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

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is an improper foundation for thy faith As thy faith is hereby a blind faith so thy comfort is but a blind comfort How greatly do the Popish Casuists perplex their people with such cases of conscience and about such superstitious things that they have only tradition for and that it may be not many yeares neither without any stamp or superscription of the Scripture Have not they comfort in their Penances in their Indulgences Will not their Friers and Monks not those slow beasts and idle bellies who from deluded principles of conscience do severely and austeerly mortifie themselves say They have the testimony of their consciences and make a bulwark from thence But where is the rule they go by Is it not tradition On the contrary side in another extream there is the Enthusiast who rejecteth the Scripture as a dead letter and doth adhere only to revelations to pretended workings of Gods Spirit to the manifest light within them Doe not these even boast in their joyes and ravishments Doe they not when unable to answer arguments flie to a light within them But what ground is there for this Is not the Apostles command That we should not believe every spirit but try them 1 John 4. 1. And how must that be but by the Scripture You see then that it is not conscience simply and alone but a Scripture-conscience that is the ground of comfort To leave that and to trust in our conscience is to make our consciences a Bible to attribute infallibility to our selves Now this Scrigture is not only a Rule for our conscience in matters of faith but also of manners of righteousnesse towards man Conscience must witness to thee not only that thou art in the true Religion but also doest walk in holy conversation It must testifie of thy righteousness towards man as well as of Religion towards God This was Paul's continual exercise Act. 24. 26. To have a conscience void of offence towards God and towards man There are many voluminous Tractates of Cases of Conscience De jure justitiâ Of Righteousnesse towards man And although the Scripture doth not particularly decide Law-cases yet it layeth down such general rules that by them particulars may easily be decided if our hearts were not corrupt As for example that famous rule What you would have men do to you do ye to them Mat. 7. 12. Our Saviour after he had given religious precepts about prayer c. he addeth this to shew that Religion and righteousness must alwayes go together And Adrian the Emperour was so affected with this Rule saying He had it from the Jews or Christians that he commanded it to be written on the doors and gates of his Palace and before he would punish any offender would inform him of this Rule And our Saviour saith This is the Law and the Prophets A great expression Look then to thy conscience that it take the Scripture for a Rule in its adequate nature For faith and conversation this is no rule for conscience to go by Others do say every one is to look to himself but the word of God that must bear evidence to thee by thy conscience Secondly To the right guidance of our conscience in witnessing to us there is not only required the Word as a Rule But the Spirit of God to enlighten thy mind to receive the true meaning thereof Such are the powerfull delusions of Satan that when he can no longer dethrone the Scripture from its authority but men will appeal to that then he looketh about to advance his Kingdom by the Scriptures ill handled and wrested to corrupt opinions and by this means men are brought into a worse condition and more incurable then those who walk by no Scripture at all For if a man be delivered up to this perswasion that his opinions and wayes are allowed by Scripture warranted by Scripture what way shall we take to reduce him The Apostle Peter telleth us of some unstable and unlearned men 2 Pet. 3. 16. which did wrest the Scriptures to their own perdition And nothing is more ordinary which made Luther say That the Bible was the Hereticks book not in the sense the Papists do accusing it thereby of insufficiency and imperfection But for the dignity of it having such authority that every Heretick would gladly runne to this Sanctuary The Scripture then though a perfect Rule yet is not enough to guide our conscience unless the Spirit of God as is promised lead us into truth As the Sunne though never so full of light yet cannot guide a blind man We grant indeed that the Scripture is but a dead letter and of it self without Gods Spirit doth not enlighten the mind and convert the heart Only we say The Spirit doth this in and by the Scripture and that all mens consciences impulses light revelations and joyes must be examined and stand or fall according to this Rule Let this be granted and then we plead as fervently as any can for the work of Gods Spirit This must enlighten the conscience to be able to understand and believe the things revealed there Hence the Disciples could not attempt their office of publishing the Gospel without this assistance from the holy Ghost John 16. 