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A03342 CVIII lectures vpon the fourth of Iohn Preached at Ashby-Delazouch in Leicester-shire. By that late faithfull and worthy minister of Iesus Christ. Arthur Hildersam.; Lectures upon the fourth of John Hildersam, Arthur, 1563-1632.; Cotton, John, 1584-1652. 1632 (1632) STC 13462; ESTC S119430 700,546 622

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saith he Matth. 11. 19. yea he was wont to take the benefit of Gods creatures not of such onely as serue for mans necessity but of such also as God hath giuen vs for our delight It was noted of him by his carping enemies that he was wont to drinke wine Luke 7. 34. And it is said of him twice that he suffered his feet to be annointed with very precious oyntment Luke 7. 38. and Iohn 12. 3. 5. neither refused he to goe to feasts when he was bidden no not vpon the Sabbath day Luke 14. 1. And for his Disciples we know there was offence taken at him because he did not teach them to fast Luke 5. 33. Why then doth he forbeare his meate at this time surely because he would not let slip a notable occasion and opportunity of winning soules to God which he knew was now to be offered vnto him Hee had another matter in hand which he calls his meat which he did as earnestly desire as any hungry man can desire meat and which he knew would delight refresh and comfort him as much as any meat can doe him that stands most in need of it and that was to winne and conuert soules vnto God Why but may some say he might haue eaten somewhat in the meane while in the space wherein the woman was going to fetch her neighbours and they in comming out of the City vnto him So that his eating of somewhat need haue beene no hinderance to that good worke he so much desired to do but a furtherance rather vnto it I answer it is true he might haue done so but his heart was so taken vp either in secret prayer to God for them or in meditation of that he was to teach them when they should come or with the ioyfull expectation of their comming and of the good he knew he should haue occasion to doe as it made him quite to forget all hunger and thirst Now that we may receiue our instruction from this notable example of our Sauiours zeale which is here set forth for our imitation let vs obserue these three points in it 1. That he is so carefull to take the occasion and opportunity that is here offered of inlarging his Fathers Kingdome that though he was hungry he neglects his meat for it 2. That he calls this his meate to doe the will of his Father in instructing and conuerting of men 3. That though he had time to eate without any hinderance vnto that worke yet the care he had of this businesse and ioy he conceiued in the expectation of the good hee was to doe made him forget his hunger And from hence this Doctrine will arise for our instruction That he that will be a true Disciple of Christ must be zealous in the Lords businesse zealous in seruing God and seeking to honour him It is not sufficient to a mans comfort that he hath professed the truth serued God in his calling done the duties God hath required of him vnlesse he haue done it with a zealous heart and earnest affection This is required of vs that would approoue our selues to God in preaching of his Word Apollos is commended for this Acts 18. 25. that being feruent in the spirit hee taught diligently the things of the Lord This is required in them that heare the Word Luke 24. 32. Did not our hearts burne within vs when hee opened to vs the Scriptures This is required of them that would pray with comfort Iames 5. 16. The effectuall feruent prayer of a righteous man auaileth much This is required in euery part of that seruice that we doe vnto God we must be Rom. 12. 11. Feruent in spirit seruing the Lord. Yea this is in generall required of vs in our whole profession and practise of Religion Tit. 2. 14 Christ gaue himselfe for vs to purifie to himselfe a peculiar people zealous of good workes Therefore it is noted to the praise of Iehosaphat that hee lift vp his heart to the waies of the Lord 2. Chron. 17. 6. And of Hezechia it is said that in all the workes he began for the seruice of the house of God to seeke his god hee did it with all his heart and prospered 2. Chron. 31. 31. And of Iosiah that he turned to the Lord with all his heart and with all his soule and with all his might 2. King 23. 25. They maintained and held out the profession and practise of Gods pure Religion with great zeale and earnestnesse of affection The Reasons and grounds of the Doctrine are principally three 1. Euery one that lookes to be saued by Christ must be a follower of Christ He that saith he abideth in him saith the Apostle 1. Iohn 2. 6. must himselfe walke also euen as he walked The best euidence that we can haue that we remaine in him is when we are conformed vnto his example and by his spirit made like vnto him 2. The Lord cannot abide such as serue him without zeale This is plaine by that speech of Christ to the Laodiceans Reu. 3. 16. 1. He professeth that he liketh not so ill of him that is cold that is an Idolater or a worldling a man of no Religion as he doth of the Christian that is lukewarme 2. That he will spue such a one out of his mouth yea he threatneth the Church of Ephesus that because she had lost her first loue her zeale that once she had he would come against her shortly and remooue her candlesticke if she did not repent and amend this fault Reu. 2. 5. 3. The Spirit of God is said to be like vnto fire in all them that haue receiued it and from thence comes that speech quench not the spirit 1. Thess. 5. 19. And all that are regenerated by the Spirit of Christ are said to be baptized with the Holy Ghost and with fire Matth. 3. 11. and where fire is there must needes be some heate The Vse of this Doctrine is 1. To conuince a great error in iudgement that is common in the world We see this is held as a perfect definition of a good Protestant that he is a man found in iudgement and in the knowledge of the truth but not forward nor zealous either in the profession or practise of it yea it is counted the wisedome of a Christian and euen of a Minister too to be a moderate man in Religion not forward nor hot nor zealous in it Whereas we haue heard that such as are regenerate and haue Gods Spirit cannot be without this heate and zeale 2. That in Gods account neither Papist nor Turke is in so bad an estate in some respect as the Gospeller is that is void of zeale 3. That God hath threatned to depriue them of the Gospell that professe it without zealous loue vnto it 2. To exhort vs to examine our selues well whether there be any true zeale in vs yea or no that if we want it we may be humbled and seeke
minded and dare say nothing for God hath enioyned them silence and forbidden them to meddle with thee therefore they can say nothing therefore they dare say nothing Thou art a priuiledged person I tell thee and I dare say thou gloriest much in it But thou wilt finde it a wofull priuiledge one day Cain had such a priuiledge and protection Gen. 4. 15. God forbad all men to kill him or to touch him because he would haue him to be spectacle of his wrath vnto men And thou hast a priuiledge too God hath forbidden all men to rebuke thee to speake of good things in thy presence that thou maist goe on and fill vp the measure of thy sinne to such as thou art the Lord himselfe speaketh in this manner Reioyce O young man in thy youth and let thy heart cheere thee in the daies of thy youth and walke in the waies of thine heart and in the sight of thine eyes Eccles. 11. 9. If thou hadst so much grace as to iudge rightly of this thy priuiledge thou wouldst take small pride in it but pray rather that thou maist so liue as no godly man may be vnwilling or affraid to reproue thee according as Dauid a great King did Let the righteous smite me said he it shall be a kindnesse and let him reprooue me it shall be an excellent oile Psal. 141. 5. But you must obserue that when our Sauiour Christ was thus silent he stood as a priuate person In his publike ministry he spake good things and taught the will of God neuerthelesse freely and boldly though the Pharisees and other wicked men were present when he taught And by his example we are taught that we should not be daunted nor discouraged in our ministry by the presence of any wicked man whatsoeuer he be but we should do our work faithfully and chearefully whatsoeuer our hearers be For first though any come to heare vs with neuer so bad a minde God can and doth oft catch him and change his minde as he did the officers whom the Pharisees had sent to apprehend Christ Iohn 7. 45 46. and that vnbeleeuer 1. Cor. 14. 25. Secondly and though he doe not so yet our labour shall not be lost vpon them no not vpon the carpers the scorners that heare vs for they shall one day know there hath beene a Prophet amongst them Ezek. 33. 33. yet though this be an infirmity in a Minister to doe his worke heauily amongst such as he seeth no hope to do good vpon yet it is such an infirmity as the best of Gods seruants haue beene subiect to they haue beene apt to receiue great discouragement in their ministry by a bad auditory When God had made knowne vnto Ezekiel what a bad auditory he should preach vnto Ezek. 2. 3 ●…5 They are impudent children and stiffe-hearted surely they will not heare thee neither will they cease for they are a rebellions house it is said Chap. 3. 14. He went to preach to them in much bitternesse and griefe of spirit but saith he the hand of the Lord was strong vpon me that is to say Else I had neuer gone It may seeme by that speech that Iohn Baptist vsed when he saw many of the Pharisees and Saduces come to heare him O generation of vipers who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come Matth. 3. 7. that he was neuer a whit proud of such hearers No more surely are any of vs now to see notorious drunkards or whoremongers or blasphemers or prophane fooles that scorne all goodnesse come to hear●…e vs. On the contrary side when we haue such a people to heare vs as shew by their constancy and chearefulnesse in hearing and by their conuersation also that they are such whose hearts God hath prepared to receiue and obey his truth it doth vs good to preach to such a people be they neuer so learned this giues heart and cheerefulnesse to vs in our ministry and euen set an edge vpon our gifts and makes vs do our worke with more freedome of spirit and with a larger heart than otherwise we should The zeale and feruency which people shew in hearing doth euen warme their Minister and make him more zealous The Apostles had excellent gifts you know and yet the goodnesse of their audience did euen mend their gifts Though they had receiued commission to preach to all Nations Matth. 28. 19. yet they were at first vnwilling to goe to the Gentiles How did God encourage them Surely by making knowne the forwardnesse and readinesse of the Gentiles to receiue the Gospell Before Paul preached to the Gentiles at Antioch they besought him to doe it the whole city came together to heare the Word of God and vpon their first hearing of the Word they shewed much gladnesse when they heard that God had allowed his Word to be preached to the Gentiles and commanded it also yea they glorifyed the Word of the Lord Acts 13. 42. 44. 48. This made Paul so zealous and forward to goe to Macedonia he saw in a vision a man of Macedonia that prayed him saying come ouer into Macedonia and helpe vs Acts 16. 9. That made him shew such a zealous desire to goe and preach to the Romanes because they were so good a people Rom. 〈◊〉 8. 10. Yea our blessed Sauiour himselfe receiued as it were some helpe and increase of gifts by the forwardnesse and zeale of his hearers seeing the multitudes that flocked so to heare him he went vp into a mountaine that they might the better heare him and be opened his mouth set and bent himself to speake so as they might heare and vnderstand him and taught them Mat. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What made him deny so much time to himselfe from preaching as might serue euen for his necessary repast both at this time and also Mar. 3. insomuch as his kinsfolke euen thought him mad for it Mar. 3. 21. Surely the zeale of the people and their great desire to heare the multitude commeth together againe so as they could not so much as eate bread Mar. 3. 20. And if the Apostles and Christ himselfe had euen neede or at least receiued good by this helpe how much more may we The Reasons of this Doctrine are two 1. The faithfull Minister hath no ioy comparable to this when he seeth the forwardnesse of Gods people in receiuing and obeying the truth Iohn the Baptist reioyced to see his hearers flocke after Christ. Iohn 3. 29. The friend of the Bridegroome reioyceth greatly because of the Bridegroomes voice that is that the Bridegroomes voice is so well accepted that he findes so good entertainement with the Bride 2. The more zealous and prepared the audience is the better assistance of his Spirit God is wont to giue to his seruants As it is with thy prayer the better thy heart is prepared to pray the more comfortable and fruitfull shall thy prayer be when he prepares our hearts then will he cause his eare to heare
