rejoyce in them as they are the effects and fruits of Gods favour and love as they signifie the cause from whence they come Rahab could not but rejoyce to see the thread that was a signe of such a great mercy designed for her If then the godly man have that spiritual skill as to difference between trusting in his graces as any way causes of his salvation and thankfully receiving them assignes from which he may be perswaded of it then doth he hit the mark It is usually said from Luther That we are to take heed not onely of evil deeds but of good and holy works also because the heart is apt to be carried away with pride and self-confidence insensibly yet this much not so deterre the people of God that they may not take comfort from their graces For how can they see them and not rejoyce because they are the pledge of Gods favour it self and of an interest in Christ So that though their graces be weak and full of imperfections yet they manifest that to be ours which is fully perfect and hath no fault at all in it Imperfect graces do manifest Gods perfect grace to
other helps no more than he will make you understand Greek and Hebrew Know then it is a very sad and almost incurable condition when the holy Scriptures do become a snare to us when we suck poison out of these sweet herbs Although indeed we cannot from the Scripture get any hurt but our own corruptions procure it to us because we bring the Scripture to our ends and affections not them to the Scripture Thirdly To the having of a well-ordered conscience There is greatly required pure aims and intentions For although a good intention cannot sanctifile an unlawfull action yet corrupt intentions will blast and defile the best actions Insomuch that if we had the gifts and parts of the ablest men yea of Angels themselves yet sinfull aims would be like Locusts and Caterpillars to devour this hopefull fruit But oh the unsearchable hypocrisie and deceitfulness of mans heart even in this very respect How ready is every Pharisee every Heretick and Papist to appropriate this to themselves How often do we find them professing to the whole world that it is not any outward advantage any temporal emolument that they look at or regard but the glory of God and that therefore they have much rejoycing because of this But if the counterfeit will bring such peace what will the real and sincere intentions of a man do And certainly though a man be cloathed with never so much glory in the Church of God so that we are ready to say not only a greater than Austin or Chrysostome but even than Paul or Peter For some have cried up the heads of their parties as having greater gifts than the Apostles themselves Yet without sincere intentions they are but as a tinkling cymbal This therefore is the life soul and the all in a good conscience But that will come in more seasonably afterwards Fourthly To a right ordered conscience whose witness may be received and comfort taken thereby That there is required the inward sanctification and effectual renovation thereof So that till this be every mans conscience is like a man himself a meer liar There is no believing of it no trusting of it When it is said Jer. 17. That the heart of a man is deceitfully wicked or crafty and supplanting a man This comprehends conscience as well as any part else For you have heard that original sinne is in this as well as in other powers of the soul So that in these two respects the natural conscience doth alwayes fail For either it doth not witness that which is right or not to a right end Insomuch that though a natural man is not to gainsay or contradict his conscience yet nothing lieth upon him more than to have his conscience rightly informed or regulated by Gods word What is the reason you see every civil man every formal man so applauding himself in his good condition It is because his conscience is not a spiritual conscience a Scripture-conscience for that would make him abhor himself and flie out of the Sodome he was in For in most things the conscience doth not witness the truth at all but it doth fl●tter and deceive thee How seldom doth it tell thee thou art the drunkard the hypocrite the neglecter of private duties c Or if it doth then it is to a false end either to drive to despair and to flie from Christ whose blood only can cleanse the conscience or else to quiet it again by some superstitious usages and non-instituted remedies And this is the reason why so few are brought out of the troubles of their conscience into an Evangelical and Gospel way Know then here is the root of all thy misery thy conscience being unsanctified lulleth thee asleep whereby thou rejoycest in thy condition when thou hast cause to fear and tremble SERM. LXXXVI Further Discoveries of what is required to a well-regulated Conscience with Distinctions concerning it 2 COR. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience THere remain more particulars to be insisted upon which are requisite to make a well-regulated conscience whose testimony you heard is the cause of such unspeakable comfort And First There is in a peculiar manner necessary the witnessing and sealing power of the holy Ghost to and with our consciences The illumination and sanctification of Gods Spirit is not enough to make our consciences speak fully and clearly so as to have rejoycing thereby unlesse the Spirit of God doth also bear witnesse with it Hence we have them both put together Rom. 8. 16. The Spirit it self beareth witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God And therefore you heard that Bernard understood this testimony of conscience in the Text of a Testimonium percipientis not Perhibentis but they are both included For our conscience cannot give any eviden●e and sure testimony of the grace inus unlesse inabled thereunto by the Spirit of God and this is called The work of Gods Spirit sealing and witnessing with our spirits The Text is very famous and greatly agitated in the controversie about the assurance of our sanctification and salvation Grotius and some others neglect the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and would have it no more than simply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But the word is not any where so used the instances of Grotius are against him Rom. 2. 15. For Conscience there is said to bear witnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in respect of God and so doth relate to his testimony We therefore conclude That the Spirit of God is here said to bear witnesse with our spirit only the difficulty is How this is done And 1. It is not done by any external voice and sound made in the air as Christ had when it was said This is my beloved Sonne Neither may we apprehend any immediate testimony by an extraordinary revelation as some have pleaded for but in a mediate way partly by exciting and inabling of our spirits to call God Father against that slavishness and servility which is apt to bear us down and partly by working in us those heavenly and holy qualifications by which we do certainly gather that we are the children of God Indeed the Papists make the testimony of Gods Spirit to be no more as applied to particular subjects though in it self they say it is infallible then a moral certainty by probable conjectures and signs But this is derogatory to the Spirit of God and taketh away all that Evangelical joy and holy boldness which we are allowed to have at the throue of grace This witnessing then of Gods Spirit is two wayes 1. Effectivè When it doth enable the conscience of man to cast off all legal terrors and tormenting fears and so in serenity of spirit to believe God is our Father And for this end it is called The Spirit of Adoption For alas take the conscience of the most holy man without this Spirit of Adoption How legal and timorated
not only apprehensiva but quietativa not only apprehensive but quietative it brings the soul to its center to its non ultra whereas reason doth but satisfie till a man come with a stronger and one argument like the circles in the water begets another So that whereas it was Iulian's objection against the Christian Religion as low and contemptible because it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only believe yet this indeed is the glory of it this setleth and composeth when philosophical ratiocinations did carry them into endless contentions Therefore that is good counsel of Austins Noveris te esse fidelem non rationalem It is faith not syllogisms that brings an established mind in Religion It is true indeed Christianity hath her use of Reason and Arguments and there is an Habitus Theologiae whereby we do demonstrate the points of Divinity but this is when faith hath laid the foundation Fides facit argumentum non argumentum fidem as it doth in the liberal Arts Reason buildeth upon Faith not Faith upon Reason If therefore thou complainest of the diversity of Sects of the multitude of opinions that swarm every where there is no such way to escape splitting thy soul at such rocks as to pray for this godly simplicity of mind I say holy simplicity not a foolish popish blind obedience that is not faith The fool believeth every thing Faith hath alwayes an evidence and knowledge of the testimony though the thing believed may be above the comprehension But when truths out of the Scripture are with sufficient evidence held out to thee then simplicity is required to yeeld firm assent thereunto and not to dispute by humane arguments whether it can be so or no. Therefore the wisdome which is from above Jam. 3. 