13. he is said To guid them into all truth To guide them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this signifieth that they did not know the way or if they were in they would quickly divert into by-paths if this Spirit did not guide them When David said The Word was a lamp and light to his feet If we understand it effectually so that it did not only propound the light objectively but that also he was subjectively thereby illuminated this doth necessarily presuppose the work of Gods Spirit No wonder then if so many may be exceedingly acquainted with Scripture be ready with some Texts upon every occasion yet for all that be deluded with errours because they want Gods Spirit to enlighten them and instruct them thereby Let us look upon the Jews the sad dest object in the world at this day they have been so skilfull in the Old Testament that some could remember how many words and syllables were therein and that is read to them daily yet who more maliciously opposite unto the Lord Christ promised in the Old Testament than they are But the Scripture giveth a full reason thereof The veil is upon their eyes And long before there was such a prediction of this spiritual judgement upon them That seeing they should not see hearing not hear lest they understand and be converted Therefore to have a pure and true conscience we must be sure to pray and exercise our selves herein that the Spirit of God would direct us into the true sense and meaning of the Word which is to be expected in the holy use of those means which are necessary to find out the sense thereof For you must not expect that Gods Spirit will immediately reveal the sense of the Scripture without
it is that it is an art of arts and much heavenly wisdome is required to administer the proper comfort for such a grief This makes Casuistical Divinity which is applied wholly to rectifie and comfort a wounded conscience more difficult than Polemical is The afflicted soul hath its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 its deeps and Satan also in their temptations hath his deeps likewise Insomuch that it is choice prudence to give the proper cordial and to find out the true way of comforting such yet though there be special comforts in special cases yet all the godly that are in like temptations may and ought to take the like comforts That which hath done any godly man good under such an exercise may do thee also good if thou art not froward and unbelieving In the next place let us consider Why those arguments which some godly men have found powerfull to comfort them should also be very conducible to others And First Because all the Godly they are as I may so say Ejusdem speciei They have all the same substantial sundamentall worke of grace in their hearts That as you see all men have the same specifical humane Nature though there be many individual properties and differences Thus all the godly do partake of the same Divine Nature They are all borne of God they are all become new creatures Although indeed for the manner of conversion and the degrees of grace as also experiences of Gods favour and love in these things there may be much variation yet in the main as they all have the image of God and so are like him So they are also like one another It 's the common faith it 's the common love it 's the common Image of God which they all doe partake of So that godly men though they may differ in their gifts in degrees of graces in their judgements and opinions yet because the Image of God is stampt on them all there is a likenesse and similitude between one another What one feeleth the other feeleth How one is affected the other is affected they understand one another they do as it were see themselves in one another We have an expression Prov. 27. 19. As face answereth face in water so the heart of man to man There is a two-fold exposition of this place and that contrary Some say it is brought to shew the falshood and deceitfulnesse of mans heart That as in water there is not a true representation of the face so one mans heart is not truly known to another Others they goe on the contrary As say they the face of a man and the reflexion of it in the water are alike so is the heart of man to man that is of one friend to another Therefore a friend is Alter Ego They have all things common one soul as it were and one heart Now if this be true of moral friendship that their hearts are fo alike how much more of the people of God who are all made one in the Lord cis not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 3. 