should ioyne together in it as one man 122 123. Q. Questions disputing See Conference Neuer any prooued a good Scholler in any learning but he that had doubts would moue questions 322. How far forth it is lawfull to make question of or to reason against Gods Word or Workes 230 231. R. Reading We should exercise our selues in the reading of the Word 172. 291. Reason A great sin to examine Religion by carnall reason and to beleeue no more then we can see reason for 151. Reformation What properties are required in true reformation and leauing of sin 85. Regeneration Notes to try it by 5. Religion There is but one true way to saluation 139. It is the strength of a state 429. 279. Religious duties Great force in a conscionable vse of them to keepe a man from vncleannesse and other sins 93. And to breed in a man a confortable assurance of his saluation 343. Repentance There is more required to it then most men dreame 84 85. Late repentance is dangerous 442. Sins repented of though neuer so many and hainous will make vs neuer the lesse acceptable to God 95. No man hath an vpright heart that forsakes not all knowne sins 470. Notes to try our sincerity in leauing of sin 471 Repentance 470. Repentance of regenerate and naturall men distinguished 471. Reproofe The Minister must plainely and particularly reprooue sin 63. Great wisdome is required in reproouing sin 63 Motiues to perswade Ministers to faithfulnesse in this 66. How they may make their reproofe effectuall 66. He that hath grace will take reproofe well loue him the better that deales faithfully with him this way 106. 112 113. Three things that keepe men from accepting it and preseruatines against them 106. Though mens lewdnesse may restraine vs from reprouing them in priuate yet may it not their Minister from publike reproofe 294 295. Men disdaine to be reprooued by such as are no better then themselues and foure remedies against that corruption 364 365. 369 370 Fret not against the publike reproofe of thy sin in the ministry of the word 108. 373. 374. A common sin it is and dangerous not to endure reproofe 109. Reuerence Though outward reuerence be not sufficient yet can we performe no duty of Gods worship well especially in publique without some signification of reuerence euen in the outward gesture of our body 115. 120. Reasons for bodily reuerence in all parts of Gods worship 116. Rules for it 119 120. 125. More reuerence should be shewed at the hearing of the Word read then preached 126. We can performe no seruice to God well without feare and reuerence 115. S. Sacraments Our Sacraements are more cleere and effectuall then those vnder the law ●…0 In the administration of them we should make vse of our eye and behold what is done 127. Sacrifices What they and their manner of offering them did signifie 189. Samaritans The Papists resemble them much 36. Scripture The vndoubted certainty of euery thing that is written therein 249. It is much more full and perfect now then it was vnder the Law 207. To humble and honest hearts they are not obscure 349. 212. What are the causes why they are obscure 213 Pretense of their obscurity will not excuse the neglect of reading them 173. Scriptures ought to bee the rule of tryall for what is taught 174. Secret sins The Lord can discerne and is priuy to our most secret sins 69. Sin is neuer the lesse dangerous to a man because it is cunningly and closely committed 75. Securitie The false ground on which ignorant wicked men secure themselues 76. 429. Generall sec●…rity is a signe of generall calamitie approching 42●… Seducers They are cunning and who are most in danger to take hurt by them 138. Seruants They should loue their Masters and desire and seeke their comfort 492. Sundry other duties they owe but this is the roote of all 493. Cautions limiting their duty 495. Three things wherby they should shew their loue to their Masters 495. Seueritie Required in the Magistrates and all Christi ans in the discountenancing punishing of whoredome and other sins 78. Sicknesse See Delay Signes It is not simply vnlawfull to desire signes for the confirming of our faith 404. Signes of iudgement approaching 428 429. Silence From good words not alwaies vnlawfull 293 Sin Great is the necessity of an effectuall knowledge of sin 6●… 65. The sins of the elect how hainous soeuer shal not hinder their saluation but tend to their good 95. Dangerous to hide our sins and that is done foure waies 104. It will bring Gods curse vpon the house and place where it is committed 158. It is a most loathsome thing and defiles a man 4. Sathan drawes men to sin through some error of their mind and by deceiuing them 73. Of sinning against the Meanes see Meanes It will certainely bring sorrow 438 452. Sinceritie The Lord makes great reckoning of the vprightnesse of the heart 465. Necessary to examine whether our hearts be vpright 53 54. 481. Notes to try that by 53. ●…9 471. 473. 476 480 The Lord delights in the weakest seruices that are done in spirit and truth 192 193. 465. He that hath an vpright heart may know he hath it 239. We should labour by diligent examination to find whether our hearts be vpright 465 466. Sorrow Properties required in the sorrow for sin 85. Extremity if it will disable vs from praying and profiting by the Word 433. Moderate is very profitable necessary 4●…3 We must striue against that that is excessiue and immoderate 43●… Foure remedies against such 436. There is great difference between that of the regenerate that of the carnall man 437. Sin will bring sorrow and great sins great sorr●…wes 438. Soule All mens chiefe care should bee for their soules 450. Speech To speake wickedly is a greater degree of sin then to thinke ill 228. Filthy speech a great sin 87. So is the delight to heare it 88. Spirit The spirit of God in whomsoeuer it dwels is like vnto water in foure respects 3. Why God is called a spirit 196. By the testimonie of the spirit the faithfull are assured of their saluation and hee that hath it may know he hath it 339. The Lord requires delights in the seruice of the spirit see Worship Superiors Disdaine not to be admonished or reproued by thy inferior 107. Superstition Papists are many waies grossely superstitious 156 157 Supper of the Lord. It should bee administred in the publike assembly 122. T. Talke see Speech Tractablenesse A good signe of election to receiue the truth with all readinesse 312 313. Affliction opens the eare and makes men tractable 397. We should pray for a tractable heart foure notes to trie it by 423. The danger of such as cannot be perswaded of many truths though they bee neuer so cleerely taught and confirmed to them 424 425. This hypocrisie is in all by nature that they scorne to be taught
troubles were not so strong there as in Iudea and about Ierusalem Now in his iourney from Iudea into Galile he went through Samaria not of set purpose to teach the Samaritans for as he forbad his Disciples when he sent them forth to preach to enter into the Cities of the Samaritans and bad them goe onely to the lost sheepe of the house of Israel so he saith of himselfe that he was not sent but vnto the lost sheepe of the house of Israel but by occasion onely because it lay directly in his way from that part of Iudea where he was into Galile and therefore the Euangelist saith He must needs go through Samaria As he passed through that countrey he came to Sychar a City of Samaria that was famous in sundry respects for Iacob had dwelt there and giuen to Ioseph his best beloued Sonne his possession neare vnto it and digged a Well which to this day remained and bare the name of Iacobs Well Vpon this Well our Sauiour sate him downe both because he was weary with trauaile and also because he was a thirst and it was about noone For to shew himselfe to be very man and how he was content to take on him the forme of a seruant and debase himselfe for our sakes he tooke our nature with all the infirmities thereof excepting sin and was as it seemeth euen more wearied and weakened with trauell and more thirsty also then his Disciples were for they were able to go further into the City without resting themselues or desiring water As he was sitting thus vpon the Well to rest coole and refresh himselfe There came a woman of Samaria to draw water and he asketh her some to drinke Not so much because he did thirst after drinke though indeed he did so as hath beene said for he knew before she spake what she would answer him and how she would deny him as because he thirsted after the saluation of this wretched woman and would take occasion hereby to conferre with her and to instruct her For so soone as he was entred into conference he forgetteth his thirst and desireth no more any water of her Now the Euangelist saith the occasion he tooke to aske her water was this that his Disciples whose seruice he might haue vsed for the drawing of him some water were gone into the City to buy meat For our Sauiour though he had no house and land of his owne yet he liued not by begging nor of meere almes but had money of his owne which his hearers and friends bestowed on him The woman perceiuing both by his speech and apparell that he was a Iew giueth him no water but wondereth that he being a Iew should aske any of her being a Samaritan and giueth this for the reason why she wondred because such was the mortall hatred that the Iewes did beare to the Samaritans partly by reason of their difference in Religion and partly because of the old iniuries that they had receiued from them as that the Iewes medled not at all nor would haue any dealing with the Samaritans Hereupon follow the words that I haue now read vnto you wherein our Sauiour doth neither reiect her in wrath for being so void of humanity as not to giue a little water to one that asked it in his need nor answereth directly her question nor importuneth her further for water but gently reproueth her yet not for denying water but for not making that vse of him she should haue done and taketh occasion thereby to discourse vnto her of another manner of water that he had to bestow vpon her which she would haue asked of him if she had knowne him But yet because he would draw her on to further speech and stirre vp in her a desire to question and inquire of him he doth not in plaine termes deliuer his meaning to her but in a parable as if he should haue said thus vnto her Thou takest me to be an ordinary Iew and therefore refusest to gratifie me in this small thing but if thou knewest me well and what a gift the Lord maketh offer of vnto thee and all his people in sending me into the world thou wouldest haue esteemed of me better then thou doest thou wouldest haue thought thy selfe not good enough to haue giuen me water but wouldest haue begged of me and I would haue giuen thee a better and farre more excellent kind of water then this is that I haue desired of thee Now there are in these words three principall things to be obserued 1. What it was that he had to bestow on her and which he was desirous to haue bestowed on her water of life by which though in the letter he meaneth spring-water for so she vnderstood him and so is this word vsed Gen. 26. 19. Isaaks seruants digged in Gerar a Well of liuing water yet thereby as by a Metaphor he meant the Spirit of God 2. What her duty was to haue done and how she might haue obtained this water of life She should haue asked it and he would haue giuen it her 3. What the cause was why she asked it not She knew not Christ whom he calleth here that gift of God and who was the person that now spake vnto her The first thing then that offereth it selfe in these words to our consideration is this that our Sauiour calleth the spirit of regeneration water of life For that he meaneth this of the Spirit it is euident both by that which he saith ver 14. where also we shall haue more fit occasion to inquire why he calleth it Spring water or water of Life and more plainly Ioh. 7. 38 39. Where when he had said He that belieueth in me out of his belly shall flow riuers of water of life in the next verse the Euangelist interpreteth him thus This spake he of the spirit from thence then we haue this to learne That the Spirit of God in what heart soeuer it dwelleth is in effect and operation like vnto water For the proofe of this all those places might be brought where the Spirit of God is compared vnto water but I will content my selfe with one or two Esa. 44. 3. the promise which in the beginning of the verse is made I will powre water vpon the thirsty and flouds vpon the dry ground is interpreted thus in the latter end of the same verse I will powre my Spirit vpon thy seed and my blessing vpon thy buds So Ioh. 3. 5. Unlesse a man be borne againe of water and the spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdome of God In which respect also it is vsed in Baptisme to signifie not onely the bloud of Christ but the spirit of regeneration also The reason is the great similitude that is between the Spirit of God and water in effect and operation which may be discerned principally in foure points First whereas before a man be regenerate the Lord is to him and in his
gifts is in respect of the benefit we receiue by the gift and the fruits and consequents of it For first whereas all worldly benefits yea and many excellent gifts of Gods spirit also a man may enioy and perish with them as Esau Saul and Iudas did this whosoeuer receiueth can neuer perish Iob. 3. 16. whosoeuer beleeueth in him shall not perish but haue life euerlasting 2. All other gifts and benefits proceed from this as from their fountaine or else they are no blessings nor can doe vs any good Earthly blessings we haue no title to neither can they doe vs any good without wee haue him also and them for him and his sake him hath he appointed heire of all things saith the Apostle Heb. 12. and God hath created them to be receiued with thanksgiuing saith he 1. Tim. 4. 3 of them which beleeue and know the truth nor spiritual blessings neither he hath blessed vs with all spirituall blessings in heauenly places in Christ saith Paul Eph. 1. 3. in which respect also the Apostle saith that for all blessings we must giue thankes to God the Father by him Col. 3. 17. and Heb. 13. 15. By him let vs offer the sacrifice of prayse to God continually 3. If we haue this gift we may be sure neuer to want any other blessing that shall be good for vs how shall he not with him also saith the Apostle Rom. 8. 32 freely giue vs all things and so saith our Sauiour also Mat. 6. 33. seeke you first the Kingdome of God and his righteousnes and all these things shall be added vnto you The third reason whereby this may appeare to be the greatest of all gifts is in respect of the freenesse of this gift This giues great price and value to euery gift the more free it is the more it is esteemed Now of all the gifts that euer God bestowed vpon man this was the freest gift First nothing neither the good workes he fore-saw we should doe nor the faith he fore-saw we should haue mooued him at the first to finde out this way for our saluation and to purpose to bestow this gift vpon vs but his owne good pleasure onely and free grace He predestinated vs vnto the adoption of children by Iesus Christ vnto himselfe saith the Apostle Ephe. 1. 5. according to the good pleasure of his will 2. Nothing mooued him to giue and bestow this gift vpon vs but his owne good pleasure and free grace for what was there in them vpon whom he b●…stowed it to deserue it by Consider who they were He bestowed not his gift onely vpon some rare persons for their pietie and holinesse as Abraham Iob Mary though if he had it had beene free enough for there was nothing in them to deserue it but vpon vs all Rom. 8. 32. vpon the world Ioh. 3. 16. and what could there be in the world to deserue such a gift 〈◊〉 Ioh. 5. 19. The whole world lies in wickednesse It is therefore to be obserued that the Lord that the freenesse of this gift might be the better acknowledged sent his Sonne at that time when all things in the Church and Common-wealth amongst his owne people were most corrupt and out of order This greatly amplifies the loue of God in this gift Rom. 5. 