17. is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 easily to be perswaded As in respect of the objects to be believed and the instruments who propound it there is necessary Piscatoria simplicitas which is more than Aristotle's subtilty or his Minutiloquium as Tertullian calleth it So there is such an humble simplicity required on the subjects part who are to receive these divine truths I am the larger on this as being assured the best antidote against all heresies and the surest remedy to preserve from doctrinal Apostasie is this simplicity of mind But Secondly This simplicity is no lesse signally seen in the Will which is to cast away its contumacy stubbornness and propriety resigning it self wholly up to Gods command The Lord hath commanded it therefore I obey not disputing with flesh and blood whether this will be for my advantage honour or profit but the will of God boweth him into all ready compliance It is the Apostles advice Phil. 2. 14. Do all things without mumurings and disputings that ye may be sincere Here it is plain that sincerity is manifested when we willingly do our duty not murmuring and quarrelling at it Even as we read of Abraham though commanded by God to sacrifice his own sonne with his own hands when he might have had so many fair arguments against it yet he readily applieth himself to his duty and so when commanded to come out of his own countrey and to go he did not know whether yet he willingly obeyeth this is simplicity And so it was with Paul Galat. 1. who immediately obeyed the call of God Not consulting with flesh and blood whereas Saul because he did not obey in simplicity but waved the commands of God upon religious pretences his rebellion was accounted a● witchcraft not believing that Obedience was better than Sacrifice 1 Sam. 15. 22. Thirdly This simplicity is seen in an holy boldnesse to do our duty to be zealous for God to reprove sinne though there be never so many Lions in the way It is true the wisemen of the world call this simplicity indeed making it the same with folly Thus most of our Christian duties if fervently and zealously performed are nothing but folly and silliness to carnal policy But to appear for God and to own his wayes among a crooked and malicious people is an excellent mark of simplicity whereas hypocrisie measuring all things by its safety honour and profit becometh like the shadow to the body su●eth it self to every corrupt humour of others But this plainness of heart maketh us with David Psal 119. to speak of the Law even before Kings and alwayes to obey God rather than men So much shrinking from thy duty because of the fear or favours of men is so much want of simplicity Hence Varinus makes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 boldnesse and freedome Oh then pray exceedingly for this simplicity of spirit that will make thee constant bold and zealous for God! How often may thy conscience convince thee that sinfull fear or foolish shame or carnal affections have made thee not do th●se duties with singleness of heart as thou shouldst have done How many times hast thou betrayed the truth by sinfull silence How many times hast thou wounded thy spirit by holding thy tongue whereas this holy simplicity would have imbo●dened thee It is true there is Christian prudence required also there must be the wisdome of a Serpent as well as the innocency of the Dove Discretion is the salt to season our Sacrifices and there must be this salt as well as the fire of zeal but we must look the Serpent doth not eat up this Dove that discretion doth not devour this simplicity Thus much of simplicity as it relateth immediately to God Now because the Apostle useth the word largely relating to his ministerial conversation as it did reach to men we shall take in briefly the consideration of that also And First Godly simplicity maketh a man inoffensive to men This simplicity maketh a man harmlesse and unblameable as to others Christs Disciples are compared to Sheep not to Bears for cruelty or Foxes for craft in doing mischief therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is as much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Apostle saith I would have you simple in malice Rom. 16. 19. The leven that was forbidden in the Sacrifices did signifie malice and sourness So that where this simplicity is a man is wonderfull harmless is not injurious doth no wrong The word used in that place of Rom. 16. 19. is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which though it properly come from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet some make it from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if to say without horns The people of God are meek and lowly as it 's said of Jacob He was a plain man but Esau rough and hairy which may relate to their manners as well as bodily constitutions not but that they can be as bold as Lions in the cause of God Simplicity is consistent with zeal and courage for God Moses was the meekest man upon earth yet in the case of Idolatry and the peoples uncleanness how forward was he to have severe punishment
mutable and inconstant principles he can never be serviceable to God for this debaseth him before men this maketh him vile and contemptible and thereby like a broken vessel that is of no use Fourthly It is a great sinne to be thus inconstant in our words because it 's an abuse of our tongue which the Scripture calleth a mans glory though some apply it to the soul now for thy glory to be a shame to have thy tongue accounted a lying tongue a double tongue a false tongue This is an aggravation of thy wickednesse Lastly As God doth threaten to punish lying and deceitfull tongues so he doth graciously encourage all such as are of sincerity in all their words and works A lying tongue is one of the seven abominations which God hateth Prov. 6. 17. as on the other side How mercifully doth God encourage some Isa 63. 8. for he said Surely they are my people children that will not lie so he was their Saviour So that if all these particulars be laid together we may see how necessary it is to adde righteousness to our Religion to be as Christ Whose lips were without guile in respect of God and man Oh this will afford thee great comfort this will assure thee that thy Religion was not hypocrisie It 's easier performing multitude of duties then to walk thus uprightly towards men they may be done with more ease to flesh and blood yea they may be the fuell to thy hearts-pride and self-applause but this tendeth really to mortifie sinne within thee and to cause thee to have respect to all Gods commandments SERM. CXI Of the sinfulness of Inconstancy and lightness in matters of Religion 2 COR. 1. 17. When I therefore was thus minded did I use lightness WE have treated of lightness and Inconstarcy as it was expressed in civil things whether in our words Promises or dealings between man and man This you heard was both a sin towards God and a reproach to religion yea unrighteousness and falsehood in these outward affairs are so great sinnes that many times they make the greatest wound in our consciences and Experience confirmeth it That when a man is converted to God and made sensible of sin the sinnes of his unrighteousness doth most trouble his conscience It is longest e're he get the pardon of these in his own soul and the Reason may be because such unfaithfulness in words and dealings are condemned by the natural light of our conscience Even Heathens have been able to judg such things great sinnes Now what is done against natural light that maketh a greater gash in the conscience Hence the Omission of those Duties which are meerly known by supernatural light is not so grievous to us as when an humble broken-hearted sinner is called upon to believe in Christ to rest his soul upon him for justification How hardly is such a contrite spirit brought to judge that unbelief herein is a great and heynous sin that God is provoked hereby That as much as lyeth in us we make Christ of none effect So that when such a wounded conscience can complain of its former unrighteous unjust and sinfull wayes it once lived in yet it doth not at the same time bewail that great sin of unbelief its frowardness and slavishness that it doth not receive Christ as a Saviour yea it rather judgeth it a duty to keep off from a Promise and to question whether Christ will receive such a wretched sinner as he feeleth himself to be By which we see what cause the people of God have to take heed of sin in this kinde for how hardly are they healed how long may it be ere thy conscience may be pacified thorough the blood of Christ But I proceed to a Second kinde of Inconstancy which is of a greater guilt because exprest in matters of greater concernment and relation even to God himself To be yea and nay off and on in matters of Religion this proclaimeth our wretchedness And First There is an inconstancy in our Faith When we do lightly and uncertainly receive the truths of God so that we are ready for one Faith one week and another Faith another week This is a very dangerous frame of soul when a man is not of a sound judgment neither hath laid a good foundation in Christian Religion but as the Apostle saith Ephes 4. 