21. They are all but one Person their hearts must needs answer one another Let a godly man read David's Psalmes wherein he doth experimentally declare what the workings of his soul were will not a godly man say he speaketh his heart his doubts his complaints Seeing then there is the same fundamental work of grace in all no wonder if what is suitable to one is also to another Secondly Another ground of the Doctrine is From the samenesse and identity of that Spirit of God which enliveneth all and worketh in all For as it is with the body though it hath different parts yet all those are informed and animated by the same soul It is not one soul that informeth the arms another the feet but it 's one and the same soul that informeth all Thus it is also with all the people of God they may differ much in externals their condition their estate yea in internals also in illumination and sanctification yet it is the same Spirit of God that liveth and worketh in them all If therefore the same root give nourishment to all of them they all grow upon the same stock if the same spirit diffuse it self through all no wonder if what comforts one may also comfort another no wonder if the same promises revive one that doth another He said Homo sum nihil humani alienum c. He was a man and so nothing of a man was strange to him Thus thou art a believer a new creature and so nothing that is proper to such should be strange to thee If you say Seeing they are all animated by the same Spirit which is a Comforter then it would follow they are all comforted alike all have joy alike but experience confuteth that Two have the Spirit of God and one is comforted the other is dejected walking in darknesse so that you would say certainly the same Spirit is not in both The answer is Though the Spirit of God which is a Comforter be in all the godly yet it is a free agent he dispenceth this voluntarily as he pleaseth And again Though the Spirit of God in the godly encline to comfort yet it is in an ordered and appointed way If thou art unbelieving froward then thou resistest the Spirit of God within thee The Jewes have a Proverb Super maestum non cadit Spiritus Sanctus which in a good sense may be true As it is in matter of Doctrine so it is also in respect of Consolation All the godly have the same Spirit whose work it is to lead into truth yet what wonderfull differences in judgement may be amongst them that have the same Spirit yet they all hold the foundation because the Spirit of God doth communicate it self by degrees and in measure to one more to another lesse Thus it is also in respect of Consolation though they have the same Spirit of comfort yet the out-goings of this are in one more than the other And why should it seem a strange thing for all the godly under the Gospel to have the same Spirit seeing the holy ones under the Old Testament and those under the New are led by the same Spirit Whatsoever Marcionites of old and Socinians of late say to the contrary as appeareth notably 2 Cor. 4. 13. We having the same Spirit of faith as it is written I believe and therefore have spoken we also believe and therefore speak so we also believe and therefore rejoyce Thirdly Another ground of the Doctrine is Because the main arguments of comfort promised in the Word are not upon personal considerations neither are particular priviledges but from that common reason which belongs to every believer Paul is comforted not because Paul not because an Apostle So David findeth God putting gladnesse into his heart not because a King not because a Prophet but because godly If therefore comforts Fundamental I mean are given upon a
the grace of God given unto me unto me who am lesse than the least of all Saints is this grace given that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ Doe not these words proclaime how greatly his heart is affected with the grace of God in setting him apart to be an Officer in his Church and to proclaim the Gospel to the Gentiles Thus the grace of Conversion and the grace of Apostleship are a two-fold obligation upon Paul for ever to keep him humble and lowly in his own eyes Thirdly The grace of God exalted by Paul is seen In the inabling of him in his ministerial worke and going along with him in an effectual manner That whereas he had so many adversaries the false Apostles who gloried in humane wisdome and all external enticements of the flesh of man yet for all that that his seeming folly should conquer their towering wisdome that his contemptiblenesse should surmount their eminency This argued that it was not Paul but the grace of God with him that was thus effectuall Even as it was not little David in his own power but in the name of the Lord that did destroy that vaunting Goliah Now as there were many choice ingredients that did make up that precious ointment which was to be poured on the head of the Highpriest So there are also many choice and gracious qualifications with the Concomitants thereof required in those who are Pastours over people especially in the Apostles who were Pastours over Pastours as well as people As First It was the gracious worke of God To make Paul to be sincere and to walke in all plainnesse and integrity of heart whereas we see many in the broaching of their false wayes are filled with great deceit and subtilty The Apostle chargeth upon such who deliver false Doctrines Ephes 4. 