8. God commendeth his loue towards vs in that when we were yet sinners and enemies also ver 10. Christ died for vs. Thirdly nothing he requires at our hands for the making of this gift our owne but onely that we should feele the need of it and receiue it at his hands He cryes Esa. 55. 1. Hoe euery one that thirsteth come and Ioh. 1. 12. as many as receiued him to them he gaue power to become the Sons of God The Vse of this doctrine is First to teach vs not to rest contented nor to blesse our selues in any blessing or token of Gods fauour we haue receiued till we be assured that God hath giuen vs his owne Sonne This is the only sound cause of ioy Esa. 9. 3. 6. esteeme basely of all other things in comparison of this as Paul did Phil. 3. 8. no other blessing may giue vs iust cause of ioy but this onely Luke 10. 20. in this reioyce not c. but rather reioyce because your names c. for this is the onely certaine and infallible argument of Gods fauour no outward thing can assure thee of it No man knoweth either loue or hatred by all that is before them all things come alike to all saith Salomon Eccl. 9. 1 2. Esau had all outward blessings in farre greater plenty then Iacob had and yet as it is said Mal. 1. 3. Rom. 9. 13. God hated him Then onely shall we be truly thankefull to God and loue him heartily when we can be perswaded he hath so loued vs as to redeeme vs by his Sonne from hell when we can say to him as Dauid doth Psal. 86. 12 13. I will praise thee Oh Lord my God with all mine heart and I will glorifie thy Name for euermore For great is thy mercy toward me and thou hast deliuered my soule from the lowest hell 2. To confirme vs against desperation Hath the Lord so loued the world that he gaue his Sonne to that end that whosoeuer c. not excepting nor excluding thee but offering him vniuersally Iohn 3 16. 2. Yea commanded that to thee in particular in the Ministery of the Gospel he should be offered Marke 16. 15. Preach the Gospell saith he to euery creature 3. Yea commanded thee in particular to beleeue that he belongs to thee that he dyed for thee 1. Iohn 3. 23. This is his commandement that we should beleeue c. 4. Requiring nothing at thy hands to make this gift thine owne but onely to accept and take it at his hands Iohn 1. 12. 5. So desirous that thou mayst haue the benefit of this gift that he hath reuealed in his word that of all thy sins and rebellions he takes this for the worst and accounteth it the most hainous if thou wilt not beleeue and take this gift of him The Holy Ghost shall conuince the world saith our Sauiour himselfe Iohn 16. 9. Of sinne because they beleeue not on me and wilt thou yet doubt that he loueth thee not wilt not thou beleeue that he meaneth as he sayeth and that in this inestimable loue of his he had respect vnto thee as well as vnto any other 3. To teach vs to inquire how we may know that this gift belongeth to vs the rather because it is certaine it belongs not to all Iohn 17. 9. I pray not for the world no not to all that pretend title to it and seeme very that it is theirs Mat. 7. 21. Not euery one that saith Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of heauen Three notes we shall try by whether we haue indeed receiued this gift 1. No man ordinarily comes to Christ till the law hath schooled him and brought
10. 2. But he that knoweth Christ aright cannot chuse but feele in himselfe the want of grace and earnestly desire it See the proofe of this in the description our Sauiour maketh of a true Christian Mat 5. 3. 6. he is poore in spirit he mourneth for that he is meekned and humbled thereby he hungreth and thirsteth after righteousnesse and in the experience of all that haue best knowne Christ and haue been most assured of Gods fauour in him Dauid knew Christ well and see what want of grace he felt in himselfe and the desire hee had of it As the Hart brayeth for the riuers of water so panteth my soule after thee O God Psal. 42. 1. Paul knew Christ well and see the feeling he had of the want of grace in himselfe and desire he had to it To will is present with me saith he Rom. 7. 18. q d. I would faine doe better I would faine haue more grace and verse 24. ô wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death q d. how faine would I be deliuered from this corruption that cleaueth so vnto me And Phil. 3. 10. he professeth his earnest desire was to know Christ and the power of his resurrection that is to know him better and better euery day The reason why men that before felt no want of grace in themselues when once they know Christ aright fe●…le the want of nothing so much hunger and thirst after nothing so much as Gods grace is this that 1. their regeneration as well as their knowledge is vnperfect 1. Cor. 13. 9. 2. The true knowledge of God is like vnto the light yea to a maruallous light 1. Pet. 2. 9. and the nature of light is to discouer and make all things manifest Eph. 5. 13. and consequently they that haue most grace and sauing knowledge in them must needs discerne better the want of grace in themselues then they that want grace can doe The vse of the Doctrine is first to kindle in vs a desire of sauing knowledge and an earnest endeauour to obtaine it by the vse of all the good meanes God hath appointed For first as a man can haue no assurance of his Election till he feele that the Lord doth effectually call and conuert him and so execute his eternall decree of electing him within himselfe so this is one of the first works of Gods grace whereby a man shall perceiue that he is actually elected when God workes knowledge in him and an endeauour to increase in knowledge Hos. 6. 2. After two dayes he will reuine vs and in the third day he will set vs vp and we shall liue in his sight ver 3. Then shall wee haue knowledge and endeauour our selues to know the Lord Hast thou no knowledge no endeauour after knowledge surely God hath not yet begun to reuiue thee but thou remainest dead in thy sinnes Psal. 67. 1. 2. When God once begins to be mercifull vnto vs and to cause his face to shine vpon vs then shall his wayes and sauing health be made knowne vnto vs. 2 Knowledge is the foundation of all other graces if our faith zeale loue c. be grounded vpon knowledge they will last and abide as the house built vpon the rocke but if we haue neuer so good and holy affections they will be of no continuance vnlesse they be grounded vpon knowledge yea proportionable to the measure of sauing knowledge is the durablenesse and comfort of all other graces 2. Pet. 1. 2. Grace and peace be multiplyed to you by the knowledge of God and of Iesus Christ our Lord ver 3. According as his diuine power hath giuen vs all things that pertaine vnto life and godlinesse through the knowledge of him that hath called vs vnto glorie and vertue That is the reason of this feruent prayer Paul makes Col. 2. 2. That their hearts might be comforted and they knit together in loue and in all riches of the full assurance of vnderstanding to know the mysterie of God the Father and of Christ. So that if thou endeauour not to increase in knowledge all thy good affections will vanish as the morning deaw when they should stand t●…ee in most stead 3. Knowledge bringeth with it all other sauing graces so that he that hath true and sanctified knowledge shall be sure to want no grace that is needfull for his saluation Iohn 17. 3. This is life eternall to know thee In which respect you shall see how singular a blessing and token of Gods fauour Dauid esteemed the knowledge of the word to be by his so frequent and feruent prayers he makes to God for it Psal. 25. 4. 5. 8. 9. 12. 14. and in sundry other places of the Psalmes What shall we say to them then that care not for knowledge vse no means to obtaine it read not heare not or if they do doe it not ordinarily or i●…●…hey do that doe it not with any care to profit in knowledge by that they heare or read surely they are far from saluation as Dauid pronounceth Psal. 119. 155. and how well soeuer they think of themselues the Holy Ghost pronounceth them to be prophane Atheists and contemners of God They that doe thus professe in their liues that they desire not the knowledge of his wayes they haue said in their hearts vnto God Depart from vs who is the Almighty that we should serue him Iob. 21. 14. 15. 2. Vse is for them that perswade themselues they haue knowledge that seeing we haue heard there is a knowledge that is common to many a reprobate and will doe a man no good but much hurt and there is a knowledge that is proper to the elect and a certaine signe of Gods fauour and vnchangeable loue that therefore we rest not in this that wee haue knowledge but seeke for sauing and sanctified knowledge and examine our selues well whether we haue yet attained to this knowledge that accompanieth saluation yea or no. I will therefore giue you out of Gods word certaine notes whereby you may discerne it and they may be referred to three heads for sauing knowledge the knowledge of the elect may be discerned from the knowledge that may be in the reprobate 1. By the efficient causes 2. By the effects 3. By the properties of it The efficient causes of it are foure 1. The Spirit of God is the onely worker of it no wit nor meanes nor studie can worke it but the Spirit of God is the onely worker of it Iohn 6. 45. it is written they shall be taught of God And in that respect no man is capable of it but he that hath the Spirit of God Psal. ●…5 4. The secret of the Lord is with them that feare him and he will shew them his Couenant 2. It is not attained but by the hearing of the word ordinarily By reading and other meanes I deny not but a man may attaine to a great measure of
his fatherly affection and loue in Christ more fully and cleerely to vs then hee had done to his Church vnder the Law Gal. 4. 3. 4 5. We when we were children were in bondage vnder the elements of the world But when the fulnesse of the time was come God sent forth his Sonne made of a woman made vnder the Law To redeeme them that were vnder the Law that wee might receiue the adoption of sonnes From hence then we haue this Doctrine to learne That No man can worship God aright till he know God to be his Father the better a man is perswaded and assured of Gods fatherly loue to him in Christ the better seruice he shall doe vnto him Therefore our Sauiour teaching vs to pray bids vs say Our Father Matth. 6. 9. As if he should say presume not to aske any petition of God till thou canst so conceiue and be perswaded of him And the Apostle tells vs it is the spirit of adoption that makes vs able to pray and makes this the voice of the spirit of prayer it cryes Abba O Father Rom. 8. 15. Yea he makes it an impossible thing for any man to pray aright without this assurance Rom. 10. 14 How shall they call on him in whom they haue not beleeued The reason of it is first because till we know God is our Father and Ioueth vs in Christ we cannot be assured that he will accept vs. When we know he is our Father in Christ it makes vs goe to him with boldnesse and confidence in Christ we haue boldnesse and accesse with confidence through faith in him Eph. 3. 12. I will arise and go to my father saith the Prodigall Luke 15. 18. and will say vnto him father I haue sinned against heauen and before thee Though he had sinned so outragiously yet the consideration of this that it was his father he was to go vnto gaue him boldnesse It giues vs assurance that not withstanding our infirmities he will accept vs I will spare him and deale gently and indulgently with him saith the Lord Mal. 3. 17. as a man spareth his son that serueth him When the Prodigall was yet a great way off his father saw him and had compassion and ran and fell on his necke and kissed him Luke 15. 20. And nothing graceth our prayers more with God then this confidence and boldnes Let vs come boldly to the throne of grace that we may obtaine mercy and finde grace to helpe in time of need saith the Apostle Heb. 4. 16. But without this faith and perswasion that God is our Father we can haue no assurance that any thing we doe in his seruice pleaseth him without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. And the best thing we doe in his seruice without this assurance that we please him in so doing is sinne Rom. 14. 23. Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Secondly because till a man be per●…waded of Gods loue and fatherly affection towards him in Christ he can neuer serue him of loue nor with a good heart but vpon some by-by-respects vpon a seruile feare or hope of merit Heb. 10. 22. We can neuer draw neere to God with a true heart till we haue assurance of faith and our hearts sprinkled from an euill conscience No man can truely loue God till he be perswaded by the spirit of Gods loue to him Wee loue God because he loued vs first 1. Iohn 4. 19. true loue comes from a pure heart and a good conscience and faith vnfained 1. Tim. 1. 5. And whatsoeuer seruice we doe to God vnlesse it proceed out of a good heart and from loue to God it cannot please him though a man should giue his body to be burned in Martyrdome yet if that proceed not from his loue to God it would profit him nothing 1. Corinthians 13. 3. For what man would accept of any seruice from him that hee knowes loues him not The Vse of the Doctrine is to exhort vs to get good assurance to our hearts that God is our Father that he beares a fatherly affection to vs aboue all sinnes striue against infidelity Examine your selues whither yee bee in the faith prooue your selues 2. Cor. 13. 5. Many want this assurance and seeke it not many seeme to haue it and haue it not I will giue you foure notes to trie it by 1. God is a Father to no man but in and through Christ Iohn 1. 12. So many as receiued him to them gaue hee power to become the sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue in his name Galathians 4. 5. Hee hath redeemed vs that were vnder the Law that wee might receiue the adoption of sonnes so that vnlesse a man ground his assurance and confidence that God is his Father onely vpon Christ if hee ground it vpon this that God hath made him and preserued him c. his assurance is in vaine 2. He that is perswaded indeed that God is his Father will ●…adly and boldly resort to him in prayer Because yee are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his Sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father Gal. 4. 6. They that seldome pray or pray with no willingnesse and cheerefulnesse or pray with no confidence doubtlesse are not perswaded that God is their father 3. He that is perswaded that God is his Father will not murmure against nor be put out of heart by any of Gods corrections but be perswaded of his loue euen in affliction according to that of the Apostle Heb. 12. 7. 9. If yee endure chastening God dealeth with you as with sonnes for what sonne is hee whom the father chasteneth not And Rom. 15. 3. Being iustified by faith wee glory euen in tribulation They that in the time of their peace and prosperity onely are confident in Gods loue but haue no heart no comfort in affliction are not indeed perswaded that God is their Father 4. He that is indeed perswaded that the Lord beareth the affection of a Father vnto him will beare the affection of a childe vnto God will loue him and be carefull to please him fearefull to offend him Mal. 1. 6. If I bee your Father where is mine honour Heb. 10. 22. No drawing neere to God in assurance of faith till wee be sprinkled in our hearts from an euill conscience and washed in our bodies also They that haue no care to please God nor feare to offend him doubtlesse are not perswaded that God is their Father Now come we to the principall Doctrine which our Sauiour teacheth vs in this place namely That the onely true worship of God the onely worship that pleaseth God now especially vnder the Gospell is that which is spirituall the worship that is proper to the Gospell the true Christian worship is spirituall For so saith our Sauiour here The houre commeth and now it is that the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth and againe They that worship