4. is like a childe tossed up and down with every wind of doctrine Such are called by the Apostle Peter 2 Pet. 3. 16. unlearned and unstable In the number of these light and inconstant persons we may reckon the Galatians when he chargeth them with their suddain Apostacy Gal. 1. 6. I marvel that you are so soon removed from him that called you unto another Gospel They were ready for another Gospel for other Teachers who formerly had received the Apostle as an Angel of God yea as Jesus Christ This lightness also was manifested in some of Christs Disciples John 6. 60 61. who upon their misunderstanding of some passages in our Saviours Sermon judging them hard and absurd from that time went back from him and walked no more with him And truly are not these times a sad instance of the lightness and uncertainty of many men in the Doctrine of their Faith In how many mens Religion may you finde Yea and Nay How many are destroying that which once they did build Now nothing is more contrary to the nature of Faith than this inconstancy For if we do consider what the Nature of Faith is we shall finde that it doth so autoritatively bring the understanding into obedience of the Divine truth that it dare not give way to doubtings and plausible Objections of deceitfull men any more The Apostle Heb. 11. 1. giveth us a full description of Faith as to this matter of quieting and satisfying the soule for he saith It s the substance of things hoped for and ehe evidence of things not seen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which hath but a meer apearancy as Meteors or rather as colours in the Rainbow and truly many mens Faith hath no subsistency at all it is only in their fancy Hence it is that there is almost a ●cepticisme introduced into Religion as was once into Philosophy But Faith doth consolidate the soul and establish it upon Scripture-grounds which are sure and unmoveable The other word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is applyed to a Demonstration that doth even necessitate the understanding to give assent to it so that it hath no power to refuse it Thus also it is when the soul believeth The spirit of God through the word so convinceth the heart that no demonstration in Sciences nor objects to sense can be more potent to perswade Oh then take heed of Inconstancy in Principles of Faith This will argue thou art built upon a sandy foundation that thou dost believe such Doctrines onely upon humane Motives and deceitful grounds
too light and wanting But oh the horrible neglect herein who mattereth what the Scripture saith Who ordereth his life according to that Canon What art thou a drunkard by Scripture a swearer by Scripture Know assuredly that he which learneth not holinesse from the Scripture shall never find comfort from the Scripture that hath precepts as well as promises and without obedience to one we cannot reap any comfort from the other Secondly The other principle of a godly mans but efficiently is the Spirit of God enlightning and sanctifying by the Scripture The Word is the Rule the Spirit of God is the efficient cause The Scripture is like Christs garment the Spirit is the virtue and power of God communicated to the soul thereby Hence are those descriptions of a godly man that he is in the Spirit that he liveth in the Spirit walketh in the Spirit is led by the Spirit which must not be wrested to any immediate Revelations and Enthusiastical motions and thereby opposed to the Word but the Word is subordinate to the Spirit This is the pool wherein the Spirit of God descends and vouchsafeth healing to the soul therewith Now Chrysostome maketh this a great part of Paul's meaning he did not purpose according to the flesh that is he could not dispose of himself and his journeyes to come and go whither he desired because he was wholly at the command of the Spirit to be directed thereby For we read when Paul had a mind to preach the Gospel in some places he was hindered by the Spirit and so could not go but those directions of the Spirit and Revelations were extraordinary and for that present age of the Church and are not now to be expected The Spirit doth now enlighten sanctifie direct and guide us by Scripture-rules And hereupon it is that the godly are said to be led by the Spirit and to walk by the Spirit and this should provoke the godly to all holiness Oh is pride from the Spirit of God Is worldliness is envy is passion from the Spirit of God Remember alwayes from what Spirit it is that thou doest things The Apostles thought it a good zeal when they would have fire from Heaven to come and destroy the Samaritans Luk. 9. 55. but Christ rebuked them saying Ye know not what manner of Spirit ye are of Take heed then thy own Spirit or a deluding spirit be not the principle that moveth thee instead of Gods good Spirit Thus you see the two general Rules that we should order our lives by the Word and the Spirit whatsoever is not according to these is not suitable to Christianity Besides these general principles we may instance in some particulars that a godly man doth walk by and against which he dare not sinne As 1. To keep a good conscience towards God and man Paul professed he exercised himself herein Act. 24. 16. towards God therefore he taketh heed of any thing that may make his heart smite him he had rather have his peace of conscience than all the advantages in the world Hence in all things his Question is Will not this trouble my conscience Will not this disturb the peace of my conscience This is a blessed principle he keepeth close unto And then again in respect of man he keepeth an inoffensive conscience he lieth not he defraudeth not he injureth not he looketh to righteousness as well as Religion his principle is to be holy towards God and just towards man and in following this principle he aboundeth with joy in his heart he liveth chearfully and fruitfully and withall doth awe the hearts of the most desperate enemies to the wayes of God 2. Another principle is To make sure of his ultimate end for which God made him and the necessary means conducing therunto His end is glory and salvation hereafter The necessary means therunto is grace and godlines here while we are in this world so that while other men walk according to their several principles some will be rich some will have their honours others their profits his principle is to be godly here and saved hereafter Hence he giveth all diligence to these two things So that if you ask him Why are you sollicitous Why are you so carefull Why so often in praying so often in hearing It is he saith to obtain grace here and glory hereafter This I must have I dare not live and die without it for want of this principle men have such sluggish and dull affections to heavenly things A third principle is To live and walk with daily expectations of death and the day of judgment as if he heard alwayes that voice sounding in his ears Arise and come to judgement He desireth to have such thoughts of sinne as a man dying as a man arraigned at Gods tribunal would then have Death is certain nothing can exempt him from it and therefore he desireth to die daily to be preparing for these great changes In morte solâ non est fortassis as Austin observed In all things in the world there is a fortasse a may be Thou mayest be a rich thou mayest be a great man but we cannot say It may be thou mayest die it may be the time will come when thou shalt fall into the grave No this is without all doubt hence the godly mans principle is so to live that death and the day of judgement may be no new thing or terrible dreadfull thing to him A fourth principle is To judge sinne the onely or the greatest evil and godlinesse the greatest good If this were a principle in mens hearts to live by what reformed persons should we see every where This principle in thy heart would be like fire there if sinne be thought worse than any evil then poverty shame misery yea and hell it self better be any thing than a sinner How couldst thou give thy self up a servant thereunto Though it were a pleasing sinne a profitable sinne yet because it is a damning sinne thou wouldst runne from it thou wouldst say Oh this sinne though I love it though I am used to it yet it can never be good for me it will be the poison of my soul And then on the other side a godly mans principle is That godlinesse is more worth than all the great and glorious things of the world His soul longeth for it more than silver and gold he thinketh every rich man every great man a miserable man if he be not godly As Rachel cried Give me children else I die so give me godlinesse Lord else I am damned As Abraham did not so much rejoyce in his wealth and outward mercies because he was still childlesse so saith this man It is not earthly comforts Lord but grace that refresheth my heart let me be poor contemned rather than not godly Use of Exhortation To examine what are the principles you walk by There are but these two and they are contrary one to the other the principle