14. By cunning craftinesse and sleight of men they lie in wait to deceive Those that are false Prophets in the Church of God they have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A strange slighty jugling and even bewitching of men but it is from the grace of God that those who are his true Ministers are sincere and upright They have an agreement betweene their heart and tongue It was the speech of one reading Lectures in the Popish Schooles Sic dico quando sum in Scholis sed penes nos sit aliter sentio I speake thus when I am in the Schooles but to tell you a secret I thinke otherwise It was also a boast of another Fredericus Staphylus That he had so many yeares beene a professour of Divinity in the Schooles and yet no hearer was able to tell what judgement he was of Gerhardi Cathol Confessio lib. 1. par 2. cap. 19. Now this craft and dissimulation in the old Dragon and his seed is no wonder but the Ministers of Christ as they believe with their heart so they make confession with their mouths and dare not but reveale the whole counsel of God It was horrible impudence in Melanthus the Grecian who having got a Kingdome by fraud and deceit did in honour thereof as if it were pleasing to their gods appoint Festivals calling them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as much as coustning and deceiving inculcating that of the Poet Dolus an virtus quis in hoste requirat Capel Histor An. Mund. 2872. Certainly the Church of Rome and many other Hereticks have gone by no better Rule counting gaine godlinesse counting lying and dissembling godlinesse when they conceived that it made for their end As if they were of that Kings mind Darius Hystaspes that to lie and speake truth were all one For he that spake truth did so to obtain his desires and so he that lied did no more and therefore both truth and a lie were all one Vide Laurent Vul. Jisuit cap. 1. pag. 30. But oh how abominable is this and contrary to the Spirit of Christ The grace of God in such who are his faithfull Ministers maketh them not to turn into such false and crooked wayes though the preaching of the truths of Christ bringeth much hatred and opposition though they know they are unwelcome and despised and that for their very message sake yet they consult not with fleshly wisdome but doe the work of God zealously and with much faithfulnesse And truly the Ministers of God are much to pray for this grace of God upon them that they may be above all humane feats all sinfull compliances and be afraid of nothing but that they should sinne and not preach the Gospel with that boldnesse as they ought to do That great commendation which the spies gave Christ upon a wicked designe is to be endeavoured after by every faithfull Minister of Christ Luke 20. 20. Master we know that thou sayest and teachest rightly neither acceptest thou the person of any but teachest the way of God truly So that you see this sincerity in the Ministers of God is the special effect of Gods grace towards them And therefore let us make an Use of Admonition to all such as desire to serve God in the way of the Ministry that above all things they would pray to God for this grace To have thy ministerial conversation with much wisdome and learning with great applause and glory in the world is nothing so advantagious as this integrity of spirit This is above parts above gifts above books and all learning It is said of Barnabas Act. 11. 24. He was a good man full of the holy Ghost and of faith and much people was added to the Lord This followed as a blessed effect upon the former If we Ministers had more mighty workings of Gods Spirit in us we should find more mighty workings of his Spirit with us SERM. XCVI Wherein the Grace of God appeared towards Paul in his Ministerial Labours 2 COR. 1. 12. But by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world WE are enumerating the particulars of that grace which the Apostle doth especially acknowledge in his ministerial course We proceed therefore and First The faithfulnesse of Paul to his Apostolical trust fixing his heart upon that and using no other meanes then what are proportionable and commensurate to such a noble end was wholly of the grace of God towards him It is required of Stewards that they be found faithfull saith this Apostle 1 Cor. 4. 2. and with this grace God had honoured him Insomuch that we do not find in Paul any halting any carnal compliance which might contradict the holy end of his Apostolical Office Those are two noble expressions 2 Corinth 10. 8. Our authority the Lord hath given us for edification and not for destruction The other is 2 Cor. 13. 8. For we can doe nothing against the truth but for the truth In these Texts we have expressed the end of all ministerial power it is for edification And therefore if any
sought not himself neither did he mind his own will or his own glory And certainly the higher the Office is the greater will thy account be and thy condemnation the heavier Oh the dreadfull account that is to be made at that day concerning this talent 2. Of laziness and idleness For the work is of great consequence The bloud of souls will speak more terribly than the blood of Abels body How severe was the master in that Parable of our 〈◊〉 to him who hid his talent in a napkin Luke 19. 20. he is called an unprofitable servant and must be cast into utter darkness Use 2. To you that are the people If we have our Commission from Christ then take heed how you reject the Word we speak from him The Apostle makes a comparison between him that refused Moses speaking and Christ speaking and saith How much forer punishment shall he be thought worthy of Heb. 10. 