serue him in my calling I get my liuing by my earnest labour I deale iustly with all men and God is a Spirit and will be worshipped in spirit it is the seruice of the heart that he lookes for hee cares not for these hypocriticall shewes it is no matter though I serue him not outwardly so long as I haue a good heart And there be three Reasons why men may not content themselues to serue God in spirit onely but must doe him outward and bodily seruice also 1. In respect of God for hee hauing created redeemed and sanctified our bodies as well as our soules is of right to haue homage and seruice done him by both 1. Cor. 6. 19 20. Yee are not your owne for yee are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirit for they are Gods 2. In respect of our selues for the seruice we doe to God in our bodies is a great and necessary helpe to our spirits Rom. 10. 17. Faith commeth by hearing 3. In respect of others for our light should so shine before men that they may see our good workes see that we worship and serue God and glorifie our Father which is in heauen Matth. 5. 6. Why then may you say how doth Gods seruice now differ from that which was vnder the law seeing the faithfull then serued him in spirit and truth as well as we and we serue God with an outward ceremoniall worship as well as they I answer the difference stands in these two points 1. Though wee haue some outward worship and significant ceremonies now yet haue we nothing so much outward worship required of vs as was of them nor so many significant ceremonies as they had Besides their Sabbaths and new Moones they had many other festiuall dayes which they were bound to obserue their Temple and euery thing in it their sacrifices their offerings and purifications their Priests and euery thing that belonged to them were significant ceremonies we haue but a little outward worship in comparison required and but two only significant ceremonies left vnto vs by Christ. 2. Euen that outward worship that wee haue is much more plaine and spirituall then theirs was much more effectuall to worke vpon the vnderstanding and conscience then that was our ceremonies doe much more cleerely set foorth and represent that which they signifie then their ceremonies did Did not circumcision more cleerely represent the remission of our sinnes and regeneration by the merits of Christs blood then Baptisme Did not the slaying and eating of the Paschall Lambe more cleerely represent the Passion of Christ and the nourishment our soules receiue by it then the Lords Supper doth I answer no. For they represented Christ that was to come and take our nature vpon him and performe therein the worke of our redemption Ours represent Christ that is come and hath already taken our nature vpon him and performed fully the worke of our redemption And therefore theirs were both of them bloudy Sacraments to shew and figure vnto Gods people that blood was to be shed for the obtaining of these good things for them ours are without blood to shew to vs that Christs blood is already shed for vs and that there is no more blood to be shed for our sinnes Therefore Christ instituting the Lords Supper calls the wine his bloud that was already shed Matth. 26. 28. So that as the faithfull that liued in Christs time and saw all that performed which God had promised concerning him were much more confirmed in their faith and had much more comfort in the knowledge of Christ then those had that liued before and beleeued in him your father Abraham reioyced to see my day and he saw it by faith and was glad Iohn 8. 58. I tell you that many Prophets and Kings haue desired to see those things which yee see and haue not seene them and to heare those things which yee heare and haue not heard them Luk. 10. 24. When Simeon who had waited for the Consolation of Israel that is for Christs comming Luke 2. 25. had both seene Christ and taken him vp in his armes he was so comforted that he desired to liue no longer but cryed Lord now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace according to thy word for mine eyes haue seene thy saluation Luke 2. 28 29 30. So our Sacraments that represent Christ as one that is already come and hath performed the worke of our redemption must needs make much more for the confirmation of our faith and comfort of our conscience then theirs did The sixt question followeth What was the cause of this alteration in the worship of God that the Lord in whom there is no variablenesse nor shadow of change Iam. 1. 17. would be serued after one manner vnder the Law and another vnder the Gospell vnder the Law with many ceremonies vnder the Gospell in a more spirituall manner I answer that this grew not from any alteration in the Lord but from the change that was in the state and condition of his Church In appointing that ceremonies and pompous worship vnder the law the Lord respected not so much his owne disposition as the weakenesse of that people and condition of those times 1. The Lord gaue them that kind of worship to restraine them from Idolatry which otherwise hee saw they were strongly inclined vnto Now that the Church is of greater strength hee hath appointed another manner of worship more agreeable to his owne nature and disposition 2. That worship was fittest for the Church in her child-hood the outward worship is easily performed though it haue most straight conditions annexed to it as we may see by that question and offer that hypocrites made Micah 6. 6 7. Shall I come before him with burnt offerings with calues of a yeare old Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rammes or with ten thousands of riuers of oyle shall I giue my first-borne for my transgression the fruit of my body for the sinne of my soule but the inward and spirituall worship is not onely hard but impossible to be performed without the grace of God And therefore it pleased God in tender regard to the weakenesse of his Church vnder the Law to appoint vnto them more of that outward worship and to accept of their spirituall seruice though it were in small measure but now to require a greater measure of spirituall worship and enioyne little of the other Of children we require a bodily seruice in saying their prayers and graces and Catechisme and though they haue little or no vnerstanding and sense of that they say yet we take it in good part 3. Though God was able to haue established his spirituall worship before and to haue giuen his spirit to his Church vnder the Law in as great measure as now yet was it fit this honour should be reserued vnto the comming of Christ in the flesh he being the Son
God then for him that is vtterly irreligious and profane Therefore the Lord condemnes the very Atheist because he did not pray Psal. 14. 4. 2. The wicked by the seruice he doth to God doth oft obtaine freedome from temporall iudgements that otherwise would fall vpon him and gets temporall rewards 1. King 21. 29. Ahab did so 3. Many a wicked man by comming into Gods House yea euen when he hath come with a wicked intent hath beene effectually called as the vnbeleeuer that Paul speakes of 1. Cor. 14. 25 26. And those messengers that were sent to apprehend Christ Iohn 7. 46. In which three respects it may be thought good policy for the wicked man to pray and heare and serue God 4. No sinne that any man hath liued in in former time can make his prayers or seruice euer a whit the lesse acceptable to God if he doe now repent the Publican vpon his vnfained humiliation and repentance went home iustified Luke 18. 13 14. So that this Doctrine tends not to the terror and discomfite of any the most notorious sinner that is penitent but to the impenitent sinner to the man that continues in sinne it is indeed a fearefull doctrine and if it be not fearefull now being vttered by a weake man yet it will certainely be fearefull to thee when the Lord shall charge it vpon thy conscience God regards not any seruice thou doest to him nay he would not haue thee to doe him any seruice nay he abhorres whatsoeuer seruice comes from thee Lecture the two and fortieth February 20. 1609. ANd thus haue I finished the first Reason that our Sauiour here bringeth for the confirmation of this Doctrine his second Reason is this God is a Spirit Now in this second Reason we must consider first the meaning of the words then the force they haue to conclude that for which Christ alledgeth them First then we must not take these words as a perfect definition of the nature of God For that that is here spoken of God agreeth also to the Angels and to the soule of man The Angels are spirits Psal. 104. 4. He maketh th●… 〈◊〉 his messengers and Heb. 〈◊〉 14. Are they not all ministring spirits The soule of man also is a spirit Eccles 12. 7. The spirit shall returne to God who gaue it A●…s 7. 59. Lord Iesus receiue my spirit But because of all the creatures God hath made these doe most fully and liuely resemble the diuine nature it hath pleased the Lord hauing respect therein to the weakenesse and shallownesse of our capacity to call himselfe a Spirit both here and in other places of the holy Scripture 2. Cor. 3. 17. The Lord is a Spirit Heb. 9. 14 Christs God-head is called the eternall Spirit 1. As they are immortall so the Lord is immortall yea he onely hath immortality 1. Tim. 6. 16. of himselfe 2. As they are wise and vnderstanding natures so the Lord is of himselfe infinite in wisedome In which respect he is called God onely wise 1. Tim. 1. 17. 3. As they are simple inuisible incorporeall not hauing 〈◊〉 mixture nor consisting of any corporall substance And therefore 〈◊〉 ●…oues himselfe after his Resurrection not to be a spirit by this reason 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Behold my hands and my feet handle mee and see for a spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…d bones as yee see me haue so is the Lord and in this respect principally is the Lord called a Spirit in this place because he is not a visible sensible corporall but a spirituall nature Now for the force that is in this reason to conclude that for which Christ bringeth it the true worshippers must worship the Father in spirit and truth not with a ceremoniall and outward worship because God is a Spirit The force I say of this reason is euident His worship must be answerable to his owne nature Such as himselfe is such must the worshippers be that he delighteth in According to the Prouerbe like will haue like like master like man Such as a mans owne disposition is such he desireth they should be that serue him Dauid had no better an argument to prooue that he did vnfainedly feare God then this that all his delight was in godly men Psal. 16. 3. Specially that his care was to seeke out such to serue him as feared God Psal. 101. 1. Mine eyes shall bee to the faithfull in the land that they may dwell with me he that walketh in a perfect way he shall serue mee This reason the Lord oft vseth Leuit. 19. 2. Yee shall bee holy for I the Lord your God am holy As if hee should say because you are my seruants my people you must frame your selues to my disposition and seeke to be like me The Lord therefore being a Spirit himselfe sets his eye vpon the spirit and heart of man to see how he is serued there 1. Samuel 16. 7. The Lord looketh not as a man looketh for man looketh on the outward appearance but the Lord looketh on the heart His delight is to haue seruice done to him with the spirit and heart Behold thou desirest truth in the inward parts saith Dauid Psalme 51. 6. Let the adorning of a Christian saith the Apostle 1. Pet. 3. 4. bee the hidden man of the heart in that which is not corruptible euen the ornament of a meeke and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price So that he that thinketh a ceremoniall and bodily worship will content the Lord doth iudge erroniously of his nature and indeed maketh an Idol and a false God of him But it may bee obiected that there seemeth to bee no consequence in this Reason the true worshippers must now after Christs Ascention worship God in a more spirituall manner then they haue done vnder the Law because God is a Spirit for God was a Spirit then also as well as now To this I answer that it is true indeed and therefore he alwaies required to be worshipped in spirit for euen to them vnder the Law it was said Deuteronomie 10. 16. Circumcise the fore-skin of your hearts and Hosea 6. 6. I desired mercy and not sacrifice and the knowledge of God more then burnt offerings But as the Lord hath more cleerely reuealed himselfe now to bee a Spirit to be of a spirituall nature then he did vnder the Law so hee requireth spirituall worship of his people now more then he did vnder the Law Then God reuealed himselfe to his people in many sensible apparitions visions and voices hauing respect therein to the infirmity of his Church while she was in her child-hood We know the Lord appeared to Abraham in the body of a man and talked familiarly with him as one friend doth with another Gen. 18. 28. And in a vision to Ezekiel he appeared in the similitude of a man sitting vpon a throne Ezek. 1. 26. So with an audible and sensible voice he deliuered the Law vnto his people Deut. 5. 26.