exhorteth all that hope in God Psal 31. 24. To be of good courage and God shall strengthen their hearts Of all temptations none are so grievous to be born as those which arise from Gods withdrawing of himself and hiding of his face from us then we apprehend no promises do belong unto us then we question very principles and so are like a ship tossed in the Sea without Pilot or Anchor Therefore spiritual fortitude to withstand these strong assaults is above all required How many have sunk irrecoverably into this pit of destruction So that unlesse Gods power settle us unlesse that compose our hearts we can as well remove mountains as this sad and sainting spirit of ours Lay then fast hold on Christ thou canst not sink in these waters if his arm doth uphold thee Thus Timothy is exhorted To be strong in the grace that is in Jesus Christ 2 Tim. 2. 1. there is his duty to be strong but how must he come to have this strength It is by Jesus Christ you would think the exhortation were superfluous for why must I be strong if it be the grace of Christ that must enable me But the exhortation is usefull howsoever for hereby we are taught our duty as also to go out of our selves renouncing our own strength and laying the faster hold upon Christ himself To this purpose we have the like exhortation Ephes 6. 10. Finally my brethren be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might when he had before laid down several precepts then knowing how impotent and unable we are he saith Be strong in the Lord. Here you see what we are commanded but it is the power of his might that is his mighty power that must confirm us and where this is present then we wonder how we are carried through such temptations led through such wildernesses as we have been we stand and admire to see what red Seas we have gone thorow and how the waters have yeelded unto us Thus Paul I can doe all things through Christ that strengthens me Phil. 4. 13. Fourthly Divine hope doth exceedingly conduce to stablish the soul upon the promises as you heard from those admonitions of David to his soul Hope thou still in God Faith is carried out to the truth of God and hope to the mercy and power of God and therefore he that hopeth in God is got into the Ark while others float in the waters Heb. 6. 19. it is compared to the Anchor of the soul both sure and stedfast and which entereth within the vail By this we see that hope doth notably settle the soul Faith indeed and hope are two sisters and twins and look so like one another that we can hardly make the difference yet faith establisheth the soul upon the promises by apprehending them as present so that the soul is in as holy a manner secure as if it were already in Heaven But hope doth settle the soul on Gods promises as the things promised are future and to come For seeing between Gods promises and the accomplishment of them there happen so many crosse providences in appearance yea so many difficulties and seeming impossibilities are in the way we need some divine grace to overcome all these and that is hope compared excellently to an Anchor for as that doth fasten the ship which otherwise would be tossed up and down and in danger of splitting upon every Rock so the soul of the most godly man is tossed up and down with such sad temptations that did not this hope bear up the heart all would fail within us But this spiritual anchor exceedeth all material ones for this is sure and stedfast Sure so that no outward violence of storms can break it and stedfast in respect from within there is nothing without or within that can disanu●l this But then whereas other anchors are fastened into the earth this is in Heaven in God and invisible things A godly mans hope cannot be seen by the bodily eye Take heed then of weakning this grace of hope it 's an excellent corroborater of the soul staying it up with that glory which will be revealed hereafter Lastly Another habitual principle whereby God doth exceedingly establish the heart on the promises is Spiritual joy and heavenly consolations This is one great reason say Divines why Angels and Saints in Heaven are so confirmed in that estate that nothing can tempt them off from God they never will be weary of the presence of God even because they are filled with so much infinite delight and joy that they cannot desire any better thing than God Now the godly they have the beginnings of these consolations here upon earth for by the spirit of adoption they are so filled with joy and delight that all the world is no more than an husk unto them they look upon the world as a wildernesse and Heaven as the Canaan So that spiritual consolations when wrought in the soul are like a mighty pillar to bear up the heart Hence the Apostle prayeth 2 Thes 2. 17. That God would comfort their hearts and stablish them First Comfort and then establish How hardly is the heart dejected and full of despondent thoughts established But comfort and joy is oil to the wheels Thus Nehemiah spake Neh. 8. 10. Be not ye sorry for the joy of the Lord is your strength So much sinfull grief as thou lettest in it is like the letting in of waters at some leak in the ship it may sink the ship at last Blesse God therefore for any gladnesse of heart for any consolations of soul through the Spirit of God these support the soul these make it rejoyce in the midst of all afflictions It is true sometimes the people of God for wise and holy ends are deprived of them but when they are vouchsafed they come like pleasant gales of winde to carry the ship to its Haven In the next place As God doth positively establish by these habitual principles so also by the actual motions of his Spirit upon us There is not only habitual grace but efficacious grace whereby the Lord worketh in us both to will and to do How many times do the principles of grace like Christ in the ship lie asleep in us insomuch that till they be awakened we are in danger of shipwrack Therefore when the Apostle exhorteth us To work out our salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2. 13. he giveth a wonderfull reason for it 's God that worketh in you to will and to do and that of his good pleasure So that the confirming power of God lieth chiefly in this in actuating those habitual principles within us whereby we depend upon God continually as the beams of the Sun do upon the Sun This Doctrine Pelagians and Papists cannot relish but certainly if God come not with efficacious actual help as well as habitual the instances of the fals of Gods people in all ages will palpably declare they are undone
of themselves Having thus illustrated the Doctrine let us touch some arguments à posteriori whereby it is plain That all our establishment is from God And 1. It is plain In that a godly man findeth such an inequality in the temper of his soul Sometimes he is able to withstand strong gusts of temptations and at another time he is so weak that every blow will beat him down David discovereth these hils and valleys in his soul in many Psalms Now if it were a mans own strength then he would be more constant and uniform Only by these ebbings and flowings we are taught that God doth alone support us if he withdraw his hand then are we troubled 2. It is plain Because sometimes weak Christians have gone through great temptations when strong ones have exceedingly failed Did not Peter an eminent Apostle of Christ fall very dangerously And yet how many weak women have been inabled to become Martyrs for Christ Did not Abraham called the father of the faithfull shew much sinfull fear when he was in Abimelechs country Alas if Samsons hair be cut he is no stronger than other men Oh the wise dispensation of God! Sometimes the strong Christian stumbleth and falleth when the weak standeth And why is all this but as the Apostle teacheth us to shew That the root beareth us and not we the root Rom. 11. 18. Christ keepeth us to him we do not keep Christ to our selves Lastly That it is God alone who establisheth as appeareth By the prayers of Gods people And it 's a Rule of Austins of old against the Pelagians It is an absurd thing to pray unto God for that which is in our own power If we can establish our selves why do we pray that God would not lead us into temptation Do we not therein proclaim that our own power our own strength cannot preserve us in any temptation Thus David prayeth Uphold me according to thy Word Psa 119. 116. and Psal 51. 12. Uphold me with thy free spirit The guilt upon his soul for those grosse sins would have swept him away like a flood had not God mercifully upheld him and as the godly have declared this by prayer so also by their praises and thanksgiving acknowledging that they could never have gone through such exercises conflicted with such temptations had not the Lord supported them They wonder to see how their hearts were kept up under such dejections Thus David Psal 63. 8. My soul followeth hard after thee thy right hand upholdeth me And Psal 145. 14. The Lord upholdeth those that fall though they fall yet he doth not quite take off his hand from them but raiseth them up again Thus you see how true the Text is That it is God who establisheth us SERM. CXXXI The most eminent for Godlinesse need to be established by God as well as the meanest which Establishment is in Christ Jesus 2 COR. 1. 21. Now he which establisheth us together with you in Christ c. THe next thing considerable is the Subject of this Establishment with the Object wherein The Subject is Us with you In this doth appear the Apostles modesty and humility Though he had such a plerophory and did exceed many others as much as the Cypresse doth the shrubs yet he attributeth it not to his own strength or power but to the grace of God If God leave him then this Samson is no more than other men And when he saith With you this is to be understood indefinitely not universally For who can think that every Corinthian was thus established anointed and sealed But it is ordinary with the Apostle when writing to Churches to speak of them as those that are truly godly either because many were so or else because in charity it was meet for him to think so Or lastly because according to their outward calling and profession they declared themselves obliged and bound thereunto Thus writing to the Church of the Ephesians he speaketh generally Grieue not the Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption Ephes 4. 30. In the next place you have the Object and that is in Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Christum Some render it as being more emphatical The sense is that we are incorporated as it were into Christ and thereby established for out of Christ we are as reeds shaken with every wind From these two particulars we may observe two Doctrines to be briefly dispatched at this time The first is That even the most eminent in godlinesse do need Gods power to stablish them as the weakest and most infirm Even the Pauls that are like gyants when others are but as dwarfs are not preserved by their own power It 's Gods right hand that upholdeth them and if that be removed they are no more than other men This is a very necessary truth to be improved for the comfort of those that are weak in their own sense and feeling Whatsoever encouragements you declare to them they are ready to put off all with this It is true such as Paul such as Abraham and David that were starres of the first magnitude these could do so God was in a special manner present with them But we must not argue from these Cedars to such Briars as we are whereas this Text sheweth that all are alike as to this dependance alone upon God Us with you saith the Apostle and therefore we have him Rom. 8. and in other places putting himself in the number of other Christians and a guing for their justification perseverance and eternal glory by such arguments as are common to all believers not from any thing peculiar and extraordinary in himself So that all believers have the same God the same Christ to rest their souls upon though they differ much in their inherent graces Thus we may see David a president herein Psal 32. 6. when he had declared Gods great goodnesse to him upon his purpose to confess his sins I said I will confesse my transgressions unto the Lord thou forgavest the iniquity of my sinne that is spoken by way of aggravation whatsoever was guilty and damnable in it though never in so heinous a manner thou didst pardon it then mark the inference For this shall every one that is godly pray unto thee for this because God did so with David whereas it might be objected Though God did so with David yet will he with such an unworthy wretch as I am But David answereth you For this euery godly man shall be encouraged to pray To demonstrate the Doctrine viz. That the strongest Christians are alone stablished by the power of God consider these particulars First The examples of the fals of the most godly men that are recorded in Scripture By which it is plain that not they themselves but the power of God did preserve them and when that had forsaken them being left to themselves they fall into the mire Thus David and Peter are sad
Christ Wonder not but say they wanted the root which is Jesus Christ SERM. CXXXII Of the spiritual anointing which Believers receive from God 2 COR. 1. 21. And hath anointed us c. THat which the Apostle called Confirmation and Establishment the great and precious worke of God upon the hearts of his people is metaphorically declared under three similitudes The first is anointing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because the Priests in the Old Testament used by anointing to be inaugurated into their Office and sometimes the Prophets also as we reade of Elisha 1 King 19. 16. Hence Beza doth interpret this place of the Ministers of the Gospel as if by us were meant us Ministers For saith he he is asserting the dignity and excellency of the Ministry in opposition to those calumnies that were cast upon Paul and his Colleagues This interpretation of Beza's Stapleton doth greedily catch at and maketh use thereof to oppose Calvin who doth understand it of believers in the general But first Beza though he thinketh the Apostles meaning is principally of Church-officers yet he doth not gain-say if any shall understand it of believers comparing that place of Peter with this where Christians are said to be a Royal Priesthood 1 Pet. 2. 9. Neither doe I meet with any Popish Commentator but Stapleton that doe expoundit of Ministers only From this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to prove the Oyle or Chrisme that is used in Popery when they baptize children is ridiculous but we may speak more to that in the next verse where sealing is spoken of The Text of it self is plain whereas in the Old Testament Kings and Priests were set apart for their Office by an external anointing which did externally represent some inward power and virtue of God poured out upon them In the New Testament this is applied to the efficacy of Gods Spirit that is upon believers they have all though not a material one yet an invisible and spiritual anointing which is the grace of Gods Spirit in the soul for they are to the soul what oyl was to the body in the several effects thereof So that we observe All true believers have a spiritual anointing from God They are Gods anointed ones Thus Psal 105. 15. Touch not mine anointed and doe my Prophets no harme Yea Habak 3. 13. all the people of God are called his anointed which caused Grotius though very absurdly to understand the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spoken of Hebr. 11. 26. where Moses is said To esteeme the reproaches of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Aegypt Not of Christ but the people of Israel as if they were the Christ or anointed one in that Text This will much gratifie the Socinian In the New Testament we have a notable place to confirme this Doctrine 1 John 2. 20. But ye have an unction from the holy one and ye know all things And vers 27. The anointing which you have received of him abideth in you and ye need not that any man teach you Here is the anointing or ointment as some understand because anointing say they is a transient action and so passeth away whereas the Apostle speaketh of something permanent in us we may comprehend both Now it is good to mark the opposition for the Apostle having before spoken of the Antichristian party how that deluded many by specious pretences he cometh with an adversative But ye have the unction by that you are enabled to discerne betweene falshood and truth Yea so farre it worketh in you that ye need not any man should teach you that is say some not exclusively but comparatively for so a negative expression is sometimes used If there be not this unction from God all humane teaching is in vain So that as Calvin and others well observe he doth not speak here against the use of the Ministry as Illuminatists and others pretend For then why should the Apostle teach them in this Epistle while he saith They need no man to teach them Again the Apostle speaketh of the fundamentals and essentials of Religion as if he had said You are not so rude and ignorant as to be taught the principles for so all Christians growne up should not need a Ministry for plantation and a foundation but edification and further instruction Therefore because the Hebrewes were negligent herein how severely doth the Apostle reprove them Hebr. 5. and Chap. 6 Further the meaning may be Ye need not any other man that is of the heretical way should teach you you have received the truth of God from us you need not goe to them to be instructed Thus the Orthodox may say We have informed you in the sound knowledge of God you need not to go to Papists to Socinians for more light and truth By this Text we see that though anointing doth chiefly referre to the worke of grace yet it also comprehends knowledge for Oyle was used to keep up the light of their lampes and therefore Priests and Prophets were anointed So that this very expression is very noble and magnificent You are the anointed ones of God if you doe truly believe you have an unction from the holy one Now how will this title be applied to ignorant and prophane persons Have they this choice anointing May you not call a dunghill sweet ointment as well But to enlarge this excellent point we must First Know Who is the fountain of this spiritual ointment and the Text saith It is God John saith The holy one that is the Lord Christ who therefore hath his name Messias and Christ because he is anointed as the Head and then as from Aaron's head it runneth downe to his members he is the anointed Head and we the anointed Members Whether this anointing of Christ referreth to his Divine Nature or Humane needeth not to be disputed for it is certaine it belongeth to him as God-man Hence Isaiah 61. 1. Christ saith The Lord hath anointed me to preach the Gospel Acts 10. 38. God is there said To anoint Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power So that this anointing of Christ was in him as in us the cause of all that power and vertue we doe partake of Therefore when it is said Psalm 45. vers 7. of Christ Thou lovest righteousnesse and hatest iniquity therefore God hath anointed thee with oyle of gladnesse above thy fellowes That is not an argument à priori as if therefore Christ were anointed because he loved righteousnesse but à●posteriori by way of signe and manifestation hereby it was made known that he was the anointed of God Thus the spiritual anointing of Gods people is the cause of all that fragrancy and sweet smell that is in their lives Secondly Let us compare the properties of material oyle with this spiritual anointing And First It was used as you heard in setting apart of Kings and Priests for their Office yea most things in the Temple were consecrated by the anointing of