In a sensible and visible manner he guided his people through the wildernesse in a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night Exod. 13. 51. By a sensible and materiall fire that came downe from heauen he witnessed oft-times his approbation of the sacrifices that his seruants offered vnto him 1. Cor. 21. 26. In a sensible and visible manner his glory filled both the Tabernacle and the Temple 2. Chron. 7. 2. Now since the daies of Christ the Lord hath not beene wont to reueale himselfe to his Church in this corporall and sensible manner but as he is a spirit so in a spirituall manner only hath he reuealed himselfe to his Church It is therefore spoken of as a blessing peculiar to the dayes vnder the Gospel that vpon all sorts of his people he will powre his spirit in a far more plentifull manner then euer he had done before Ioel 2. 28 29. Hauing now finished the Doctrine that our Sauiour deliuereth in these two verses and both the Reasons that he bringeth for the confirmation of it it remaineth that we make our vse of it The first Vse of it is to condemne the religion of the Papists If we had no other reason against Popery this were sufficient to prooue it a false worship such as God alloweth not because it doth euery way match yea farre exceedeth the forme of worship that was vnder the Law euen in that point for which our Sauiour doth here condemne it The vestments their Priests vse in Gods seruice the Church-musicke and many other things are vsed in imitation of the Iewes But 1. In obseruation of daies and times in the number of their holy dayes 2. In the multitude of their significant ceremonies 3. In the pompe and worldly statelinesse of their Prelates and Clergie 4. In their superstitious ringing and set seruice and other ceremonies about buriall they doe farre exceed the Iewes If that forme of worship which God himselfe appointed vnder the Law must needs be abrogated as Christ hath here taught vs and no true worshipper might vse it any longer because it stood so much in externall and carnall rites in shadowes and significant ceremonies then certainely they that vse and delight in such a kind of worship that was but deuised by men must needs be deemed hypocrites and false worshippers of God See the iudgement that our Sauiour giueth of these kind of ceremonies and of them that are addicted to them The Iewes in his time had a ceremony that they would not eate meate before they had washed oft holding the tradition of the Elders Marke 7. 3. This might as lawfully haue beene vsed as any religious ceremony that was deuised by man for it was not vsed in Gods seruice and might haue seemed to be but a ciuill ceremony Yet our Sauiour discerning that it was inioyned by the Elders and was obserued by the Iewes as a significant ceremony a Doctrine to the conscience a meane to put it in mind of a spirituall duty Marke 7. 7. A thing wherein they put holinesse and which they accounted as a worthy seruice done vnto God he would not vse it himselfe Luke 11. 38. and taught his Disciples to refuse it and defendeth them for so doing Marke 7. 6. And this he did though he saw it would prouoke the Pharisees much and be likely to draw him and his Disciples to trouble Marke 7. 3. And three Reasons he giueth against them 1. He maketh it a certaine note of an hypocrite of a carnall man that hath no soundnesse of grace in him to be addicted to these ceremonies Marke 7. 6. In which respect also among others the ceremoniall Law is called a carnall commandement Heb. 7. 16. and the rudiments of the world Gal. 4. 3. 2. That it is a vaine worship Marke 7. 7. there is no profit nor sound edification that can come to the conscience by it The Apostle therefore calleth the ceremonies impotent and beggerly rudiments Gal. 4. 9. Obserue it well where they are vsed with most conscience and deuotion as in Popery they are they worke no knowledge or sanctification in men 3. That where they are vsed they will make the commandements of God of no authority Matth. 15. 6. They will destroy the power of true piety and godlinesse and euen eate out the heart of it And that was the cause why Sathan laboured not in any thing more busily in the Primitiue Church then to bring in againe the ceremoniall worship after God had abrogated it and the Apostle calleth them that were his instruments in this worke dogges that is enemies to all piety Phil. 3. 2. The second Vse of the Doctrine doth more neerely concerne our selues for it teacheth vs to take heed of hypocrisie in the seruice of God Striue to worship him in spirit and truth Luke 12. 1. Take heed to your selues saith our Sauiour of the leauen of the Pharisees which is hypocrisie The Lord doth exceedingly abhorre hypocrisie in his seruice The more seruice thou doest to God the more thou prouokest him if thou be an hypocrite Iob 36. 13. The hypocrites in heart heape vp wrath For the hypocrite is a false worshipper he maketh an Idol of God he thinketh he can deceiue God as he doth men Now there be three kinds and degrees of hypocrites that worship not God in spirit and truth and are therefore called here by Christ false worshippers of God 1. They that doe any seruice to God with their bodies onely without the vnderstanding and feeling and deuotion of the heart in euery seruice we doe to God he calleth still for the heart My son giue me thy heart saith he Pro. 23. 26. Paul had not pleased God in preaching if he had not in preaching serued God in his spirit Rom. 1. 9. Lydia had not pleased God in hearing the Word if her heart had not beene opened if she had not heard with feeling and affection of heart Act. 16. 14. No man can please God in praying vnto him vnlesse he pray with the feeling and affection of his spirit Psal. 86. 4. Reioyce the soule of thy seruant for vnto thee Lord do I life vp my soule nor in singing of Psalmes vnlesse he sing with grace in his heart vnto the Lord Ephes. 5. 19. Our prayers are compared vnto odours Reu. 5. 8. and vnto incense Psal. 141. 2. and the feruency of our affection is as the fire without which these odours and incense can neuer send vp any sweet sauour vnto God In which respect the Apostle biddeth vs be feruent in spirit as seruing the Lord Rom. 12. 11. as if no seruice could be acceptable vnto God without feruency of spirit Let euery one of vs therefore haue a principall care of that both in our prayers and in euery other part of the worship we doe vnto God Two good helpes are needfull to be vsed to this purpose 1. Watchfulnes Continue in prayer and watch in the same Col. 4. 2. for vnlesse we
haue an eye to and watch our hearts well they will be rouing And as this is needfull in all our prayers so especially in prescript and set formes of prayer which we haue oft accustomed our selues vnto 2. To set our selues as in Gods presence and bring our hearts to a reuerent feare of Gods Maiesty before whom we appeare Serue the Lord with feare Psal. 2. 11. in thy feare will I worship toward thine holy temple Psal. 5. 7. The second sort of hypocrites that do not worship God in spirit and truth are they that vse Gods worship or any part of it as a matter of ceremony and formality onely and neuer seeke in it the edification of the spirit and conscience 1. That Preacher is but an hypocrite that seeketh not so to preach as his preaching may haue power in the hearts of his hearers I will know not the speach of them that are puffed vp but the power For the kingdome of God is not in word but in power 1. Cor. 4. 19 20. And he maketh this a note of an able Minister of the Gospell when he is the Minister of the spirit 2. Cor. 3. 6. It is that we should seeke to see Gods seale vpon our Ministry in the hearts of our hearers The seale of mine Apostleship are yee in the Lord yea he saith this was his maine answer and defence to them that examined him and questioned his Ministry 1. Cor. 9. 2. 3. We had therefore need not onely to preach but to teach such Doctrine as is profitable and which particularly concerneth and is of vse to those we teach this was Pauls direction to Titus to teach and stand vpon those things in his Ministry that were good and profitable vnto men Tit. 3. 8. neither onely to teach but to vse application also Preach the Word reproue or conuince rebuke exhort 2. Tim. 4. 2. 2. Those Christians also are no better then hypocrites who so they haue a forme of Gods seruice neuer care whether it edifie their conscience or no. Such are they as rest content with a dumbe Ministry for what power feele they in it Such also are they as heare good Preachers and praise them but neuer examine what profit they receiue in their conscience by them When you praise a good Preacher whose Ministry you frequent with your tongue your life and vnreformed course doth disgrace him Those hearers only praise their teachers indeed that haue profited in reformation of heart and life by their Ministry in whose hearts the spirit of God hath written that of their Ministers commendation as may be read of all men 2. Cor. 3. 2. 3. The third sort of hypocrites that worship not God in spirit and truth are they that will be deuout in the exercises of Religion and zealous in profession Make a shew of godlinesse but deny the power of it 2. Tim. 3. 5. True Religion where it is receiued will command the heart and the whole man Let a man professe what he will if his heart and life be not reformed he is an hypocrite and whatsoeuer worship he doth to God is but a false worship We know that God heareth not sinners but if any man be a worshipper of God and doth his will him he heareth Iohn 9. 31. yea the very seruice he doth to God doth but increase Gods wrath against him either amend thy life or giue ouer seruing of God THE THREE AND FORTIETH LECTVRE ON FEBRVARY XXVII MDCIX IOH. IIII. XXV XXVI The Woman saith vnto him I know that Messiah commeth which is called Christ when hee is come hee will tell vs all things Iesus saith vnto her I that speake vnto thee am he THese words containe the conclusion of that conference that was betweene our Sauiour and the Woman of Samaria In the interpretation of the words for the helpe of your memory these fiue questions are distinctly to be opened and resolued Whom meaneth shee here by Messias seeing it is plaine shee vseth this word as the proper name of some person I answer it is euident by the words following that she meaneth the same person that is called Christ. For as our blessed Sauiour being promised to the Church from the beginning of the world was described and made knowne to them both by his natures specially his humane nature I will put enmity betweene thy seed and her seed it shall bruise thy head Gen. 3. 15. And Gen. 22. 18. In thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed and by those offices he should exercise and whereby he should procure the saluation of his people viz. 1. His Propheticall office I will raise them vp a Prophet from among their brethren like vnto thee Deut. 18. 18. His Priesthood He shall be a Priest vpon his throne Zach. 6. 13. His Kingly office Reioyce greatly O daughter of Zion shout O daughter of Ierusalem behold thy King commeth vnto thee Zach. 9. 9. and by the place where he should be borne But thou Bethlehem Ephratah though thou be little among the thousands of Iudah yet out of thee shall hee come forth vnto me that is to be ruler in Israel whose goings forth haue beene from old from euerlasting Mic. 5. 2. So had he three proper names in the Old Testament giuen him 1. One in respect of his two natures hypostatically vnited in one person Esay 7. 14. He shall call his name Immanuel 2. Another in respect of the obscure place of his education Zach. 6. 12. Behold the man whose name is the Branch 3. A third in respect of his office Dan. 9. 25. Messiah the Prince Now of all the names whereby our Sauiour was described in the Old Testament this name was the most famous among the Iewes When Herod gathered together all the chiefe Priests and the Scribes to resolue him in the question that the Wise men came to Ierusalem to mooue he asked them where Messias should be borne Matth. 2. 4. For though the Euangelist writing in Greeke vse the word Christ in that place yet it is certaine that he in his language vsed the word Messiah So Iohn 1. 41. We haue found the Messias saith Andrew to his brother Simon Now this Hebrew name Messiah and the Greeke name Christ doe in our language signifie the annointed one and we shall finde it was giuen to sundry others in the holy Scripture for the Kings of Gods people were called the Lords annointed 2. Sam. 19. 21. and so were the Priests Leu. 10. 7. and so were the Prophets Psal. 105. 15. Because euery one of these were by the ceremony of annointing as by a Sacramentall signe assured from the Lord that he would inwardly annoint them that is endue them with such graces of his holy spirit as whereby they might be enabled to discharge those offices that he called them vnto yet was this name of Messiah Christ the annointed of the Lord made a proper name onely vnto our blessed Sauiour 1. Because all those Kings