were accustomed to bodily exercises did make much use of it It was necessary to combate and conflict with enemies Thus also it is here all Christians are called to a spiritual wartare and that with principalities and powers in high places as well as with flesh and blood They are continually to put on their armour against all the assaults of the Devil Now this could not be done unlesse we had this oyle this anointing from the Spirit of God In the Spirit of God we are to goe out against all the assaults and temptations of Satan In the name of Christ we are to set upon these Goliahs How many have been overcome in this battel even of Gods own people because they had not this establishing grace ready at hand Doe not thinke to get into Heaven without a sore conflict with Anakims in the way There must be a wildernesse and a red Sea to passe through before thou canst enter into Canaan And therefore for this end have we this anointing whereby we may be the more confirmed and having done all things to stand as it is Ephes 6. 13. What more is to be said to this point will come in upon the other metaphorical termes Therefore let us improve this And First We see what a glorious and excellent title the name of a Christian is for that signifieth as much as one anointed If thou art a Christian in deed as well as in name thou hast this anointing and unction that is here spoken of How farre then are all prophane and wretched sinners from the reality of this name What have they to doe with the name who are so contrary to the thing it self Art thou anointed that smellest of the very flames of hell Thy tongue thy actions doe all discover it There are no sonnes of Boanerges that can thunder terribly enough against such reproaches and dishonours yea blasphemies to the holy name and profession of Christianity Use 2. Of Instruction What is a special preservative against all heresies and damnable opinions even this spiritual unction For that doth not onely illuminate the minde but sanctifie the heart also And if a man have never so much knowledge by education and other meanes if he hath not also this spiritual teaching he is a ready prey for the Devil Onely you must know that this unction is not speedily and in an instant accomplished in the people of God it is successively and by degrees Even as it was with the Lord Christ though he was anointed to be the Lord of his people and he had the right to this even from his Incarnation yet the actual exercise and manifestation of this was not compleated till his Ascension into his glory Thus the spiritual unction of Gods people will not be fully finished till they are made perfect in Heaven And therefore for the present both their knowledge and their graces are but in part which consideration should keepe us from being scandalized if we see that even those believers who yet have all received this unction from God if in things not fundamentall they differ from one another Use 3. Of Exhortation To wicked men to take heed how they persecute or oppose these anointed ones how contemptible and vile they may be in thy eyes it is no matter you see how the Lord hath dignified them he hath set his mark upon them what you doe against them he taketh as done against himselfe they are as the apple of his eye David when but cutting off a piece of Saul's garment was smitten in his heart because he was the Lords anointed yet that was onely an external unction Saul had not the spiritual anointing Do thou therefore take heed of reproaching deriding and persecuting such as God hath anointed with the graces of his Spirit Use 4. Of Admonition to all the Godly that they should doe nothing unsuitably to this anointing Heresies and impieties doe not agree with this excellent composition Thy spiritual ointment is to discover it selfe in all companies in all temptations in all exercises The more precious ointment is stirred the sweeter it smelleth So the more God afflicteth thee chastizeth thee the more he doth pound thee as it were in the mortar the more doth thy preciousnesse manifest thy selfe We reade Matthew 26. 7 13. that when a woman poured an Alabaster box of precious ointment upon Christs head that Christ did so farre encourage her that he said Wheresoever the Gospel should be preached there also should this that the woman had done for a memorial of her And yet when thou confessest Christ in the midst of a wicked generation when thou art ready to part with all for Christ when he requireth it thou doest more for Christ than this woman did Look then to thy self that all thoughts all words and actions favour of this ointment whatsoever is of sinne and lust within thee thinke that is of the dung-hill that is of vomit and filthy mire SERM. CXXXIII Gods People are his sealed ones 2 COR. 1. 22. Who hath also sealed us WE come to the second noble Priviledge which the Apostle attributeth to the Corinthians for although we told you the same benefit is represented under three metaphoricall similitudes yet every one of them hath a distinct notion as this of sealing hath from that of anointing though both intend the confirmation and establishment mentioned in the former verse Some Popish Writers would from hence prove their spurious non-instituted Sacraments as by anointing they would have their oylin baptism as also in their extreme unction established and by sealing their Sacrament of Confirmation wherein likewise they use their chrisme and oil blasphemously calling it oleum salutis the oyl of salvation Hence they tell us confirmation is usually called in antiquity signaculum and the obsignation of the holy Ghost bringing this Text for the proof thereof as Vicecomes a great Popish Ritualist lib. 1. 2. de confirmatione would make us beleeve but first this Interpretation confuteth that of Stapleton who limits the interpretation to Ministers only whereas Baptism Confirmation and extreme Unction were applyed to private Christians and secondly they are never yet able to prove any such Sacrament of confirmation as they speak of Indeed in Antiquity there was Confirmation used in the Church of God When persons baptized in their infancy were afterwards by Church-officers called to account about their knowledge and Christian life wherein if approved they were commended by prayer to God for their establishment in the Christian faith against all persecutions and oppositions The use whereof Calvin wisheth were brought again into the Church of God as being advantagious to prevent heresies as also to reprove the carelesnesse and negligence of parents about the education of their children but as for that abominable abuse of this afterwards in Popery making a Sacrament thereof adding thereunto many Popish and ridiculous ceremonies This is a noisome weed not any plant of Gods planting We are therefore to enquire what
speak to this sealing of Gods Spirit upon the hearts of beleevers though in other terms This I have mentioned is pregnant for having said that he who keepeth Gods Commandements dwelleth in him and he in him Whereas it might be said how shall we know that he dwelleth in us May we not be deluded and deceived No saith he hereby we know that he abideth in us by the spirit which he hath given us and lest any man though living loosely and carnally should pretend to this spirit he saith They that have it keep his Commandements Thus doubtings and sinnefull diffidence is excluded on one hand and all carnal presumption on the other hand The last Text to bring in assistance to this truth shall be 1 John 5. 8 9 10. where the Apostle speaketh of three Witnesses on earth as he had before in heaven viz. water and the bloud and the spirit Now although there be many perplexed controversies about this passage yet I shall pitch upon that which is most probable without further disquieting of you It seemeth to be without doubt that the Apostle alludeth to the legall administrations wherein there was bloud for expiation and water for cleansing by which is represented justification and sanctification and these being wrought in us do evidently witnesse that Jesus is the Christ and Sonne of God We finding these glorious effects upon our souls cannot but acknowledge that Doctrine but because these are not enough of themselves seeing that sanctified and justified persons may be under great discouragements therefore he addeth the Spirit also It is true the same spirit is said to be a witnesse in heaven but that was because of the extraordinary and visible Testimony that it gave to Christ but here it speaketh of the witnesse it giveth on earth and that must be the sealing spoken off in other places for he saith verse 6. It is the spirit that beareth witnesse because the spirit is truth having there also mentioned water and bloud Verse 10. he seith He that beleeveth on the Sonne of God hath the witnesse in himself Thus you see that as God hath abundantly provided for the holinesse of his people by his spirit to quicken them up therein so also for the assurance and consolation of his children to establish them therein Oh how greatly are we indebted unto the Lord Jesus Christ who giveth us his Spirit not only to leade us into the truth and mortifie the deeds of the flesh but also to fill us with comfort and to assure us that we are the children of God So that it is the duty of the Ministers of the Gospel not only to improve the former truth but this also and to presse you upon the sealing work of Gods Spirit as well as the sanctifying Hath not the Spirit of God this Name given it to be called the Comforter John 14. and shall we divide the operations of Gods Spirit minding him as he is an holy spirit but not a comforting Spirit Having thus informed you what the Scripture declareth in this matter I shall give you a large and popular description of the nature of this sealing and the opening of the several parts touched therein will much conduce to the knowledge thereof The sealing of Gods Spirit may be described after this manner It is a supernaturall and gracious work of Gods Spirit upon the hearts of sanctified persons in a secret and unspeakable manner whereby they are confirmed and established in the Covenant of grace as belonging to them in particular by such means which God hath appointed thereunto that through the sence thereof they may daily walk more and more boldly joyfully and thankefully notwithstanding all discouragements to the contrary till they be made compleatly happy in heaven I have made this description the larger because I would take in every particular considerable about it as much as may be And First I give two Qualifications or Adjuncts to this work of Gods Spirit It is supernatural and gracious Supernatural and that if we respect either rectified nature or corrupted nature Rectified nature for Adam in the state of integrity though he was made perfectly holy yet he had not this Gospel-sealing no more then he was in Christ as a Mediatour for had he been thus sealed he would certainly have persevered and although Adam was partaker of the holy Ghost yet it was as he is the third person not as the spirit of Christ viz. purchased by his death for those that are his so that in this respect we may say this sealing is a priviledge above the nature of Adam while considered before his apostacy but then I call it supernaturall chiefly in respect of corrupted nature for as man naturally of himself hath no power to that which is gracious so neither to that which is comfortable and joyfull All the world all Ministers and Angels cannot powr one drop of this assurance and joy into thy soul unlesse the Spirit of God inable thee thereunto As it is supernaturall so it is gracious for this floweth from the former There is nothing in thee to deserve this establishing as Gods grace sanctifying found thee dead in thy sinnes so his sealing and comforting findeth thee in a guilty despairing way and therefore as God might leave every prophane man to wallow in his lusts and so let him perish thus also might he forsake every guilty conscience under the burthen of thy sinnes and suffer thee to be a Cain to be a Judas even to fall from an hell here into an hell hereafter So that not only by grace we are sanctified but by grace we are healed Blesse God for any establishment of soul against fears and doubts as well as for victory against any lusts It is meerly of Free-grace that we are thus sealed In the next place Secondly we have the generall nature of it with the efficient cause The work of Gods Spirit It is true in the Text it is said That God doth seal us and so whatsoever works there are ad extra from God to the creature they are all common to the three Persons yet there is a peculiar order and appropriation which the Scripture taketh notice of So that it is made the work of the Father to send his Sonne into the world It is made the work of the Sonne to offer up himself a Sacrifice for our sinnes And it is made the proper work of Gods Spirit to apply the benefits of Christs death to our souls therefore sanctification is attributed to the Spirit so also consolation and sealing thereunto Thus the Texts we mentioned formerly give all this work to the Spirit of God as in an appropriated manner doing this for us It is not then of our selves or of our own power that we can obtain this priviledge but it is wrought alone by Gods Spirit As we have no free-will to the grace of God so neither to the comforts God as he is called a God of all
if you ask Have all the sanctified persons of God this sealing Have none the sanctification of the Spirit but they must also have the witnessing of the Spirit I answer this Question because of great practical importance shall God assisting be handled by it self after the description hath been explained That which I shall here take notice of is That sanctification is necessarily presupposed to this sealing A great Prince will not set his seal to dung to make an impression there neither will God to an heart unsanctified For as in matter of Doctrine God will not vouchsafe miracles to confirm that which is a lie neither in practicals will the Spirit of God witnesse to that heart which is not made holy For indeed it should witnesse a lie in such a case informing such they are the sonnes of God when indeed they are the children of the Devil This order of Gods Spirits first sanctifying and then sealing is clear Ephes 1. 13. In whom after ye believed ye were sealed Those eminent Divines who defined faith to be assurance making it the same with the sealing of Gods spirit are gravelled at this Text and therefore make this Objection If faith be assurance be the sealing how doth the Text say After we believed we were sealed To this therefore Piscator answereth not yeelding that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should be rendred Having beleeved as of a thing past but beleeving as in the present but there is too much forcing in this interpretation Others they consider of faith as it hath two parts Illumination of minde and fiducial assurance Now say they the Apostle meaneth by faith the former work of faith and so the meaning is After you were enlightned to know the truth you were confirmed and assured but that opinion making faith justifying to be an assurance that Christ is mine is justly refused It is plain then that when the Spirit of God hath in order of nature for in time they may be both together sanctified a man throughout whereby he is made a new creature then the Spirit of God maketh this glorious stamp upon him then he giveth him this seal as an honourable priviledge whereby he may know himself to be the Lords Even as in antiquity none might have seals but persons of honour and dignity So that the natural and unregenerate person is to stand aloof off thou hast nothing to do in this priviledge thou art not the man whom the great King of Heaven and earth doth purpose thus to honour We proceed in the Description and there we meet with the formal Nature of it wherein it doth essentially consist with the object thereof The Nature of it is In confirming and establishing the heart of a man For this is the chief and usual end of seals to ratifie a thing and to make it no longer uncertain and doubtfull And to this property doth the Scripture chiefly attend For whereas the soul though sanctified is apt to be in daily fears and doubts about Gods favour and grace towards it it fluctuateth up and down having no subsistency the Spirit of God cometh and consolidateth the soul inabling it to rest satisfied in this that God is his God that his sinnes are pardoned that he is become a reconciled Father in Christ And if you say Why do we not need the Spirit of God to do this Cannot we by our graces by our repentance and holy life sufficiently establish our own souls in peace No by no means we need the Spirit of God to comfort as you heard as well as to sanctifie and that for these Reasons First It is very hard for a man whose guilty conscience doth presse him and condemn him daily telling him that he hath deserved at Gods hands to be eternally tormented in hell not to thinke because God may doe thus that therefore he will do so In such terrours and affrights we look more to what we have deserved we look more to what God may do then what he will we are naturally suspicious and think the worst of God even as we doe to man If we have