And therfore what outward kindnesse soeuer they may offer to do vnto you they shall receiue the reward of such as haue contemned and reiected Gods Prophets I will giue you a plaine example for this It is said of our Sauiour Ioh. 1. 11. He came vnto his own and his own receiued him not How is this meant Did not the Iewes receiue him they flocked after him by great multitudes to heare him Luk. 12 1. 2. They oft praised him highly and accounted him to be an excellent Prophet Luk. 7. 16. 3. They inuited him to their houses and made great feasts for him Luk. 14. 1. 4. They would haue bestowed great preferment on him they would haue taken him by force to make him a King Ioh. 6 15. how is it then said that they receiued him not Surely because they obeyed not his word they would not be taught and directed by him as Iohn the Baptist interpreteth it Iohn 3. 32. What he hath seene and heard that he testifieth but no man receiueth his testimony The Reasons of this Doctrine are three 1. In respect of God It is the commandement and will of God that all men should make their vse and profit of such gifts as he hath bestowed on any of his seruants aboue themselues else they sin against God and doe contempt to his good gifts The Queene of Sheba is commended by our Sauiour for comming from the vtmost parts of the earth to make vse of the excellent knowledge God had bestowed on Salomon Mat. 12. 42. And how did sue it she asked him questions and propounded all her doubts vnto him 2. Chron. 9 1. And the like is spoken to the praise of all the Kings of the earth 2. Chron. 9. 23. All the Kings of the earth sought the presence of Salomon to heare his wisedome that God had put in his heart So children should make vse of the knowledge that is in their parents and moue questions to them Deut. 6. 20. When thy son shall aske thee in time to come what meane these ordinances and testimonies and lawes which the Lord our God hath commanded you And wiues should make vse of the knowledge God hath giuen their husbands aboue them 1. Cor. 14. 35. If they would learne any thing let them aske their husbands at home But specially the people of God should make vse of his Ministers this way not onely to heare them publikely but priuately to moue questions to them and to enquire the will of God at them in all their doubts For this meanes God hath sanctified aboue all others to that end Mal. 2. 7. The Priests lips should preserue knowledge and they should seeke the law at his mouth Hag. 2. 12. Aske now the Priests concerning the law And so we shall finde Gods people haue made great vse of their Ministers gifts this way euen in priuate Our Sauiours Disciples did so Mar. 4. 10. and 7. 17. and 10. 10. So the Christians in Corinth moued their doubts to Paul in sundry cases of conscience 1. Cor. 7. 1. 10. 22. And at Ephesus he did much good in priuate houses Acts 20. 20. 2. In respect of Gods Prophets This is the best way whereby Christians may yeeld comfort and encouragement vnto good Ministers when they make vse of their gifts and shew themselues desirous and ready to receiue good by them See a notable example of this in Titus his spirit was refreshed much by all Gods people at Corinth 2. Cor. 7. 13. how by the vse they made of his gifts they receiued him with great reuerence and were obedient to his doctrine as appeareth vers 15. This hath euer bin the minde and speech of a faithfull Minister which Paul expresseth 2. Cor. 12. 14. I seek not yours but you The Apostle when he chargeth the faithfull so to carry themselues toward their Ministers as they may do their work with ioy and not with griefe Heb. 13. 17. he telleth them how they may do that Obey them and submit your selues No kindnes that any can shew vs can so binde vs to them as this when they make vse of our Ministry and profit by vs. Mar. 3. 34 35. Hee looked round about on them which sate in compasse about him and said Behold my mother and my brethren For whosoeuer shall do the will of God is my brother c. Nay we can haue small comfort in the maintenance and countenance we haue from such as receiue no good by our Ministry I cannot say it is vnlawfull for a Preacher to take maintenance from them that receiue no good by his Ministry so long as he doth his endeauour faithfully to do them good but surely a little kindnesse receiued from the other doth him more good and is sweeter to him than a great deale from such men They that Christ is said to receiue maintenance from were such as made vse of his Ministry Luk. 8. 3. And he biddeth his Apostles when they came into any city or towne to enquire who was worthy in it and there to abide till they went thence Matth. 10. 11. 3. In respect of themselues for this is the onely sure argument that their hearts are vpright in the loue they shew vnto Preachers when they make vse of their gifts and will be directed and ruled by them By all other waies but this a man that hath no grace may shew loue and kindnesse to Gods Minister Herod reuerenced Iohn Mar. 6. 20. Nebuchadnezzar did patronize Ieremy and countenanced him and maintained and prouided liberally for him Ier. 39. 11 1●… yet had neither of these any grace in them The Vse of this Doctrine is for Reproofe of diuers sorts of men which all of them pretend much loue and respect to good Ministers yet it is not with an vpright heart or such as shall be able to yeeld them any sound comfort in the euill day 1 Such as loue them and will commend and countenance them and maintaine them too yet they seldome or neuer heare them or make vse of their Ministry and yet they blesse themselues in this as in a great signe of grace that they loue and maintaine good Preachers To these men I say this may procure thee a temporall reward as it did Potiphar to haue Ioseph in his house though he made no vse of his knowledge and piety Gen. 39. 5. God blessed the Egyptians house for Iosephs sake But sound comfort this can neuer yeeld thee for thou receiuest not a Prophet in the name of a Prophet Mat. 10. 41 but either out of a naturall affection thou bearest to the man or carnall respect thou hast to thine owne credit or some light that thou hast receiued from Gods Word that it is good to loue Preachers or some taste thou hast had of the power and sweetnesse of his Ministry whom thou dost thus affect but none of all these respects will yeeld a man any sound comfort but rather be a strong euidence against him in the day of the
64. 6. All our righteousnesses saith the Church are like filthy clouts But doth God therefore reiect them No first he accepteth them and takes them in good part they are acceptable to God by Iesus Christ 1. Pet. 2. 5. secondly he delighteth and taketh great pleasure in them sweet is thy voice Cant. 2. 14. thirdly yea he will also reward them not onely in this life yet godlinesse hath promises euen of this life 1. Tim. 4. 8. but euen with the reward of the inheritance as the Apostle speaketh Col. 3. 24. When the dead shall be iudged he will giue reward not onely vnto his seruants the Prophets and to his Saints but to all that feare his Name both small and great Apoc. 11. 18. Thirdly and lastly he is so farre from reiecting his seruants for any their infirmities that of all other he hath most care of them that are most troubled with their infirmities he sheweth most tender respect vnto them In this respect it pleaseth the Lord to compare himselfe to a carefull and good shepheard that sheweth his care most of all towards those sheepe that are most weak and feeble in the slock Esay 40. 11. He shall feed his flocke like a shepheard he shall gather the lambs with his arme and carry them in his bosome and shall guide them that are with young And Ezek. 34. 16. I will seeke that which was lost and bring againe that that was driuen away and will binde vp that that was broken and will strengthen the weake In this respect it is said of Christ Mat. 12. 20. Abruised reede shall he not breake and smoaking flaxe shall he not quench See an experiment of this in those two Apostles which aboue all shewed most weaknesse of Faith Thomas and Peter and you shall finde Christ shewed more tender respect to them two than to all the rest For Peter Christ was most carefull that his resurrection should be reuealed vnto him Marke 16. 7. Yea 1. Cor. 15. 5. He was seene first of Cephas and then of the twelue yea to him specially he giues the commandement to feed his sheepe Ioh. 21. 15. And for Thomas see the care Christ had of him Iohn 20. 24 26. first he appeared againe to his Disciples when hee was among them and for his sake chiefly secondly he singles him out from the rest and giues him sensible helpes and meanes to confirme his Faith The Reasons of this Doctrine are principally two first the loue that the Lord beareth to our persons through Christ. Gen. 4. 4. God had respect to Abell and to his offering Through Christ God is become our father he beareth a fatherly affection to vs yea a farre more tender affection than any of vs that are parents can beare to our little ones yea a mother may forget to haue compassion vpon the sonne of her wombe yet will I not forget thee Esay 49. 15. And yet euen we that are euill stand thus affected to our little ones that we cannot loath them or neglect them for any out-breach or looking asquint or any other such like deformity yea many a thing which in another mans eye is a great blemish as the pocke-holes in the face or such like to vs seemeth none at all yea the weaker and more feeble any of our children are the more tender we are ouer them And this is much more so with the Lord toward his children Psal. 103. 13. As a father hath compassion on his children so hath the Lord compassion on them that feare him Mal. 3. 17. I will spare them as one spareth his owne sonne that serueth him The second Reason is the respect the Lord hath to the worke of his owne spirit that dwelleth in his children and to the vprightnesse of their heart Psal. 51. 6. Behold thou louest truth in the inward affections therefore hast thou taught mee wisedome in the secret of my heart Vprightnesse of heart is the chiefe worke of Gods spirit therefore Dauid begs this so earnestly of God that he would renew a right spirit within him Psal. 51. 10. and describes the man whose iniquities God hath forgiuen to bee such a one as in whose spirit there is no guile Psal. 32. 2. Where God discerneth this he will beare with many other wants Though Asa had many foule faults yet is he for this commended Asa his heart was perfect with the Lord all his daies 1. Reg. 15. 14. But on the other side it is said of Amazia that though he had not so many faults as Asa but did in many things much better than he yet the Lord reiected him and made not that account of him as he did of weake Asa he did that which was right in the sight of the Lord but not with a perfect heart 2. Chro. 25. 2. The Vse of this Doctrine Before I can deliuer it I must labour to preuent the abuse of it For whereas this is the childrens bread many dogs and whelpes will be snatching at it many a wicked and vngracious man will be ready to abuse this Doctrine to the blessing of himselfe in his vngodly waies and say The best haue their faults God is not so seuere as to marke euery thing that is said or done amisse he will beare with the infirmities of his children my heart is good c. But to such I say they haue nothing to doe with this doctrine but first as of the godly I haue said that none of all their foulest sins shall euer be imputed to them so to thee I say that all euen the least sinne that euer thou committedst shall be laid to thy charge know thou that for all these things God will bring thee to iudgement Eccles. 11. 9. of euery idle word that such men shall speake they shall giue account at the day of Iudgement Matth. 12. 36. Secondly As the duties the godly haue performed euen those that haue beene most full of blemishes shall be accepted and rewarded so the very best things that euer thou didst are abominable to God and shall increase thy condemnation the sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord Pro. 15. 8. Thirdly As the foulest sin that euer a godly man fell into was but his infirmity so the least offence that euer thou committedst is a reigning sin And because thou comfortest thy selfe so much in this that the godlyest haue their faults and thy sins are but thine infirmities I will shew thee sundry differences betweene the faults of the godly and thy sins betweene the infirmities of the one and the reigning sins of the other First Before the committing of it The regenerate man doth not commit any foule sinne with purpose and premeditation of heart but hee is ouertaken before he be aware and slippeth suddenly into it through the violence of tentation Thus Paul describeth the sinne of a regenerate man Gal. 6. 1. If any be fallen by occasion ouertaken with any fault So Dauid speakes of himselfe Psal. 39. 22.
but onely that we should not suffer it to reigne in vs Rom 6. 12. 3 He not onely accepteth and taketh in good part the poorest seruice we doe to him notwithstanding our corruptions and frailties but euen delighteth and taketh great pleasure in them Cant. 2. 14. He accounteth all our good workes as the fruit of the Vine Esa. 5. 4. Yea it cannot choose but be so for Christ casteth of his odours into them and so presenteth them to his Father Reu. 8. 3. Lecture the hundredth Septemb. 10. 1611. IOHN IIII. L. IT followeth now that we come to the third and last Vse that is to be made of the former Doctrine and that is to exhort euery man that for as much as the Lord hath such gracious respect to all his seruants in whom he doth discerne truth and vprightnesse of heart he will beare much with them and accept of them and their seruices notwithstanding all their infirmities that therefore we would euery one of vs labour by diligent triall and examination of our selues to finde that there is this truth and vprightnesse in our hearts Now to stirre vp my selfe and you all to this care let vs consider these three things First the blessed estate and condition of that man who is sound and vpright in heart Secondly the dangerous estate of the man that is an hypocrite and hath a false heart Thirdly the difficulty of discerning the vprightnesse of the heart and putting a difference between him that is an hypocrite and him that is vpright in heart And for the first the man that knoweth his heart void of hypocrisie though he haue many weaknesses and frailties may be sure that he is Gods child and may be out of doubt that he is in Gods fauour and that nothing shall euer be able to separate him from the loue of God It is oft said the Lord valueth and esteemeth of euery mans actions according to the heart they proceed from Ier. 17. 10. I the Lord search the heart and trie the reines euen to giue euery one according to his waies 1 Reg. 8. 39. Be mercifull and doe and giue to euery man according to all his waies as thou knowest his heart He accepteth Abels sacrifice not Cains Abrahams laughing not Sarah's Maries question not Zacharies esteemeth more of a cup of cold water that one giueth than of many thousands that another giueth of the widowes two mites more than of all that the rich men cast into the treasurie Luke 21. 3 4. And when the Holy Ghost speaketh thus his meaning is to say God esteemeth euery man according to that grace he discerneth in him the man that hath any sauing grace in him he acknowledgeth for his owne and the words and actions that proceed from his grace and spirit he will accept of In this respect they that haue receiued the Spirit of God are said to haue the Lords marke Ezek. 9. 4. and the Lords seale vpon them Eph. 4. 30. But why is this respect that God hath to the grace of his Spirit called the beholding of the heart the respecting of the heart Surely because the heart is the chiefe and most proper seat of Gods grace and of the spirit of regeneration in euery man the seed of God is sowne in the furrowes of the heart 1 Ioh. 3. 9. Therefore also is the regenerate part called oft the inner man Rom. 7. 22. 2 Cor. 4. 16. Eph. 3. 16. and the hid man of the heart 1 Pet. 3. 4. Now as God esteemeth of euery mans actions according to that heart and inward grace it proceedeth from so yet he esteemeth men not so much according to the measure and quantity of grace they haue as according to the truth and soundnesse of grace that he discerneth in them and this is a comfortable point if it be well considered If a man haue any one grace in him in truth and soundnes though it be but one though that one be exceeding small and weake as that little spark in the smoking flaxe and you know a very little spark will make flaxe to smoke Mat. 12. 20. he may be sure he is the child of God Mark therefore how oft this is spoken of as the most infallible note of Gods child Ioh. 1. 47. Behold indeed an Israelite saith Christ of Nathaniel in whom is no guile Psal. 32. 2. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity But how shall we know this happy man whose sinnes are forgiuen he addeth and in whose spirit there is no guile And Ver. 11. Be glad ye righteous and reioyce in the Lord Yes but who is righteous If none may reioyce but those that are righteous what are we the better therefore he expounds himself in the next words and be ioyfull all ye that are vpright in heart Heare what a prayer the Prophet maketh Psal. 125. 4. Do good vnto those that be good and to them that are vpright in heart See the Lords answer to that prayer Esa. 63. 8. He said Surely they are my people children that will not lie So I was their Sauiour Marke what comfort the poore seruants of God haue found in this Remember now O Lord I be seeth thee how I haue walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart Esa. 38. 3. Now on the other side consider the dangerous and fearfull condition of euery hypocrite of euery man who hath a false and vnsound heart for let such a one liue neuer so ciuilly before men yea let him perform neuer so good duties and such as God commandeth yet 1. He doth but lose his labour God accepteth nothing that he doth as it is said of Amazia 2 Chro. 25. 2. He did that which was right in the sight of the Lord but not with a sound heart 2. His state shal be fearfull in the life to come as well as the state of the vilest liuer Mat. 24. 51 God will cut him off and giue him his portion with hypocrites there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth 3. When God doth by affliction awaken his conscience and discouer to him the vnsoundnes of his heart he hath vsually as little comfort as hope in God he is wont to be as much ouerwhelmed with terrors and anguish of heart as the most prophane and lewd man in the world Iob 27. 8. What hope hath the hypocrite when he hath heaped vp riches if God take away his soule and 36. 13 14. Hypocrites in heart increase the wrath for they call not when he bindeth them their soule dieth in youth and their life among the whore-mongers The third and last Reason that may moue vs to examine our hearts well and try whether there be any truth and soundnesse in them is in consideration of the great difficulty that there is in discerning the vprightnesse of the heart for first the heart of man is exceeding deceitfull Ier. 17. 9. There is indeed an hypocrisie and falsnesse of heart which is not vnknowne but
to another as is plaine verse 10. feruent in spirit seruing the Lord. And exhorting Seruants to their duties to Infidell Masters he saith Colos. 3. 24. Yee serue the Lord Christ. True it is an intent and desire to please God in that we doe is not sufficient to argue a sound and sanctified heart vnlesse it be guided by knowledge the wretched Iewes euen in contradicting and persecuting Christ and his Gospell had the zeale of God Rom. 10. 2. and without knowledge the minde and intent of a mans heart cannot bee good Pro. 19. 2. But yet this is a singular and certaine note of an vpright heart when in doing the duties which he knowes God in his Word hath commanded the intent of his heart is onely to please and honour God thereby and nothing else This is made the touch-stone to trie the sincerity and vprightnesse of the Magistrates heart by Psal. 101. 1. I will sing mercy and iudgement to thee O Lord will I sing As if he should say That shall be the marke that I will aime at in all that I do both in my works of mercy and of iustice also So Christ makes this the touch-stone to trie the vprightnesse of the Ministers heart by Iohn 7. 18. He that seeketh his glory that sent him the same is true and there is no vnrighteousnesse in him So Paul labouring to restraine the faithfull from condemning their brethren that differed from them in practise about indifferent things giues this reason Iudge them not for they do that they doe with an vpright heart How proues he that Why saith he Rom. 14. 6. he that obserueth the day obserueth it to the Lord and he that obserueth not the day obserueth it not to the Lord. He that eateth eateth to the Lord for he giueth God thankes and he that eateth not eateth not to the Lord and giueth God thankes Why but may some say how could he that obserued the day and abstained from eating do it to the Lord viz. to please and obey the Lord when the Lord now since the death of Christ required no such thing of him I answer he knew God had in his law required him to doe so and he knew not that God had abrogated that law This ignorance God passed by and had respect to this vprightnesse of his heart notwithstanding it In this respect of all workes those will yeeld a man greatest comfort and assurance of the vprightnesse of his heart wherein there is least danger of hauing any other respect but onely to the Lord as first of all liberality that which is shewed to the poore Eccles. 11. 1. Cast thy bread vpon the waters for thou shalt finde it after many daies Luke 14. 13 14. When thou makest a feast call the poore maimed lame blinde and thou shalt be blessed because they cannot recompense thee for thou shalt be recompensed at the resurrection of the iust So secondly of all loue and kindnesse that is the surest signe of grace which we shew to our enemies and to such Christians as are poore and in whom we see sundry infirmities Matth. 5. 44 45. I say vnto you loue your enemies blesse them that curse you doe good to them that hate you and pray for them that hurt you and persecute you that you may bee that is may be knowne to be the children of your father which is in heauen and Mat. 10. 42. Whosoeuer shall giue to one of these little ones to drinke a cup of cold water only in the name of a Disciple verily I say vnto you he shall not lose his reward So thirdly of all duties of piety domesticall duties will yeeld a man more assurance of his sincerity than publique Psal. 101. 2. I will walke in my house with a perfect heart and secret more than domesticall Matth. 6. 6. But when thou prayest enter into thy chamber and when thou hast shut thy doore pray vnto thy father which seeth in secret and thy father that seeth in secret shall reward thee openly Zac. 12. 12 13. The land shall bewaile euery family apart the family of the house of Dauid Nathan Leui Shimei apart and their wiues apart O that the time would permit me to stand vpon the application of this point but I cannot doe it you must doe it your selues By this note trie thine own heart in all the duties thou performest to men in all the duties of thy calling but specially in the duties of Gods seruice aske thine owne heart that question which Christ asked Andrew and his fellow when they first followed him Iohn 1. 38. What seeke yee Dost thou that which thou dost in obedience to him is the intent and purpose of thy heart to please and honour him Surely the least duty thou dost so will yeeld thee both comfort and reward also Col. 3. 24. knowing that of the Lord yee shall receiue the reward of inheritance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for yee serue the Lord Christ. A man may doe the thing God would haue him doe and yet be plagued for it because he doth not serue the Lord in it Baasha is threatned for killing Ieroboam 1. Kings 16. 7. and yet it is said 1. Kings 14. 14. the Lord stirred him vp to do it he did execute and fulfill the Lords will And certainly so shall it be with many a Preacher and hearer they do the duties God would haue them do but they serue not God in them No naturall man can serue God in any good thing he doth his eye is not directed toward the Lord but he looks asquint hath by-respects to his credit or profit or pleasure or merit he seekes himselfe in euery thing he doth euen in the most religious duties Thus God chargeth the hypocrites Zach. 7. 5. When yee fasted and mourned in the fifth and seuenth moneth euen those seuenty yeares did yee fast vnto me euen vnto me He repeates this as if he should say This was that that was wanting in your Fasts Yea but you will say cannot a man haue any soundnesse of grace in his heart vnlesse he haue this sincere and single respect to God in euery thing that he doth This is a hard saying will many a poore Christian thinke I answer that the best cannot wholly free himselfe from selfe-loue and ouermuch respect to himselfe not onely in the duties of his calling but euen in Gods worship Yet this he hath First though in sundry particular actions he faile yet ordinarily and in the course of his life he hath this respect to God and this is a blessed signe of grace when our walking and our course of life and conuersation is not after the flesh but after the spirit Rom. 8. 1. Secondly in his minde he consents to this that he should thus doe and his conscience checks him if he do it not and euen in this Paul himselfe found great comfort that in his minde he serued the law of God Rom. 7. 25. Thirdly the desire and endeauour of his