offended a man greatly and it lieth in his power to undo us we are never quiet we cannot but think when ever the opportunity is he will be avenged and therefore we dare not trust him Yea though we have given no just cause if others have taken up an unkind spirit towards us we expect nothing else from them but our ruine when it is in their power Therefore for all Saul's tears and good works to David yet he would never trust him Now although there be no cause for us to have such suspicious thoughts about God for he hath graciously promised that he will receive us insomuch as not to believe him herein is to give more credit to a man whose words many times satisfie us than to God who is truth it self yet the heart being guilty and full of fears doth work in this doubtfull manner about God How hard is it to bring the afflicted sinner to good perswasions about God and that though by promises and other wayes God hath so abundantly provided against such distrust Here then is the reason why we need the sealing of Gods Spirit we cannot perswade our selves but God will doe what he may do and what we have deserved And A second Reason followeth upon the former We can hardly be perswaded that the great and good things which we stand in need of God will ever bestow upon us who are so unworthy of them Can a beggars daughter be perswaded that a great King will marry her But here is a farre greater disproportion What will the great God of Heaven so holy so full of majesty look graciously upon me and not only forgive me my sinnes but advance me to eternal glory These things are very improbable Shall Joseph be freed not only from the prison but promoted to the greatest honour in the Land next to the King Who would have believed it And thus it is here the soul having low and humble thoughts of it self cannot be perswaded that the great God of Heaven will look upon such despicable wretches as they are 3. The way of evangelical confidence with the comfortable effects thereof are wholly supernatural And therefore no wonder if we need the Spirit of God to help us therein Not only holinesse and grace is supernatural but assurance and joy are likewise supernatural As we cannot pray without the Spirit helping our infirmities so neither are we able to call God Father If faith in Christ by which we are justified be supernatural then also is the comfort and peace flowing from the knowledge thereof As the Doctrine of the Gospel is by divine revelation flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto us that Christ is the Sonne of God so neither can flesh and blood enable us to the perswasion of this Mediator as loving me and giving himself for me Certainly if it be the gift of
for the future Considerations clearing the truth 1. Though we have oft had experience of Gods goodness yet every new trouble is ready to startle us 2. Though the promises be sufficient grounds for our trust yet experiences do much promote faith 3. 'T is a good way to keep the heart calme even to exercise trust in God for the future 4. The future good things that we are to trust in the Lord for are both spirituall and temporall Object Answer 1. There are motives to trust in God from both the personal and general priviledges of believers 2. What are the opposites to trusting in God 1. Presumption Signs of presumption 1. When we walk not by Scripture-light 2. When we are confident without a promise 3. When we separate the means from the end 4. When we use false means 5. When we think by our own strength to obtain grace and glory 2. Despair Whence despair arises 1. From low thoughts of God As 1. The power of God 2. The goodness of God 3. Of the merits of Christ 2. From wrong apprehensions about our sins 3. This grace of trusting in God cannot be expected to be perfect here 'T is our duty not to separate Gods power and goodnesse from the means required How God and the creature work together 1. All Gods spiritual mercies have many things concurrent before they be accomplished 2. The opposing of these requisites one against another hath bred much confusion and errour How we should relie wholly upon Christ and yet make use of the means and how we may know whether we do or no. 1. When we acknowledge whatsoever we have to come from Christ 2. When we attribute no merit or causality to the means 3. When we rest upon Christ onely for our justification 4. When we put no trust or confidence in the means 5. We dishonour God in the use of the means when we think we profit him thereby The most eminent in gifts and graces need the prayers of their inferiours Reasons 1. Because there is a more peculiar promise made to the prayers of many then one 2. Because the Church in Scripture is called a body whose parts stand in need one of another Use People ought to pray for their spirituall guides Considerations explaining the truth 1. 'T is an errour of the Socinians to say God commands prayer only in the New Testament 2. No merit or confidence to be put in our prayers 3. Ministers are to pray for their people and people for their Ministers 4. This supposeth the people to be both gifted and gracious 5. Many things there are which people are to desire of God for their Ministor 1. That they may be preserved 2. That their word may be suceesfull 3. That their gifts and graces may be quickned 4. That they may be saved Whensoever we have received mercies from God we are by praise and thankfullness to acknowledge then to him What is required to the praising of God 1. An acknowledgement that God alone is the Authour of all our mercies 2. Both the generall and particular acts of faith 3. Love to God 4. Heavenly mindedness 5. Chearfulnes Motives to praise God 1. 'T is an excellent duty in that we are so backward to it 2. It is called a Sacrifice 3. 'T is a debt due to God 4. The chief motive is thankfulnesse 5. A thankfull heart is the most proper disposition to Gospel dispensations 6. The neglect of this duty is an argument of a rotten heart Our ordinary temporal enjoyments are the gifts of God 1. The effects of natural causes are still the gift of God 2. The comforts that flow from moral causes are still the gifts of God 3. What we receive from men 't is still the gift of God 4. Whatsoever we have by the art and skill of others 5. Such things as come upon us without our care Reasons Why these are all Gods gifts 1. God is not necessitated to give them 2. We have oft forseited them by our sins 3. We are to pray to him for them Not only personal but publick prayers and praises are acceptable to God Reasons 1. Hereby the honour of God is more promoted 2. Hereby our love to one another is much quickened 3. God in a more especial manner present there 4. Herein the lively may prevail for the dull and indisposed Mercies vouch safed to the Ministers are to be accounted as Church mercies An holy rejoycing and glorying in the graces of God is lawfull What is required to our glorying in the gifts and graces we have received from God 1. An high esteem of our graces 2. A certain perswasion that we have them 3. Good grounds and Scripture-demonstrations thereof 4. The Spirit of God In what respect 't is lawfull thus to rejoyce and glory 1. As they are the fruits of Gods favour 2. As they bear up our hearts against all accusations either external or internal Wherein this rejoycing is unlawfull 1. When we rejoyce in our graces as if they were perfect 2. When we so rejoyce in them as so rest upon them 3. When we rejoyce in them as coming from our selves not God The witnesse of a good conscience is great ground of comfort What is required to a good conscience 1. That it witness according to the word of God 2. The help of the Spirit to instruct us in the true meaning of the Word 3. Pure aims and intentions 4. Inward sanctification What else is requisite to a well-regulated conscience 1. The witnessing and sealing power of the Spirit with our consciences How the Spirit of God doth not witness with our consciences How it doth 1. Effectively 2. Objectively What are the effects of the Spirit by which our consciences are rightly guided in witnessing to us 1. A purpose to leave all known sin 2. A zeal for the glory of God 3. An holy confidence in our approachings unto God 4. Love to the Brethren 5. Self-denial 6. Delight in heavenly things Distinctions concerning the testimony of our conscience 1. 'T is either particular or general 2. It witnesseth either perfection or sincerity 3. Conscience is either habitually enabled or actually prepared to testifie 4. The testimony of conscience is either alone or relating to Christ A believer may be assured he performeth duties with an upright heart What is required to a certain knowledg of our being in a state of grace 1. A firm assent to the truth of Gods promises and Word 2. A particular application of the promises to themselves What is required to an experimental discerning of our graces 1. An humble heart 2. A regular disposition in the soul 3. An holy fear 4. The help of Gods Spirit What are the hinderances which keep men from looking after an assurance of their sincerity 1. Self-fulness and presumptuous security 2. A prophane careless spirit 3. Carking carefulness 4. Despairing and discouraging thoughts Of Gods commands to get assurance The effects of our souls 1. A quiet heart 2. Spiritual