3. It is a maine hinderance to grace in the vse of the word and prayer as we haue heard in the Doctrine Pro. 15. 13. By the sorrow of the heart the spirit is broken 4. It giues great aduantage to Sathan It is an old saying that Melancholia est vehiculum Daemonum And experience proues that we are neuer so weake so apt to receiue the temptations of Sathan so vnable to resist them as when we are oppressed with melancholy and sadnesse of heart And this is that that is said Neh. 8. 10. The ioy of the Lord is our strength In this respect Paul chargeth the Corinthians to comfort the incestuous person and take heed lest he were not swallowed vp with ouermuch heauinesse lest Sathan saith he circumuent vs. For we are not ignorant of his enterprises 2. Cor. 2. 11. Lecture the ninetie fourth Iuly 23. 1611. IOHN IIII. XLIX L. THe last day we began to speake of the answer that this Ruler returned vnto Christ when he had beene rebuked of him and charged with infidelity which answer is set downe in this verse I haue now read vnto you And in it we obserued that he neither denies nor acknowledgeth the fault Christ charged him and his Nation with Secondly he neither shewes himselfe troubled with it by confessing his infidelity and seeking pardon nor doth he excuse or lessen it any way Thirdly though he esteemed highly of Christ and counted him a Prophet yet seemes he not at all to regard or be moued one whit with this sharpe reproofe he had receiued from him Fourthly no other cause can be imagined of his senslesnesse and stupidity but onely this That his griefe and care for his sonne was so very extreme that it tooke vp all his thoughts and affections it did so oppresse him that he could minde nothing else nothing else could affect him And from hence we receiued this Doctrine That extremity of worldly griefe will make the minde and heart of man vncapable of heauenly things It makes a man vnfit to receiue benefit by the Word and it makes a man also vnapt to pray with comfort For the Word though the heart of man be neuer so apt to profit by it neuer so teachable as it is in the time of affliction and heauinesse if it be moderate yet when it is in extremity it so oppresseth the heart that neither the threats of the Law though they be pressed vpon it by a sonne of thunder nor the sweet promises of the Gospell though they be applyed by such an one as Barnabas a sonne of consolation will be able to moue it or doe it good And as for prayer though we are neuer so fit for it as in time of affliction and heauinesse if it be moderate and secondly the spirit of prayer is such a grace and of that immortall nature as no affliction be it neuer so extreme is able vtterly to quench it or to depriue a man of it that did euer truely enioy it yet if affliction and sorrow be extreme it will make the best of Gods children vnfit to pray with that comfort they were wont And the reason of this I shewed you is the great weakenesse and impotency of mans nature Then came we to make our Vse of the Doctrine And the first Vse was to perswade euery Christian to learne the right way how to preuent and keepe his owne heart from immoderate sorrow specially for worldly things But because most men are apt to stumble at this exhortation and this age is so secure and so set vpon iollity and carnall mirth that it may seeme more needfull for vs to vse all our skill to humble men and bring them to remorse of conscience than to teach them to striue against sorrow I did therefore propound vnto my selfe this order in handling of this first Vse of the Doctrine First to shew you how far forth sorrow is fit and necessary for Christians Secondly that yet they must take heede of excessiue sorrow Thirdly how and by what meanes a man may best preserue and confirme his heart against it And of these three points I finished the two first the last day but the time would permit me to goe no further It now remaines that we proceed to the third and last and so come to the second Vse of the Doctrine All men esteeme it a miserable thing to haue a heart oppressed with griefe and seeke to shun it by all meanes And on the other side all men esteeme it an happy thing to haue a chearefull and merry heart but most men are miserably deceiued in the meanes whereby the heart may be preserued from excessiue sorrow and brought vnto true ioy But we must know that true peace is the peace of God as the Apostle cals it Phil. 4. 7. and true ioy is the gift of God And euery Christian should be able to call the Lord the God of his ioy and gladnesse as Dauid doth Psal. 43. 4. and make no reckoning of that peace and ioy whereof God is not the author So that if we would attaine to true peace and ioy indeed we must seeke it by such meanes as God hath directed vs to vse and not by any other Now I finde foure things especially which God hath in his Word directed vs to vse as remedies and preseruatiues against excessiue griefe and meanes to bring vs to true ioy The first is to get a true iustifying faith and good assurance of our saluation This is a sure way to keepe the heart from excessiue griefe and make it chearefull no ioy comparable to this Lord lift vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs thou hast put gladnesse in my heart more then in the time that their corne and their wine increased Psal. 4. 6 7. The ioy that growes from this ground is vnspeakeable and glorious 1. Pet. 1. 8. This is able to make a man reioyce when he hath neuer so many meanes to make him heauie being iustified by faith we glory in tribulations Rom. 5. 1. 3. this made Paul and Silas sing so merily euen in the stockes at midnight Acts 16. 25. For true faith giues a man many grounds and reasons of sound comfort First it assures him of the pardon of his sinne and when he knowes that no affliction neede trouble him Matth. 9. 2. Sonne be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiuen thee for sin is the very sting of death and of all affliction 1. Cor. 15. 56. Secondly he knowes he shall neuer lose the fauour of God after he hath once obtained it how many signes of Gods anger soeuer may be vpon him Rom. 8. 38 39. I am perswaded that neither life nor death nor principalities nor powers c. shall bee able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ our Lord. Thirdly he knowes God will haue tender respect to his weakenesse in whatsoeuer affliction he shall lay vpon him that it shall not exceede his strength God will by the
strength of his Spirit support and enable him to beare it the spirit it selfe will helpe his infirmities Rom. 8. 26. 1. Cor. 10. 13. God is faithfull that will not suffer you to bee tempted aboue that you be able Fourthly he is assured that whatsoeuer affliction God layeth vpon him it shall in the end tend to his good and to the furtherance of his saluation Rom. 8. 28. Fifthly he knowes the end will pay for all and that after a while all teares shall be wiped from his eyes and he shall enioy vnspeakeable comfort Psal. 27. 13. I should haue fainted except I had beleeued to see the goodnesse of the Lord in the land of the liuing Now on the other side the man that wants this assurance of his saluation though he haue all the meanes in the world to secure and quiet his heart and to make it merry yet can he neuer attaine vnto true ioy and comfort nor keepe off extremity of griefe when the euill day shall come vpon him If any shall obiect against this that many of Gods children that are assured of their saluation are yet much oppressed with heauinesse and their liues are very vncomfortable and on the other side that many who want this assurance are knowne to haue the lightest and merriest hearts of all other men I answer For the faithfull first That they haue much inward ioy though they shew it not as other men yea oft times when their life seemes most vncomfortable to the worldly man and most full of misery Yea as Salomon saith of wicked mens ioy Pro. 13. 14. Euen in laughter the heart is sorrowfull so of the heauinesse of the godly it may be said oft times that euen in weeping their heart is full of comfort 2 Cor. 6. 10. As sorrowing yet alwayes reioycing That as Christ said Vers. 32. of this Chapter I haue meat that ye know not of so haue the godly much comfort which worldlings haue no skill of Pro. 14. 10. The stranger shall not meddle with his ioy 2 Though they be sometime in great heauinesse indeed yet it is not possible they should be ouercome of it but they shall certainly recouer themselues as 2 Cor. 4. 8. We are afflicted on euery side yet are we not in distresse in pouertie yet not ouercome of pouertie we are persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but perish not Because they haue euer in them the seed and root of true ioy Psal. 97. 11. Light is sowne for the righteous and gladnesse for the vpright in heart So that as it is not possible for him that is once truly regenerate to sinne as other men do because the seed of God and Spirit of Sanctification abideth in him 1 Ioh. 3. 9. So it is not possible for him that hath once attained to true assurance of his saluation to sorrow as other men do or to perish in despaire because the seed of God the Spirit of Adoption which is called the oyle of gladnesse Psal. 45. 7. abideth in him For this is that that Christ saith of this ioy Ioh. 16. 22. Your hearts shall reioyce and your ioy shall no man take from you And that makes Dauid say so confidently Psal. 37. 37. Marke the vpright man and behold the iust for the end of that man is peace And as for that which is obiected concerning the ioy of them that haue no assurance of their saluation I answer First that many times their mirth is but forced and counterfeit and when outwardly they make shew of much mirth their hearts within them are as heauy as lead 2 Cor. 5. 1●… They reioyce in the face and not in the heart Pro. 14. 13. Euen in laughing the heart is sorrowfull And secondly though they seem very secure and pleasant in the time of prosperity while like drunken or mad men they haue no apprehension nor sense of their own estate yet in the euill day when their conscience shall be awakened their ioy will faile them and stand them in no stead That which is said of riches Pro. 11. 4. may be said likewise of merry company good cheare pastimes and musick They will not auaile in the day of wrath While they are out of Gods presence and forget him and their owne estate they are quiet and merry but when Gods glory shines but a little in their soules they are troubled out of measure as we see in the example of Balthazar Dan. 5. 6. O consider this ye that forget God esteeme not of the ioy of worldly men giue no rest to your selues till you haue gotten good assurance of your saluation and of the fauour of God in Christ For without this nothing will be able to giue you content and comfort in the houre of death and in the euill day Let this be thy desire and daily prayer to God that was Dauids Psalme 106. 4 5. Remember me O Lord with the fauour of thy people visit me with thy saluation that I may see the felicity of thy chosen and reioyce with their ioy The second preseruatiue against excessiue sorrow is the care of a good conscience That man that in all things is carefull to please God and to keep his conscience pure that he fall not into any knowne and grieuous sinne shall euer haue a quiet and chearefull heart 2 Cor. 1. 12. Our reioycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly purenesse we haue had our conuersation in the world Yea this will make a man chearefull at all times and preserue him from sorrow not in prosperity only but euen in aduersity he that is of a merry heart he meanes whose heart is made merry this way euen with the testimony of a good conscience hath a continuall feast Pro. 15. 15. And in this respect the Apostle Ephes. 6. 14. cals righteousnesse the Brest-plate that will defend the heart euen in the euill day But on the other side the man that hath no care of a good conscience but giues himselfe liberty to liue in any one knowne sinne can neuer haue any sound ioy in his heart but must needs be ouer-come of sorrow and swallowed vp with heauinesse when affliction shall come vpon him For sinne certainly will bring sorrow sooner or later not onely in the life to come There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Mat. 8. 12. but euen in this life sinne will bring sorrow it is the proper and naturall effect of sinne and cannot be auoided Pro. 29. 6. In the transgression of an euill man there is a snare that is matter of sorrow and teares as appeares by the other part of the Verse But the righteous doth sing and reioyce They that haue multiplied their sinnes shall haue their sorrowes multiplied yea great sinnes will bring great sorrowes as we see in the example of Iudas Mat. 27. 3 5. And many such examples God giues men in euery age Neither hath it beene so with such as Iudas onely but euen with