29. Every Sermon your condemnation will rise higher upon you Think not that our words will passe away No God saith by the Prophet They shall not return in vain for if it be not a saving and converting word it will be an hardning and condemning one No wonder if our Saviour spake one Parable to this very purpose and concludeth Take heed how you hear Mark 4. 24. The second thing observable from this relative consideration is That the Apostle intending to beget awe and esteem in the hearts of those he wrote unto he mentioneth his Office and from whom he had it An Apostle of Jesus Christ This was a greater glory saith Chrysostome then if he had styled himself any temporal Officer in the Civil State For he doth saith the same Father as if one next to the Emperour should write to a certain people giving himself that title of honour which was next to the Emperour Thus doth Paul The Apostle of Jesus Christ. This could not but astonish and startle all his opposers and enemies yet if you do consider with a worldly respect what Christ himself was and so any Officer under him you must judge it the most contemptible and despicable thing that can be that which a carnal man would have been ashamed to own for Christ himself was called The Carpenters sonne and bred up at Nazareth a most despicable place and his outward condition was so low that he saith He had not where to lay his head And as for his Apostles what repute they had in the world Paul himself telleth us when he saith They were accounted the off-scouring of all things 1 Cor. 4. 13. Yet see how the Apostle glorieth in this title as that which might justly awe the consciences of those to whom he wrote From this observe That those things are of high account and respect in the Church of God which in the world are very despicable and despised As That which is highly esteemed amongst men is abominable before God Luk. 18. So that which is abominable and loathsom before men is highly esteemed with God We might instance in many things First Christ who is the Head of the Church and the chief corner-stone yet he was rejected by those who by their Office was builders Yea Christ crucified was accounted foolishness to the Gentiles Insomuch that had not God promised Christ To give him the Nations of the Earth and had actually lifted him up above all principalities and powers We should have thought there would not have been one City much lesse one Nation especially not so many Nations adoring him as God We may truly say This is the Lords doing and it is marvellous in our eyes Christ is called by the Apostle The King of Kings and Lord of Lords which 2 Tim. 5. 16. Drusius saith was the Title and Style of the great Kings of Persia but who except the Christian would admire Christ more than the Persian King Therefore it was a wonderfull work upon those Wisemen of the East that they should come and bring such presents and worship Christ though an Infant whom they found in a mean place at Bethlehem and in the meanest place there but where God giveth spiritual eyes there is a spiritual excellency discovered where the world seeth nothing but contemptibleness Secondly For the Officers of Christ In worldly considerations how low and despised are they But to those who are spiritual and acknowledge the Order and Institutions of Christ they esteem them as the Stewards of God and the Ministers of Christ insomuch that it 's the cause of contemning Religion when their Office is despised Paul was so received by the Galatians as if he had been an Angel from Heaven Yea Christ himself They would have pulled out their eyes to have pleasured him And we see in the after ages of the Church how much the Ministers of Christ were had in esteem insomuch that it greew unto an excesse Now though the carnal worldly man beareth no such respect to them yet those who are led by Scripture doe highly esteeme them and that for their workes sake Thirdly The Duties prescribed by Christ they are such as the world condemneth either for folly or pusillanimity as Faith in Christ alone for salvation self-denial readiness to take up our Crosse To love our enemies to do good to those that hate us Are not these such things that the magnanimous and gallant spirits of the world do disdain Fourthly The priviledges and encouragements which Christ also inviteth with they are not such baits as will take in the world Psal 4. Who will shew us any good that is the vote of the world As for the light of Gods countenance justification and assurance of Gods grace these things they do no more esteem than the Swine doth Pearl Lastly The due execution of the Censure of the Church upon just grounds to cast out the impenitent sinner This the world contemneth but yet you see how powerfully it wrought upon the Incestuous person And Matth. 18. when our Saviour had said He that would not heare the Church must be like a Publican and Heathen lest they should despise this he saith Whatsoever ye bind on Earth shall be bound in Heaven Use of Exhortation To admire the power and wisdom of God who hath kept up Church-officers Church-ordinances in the world when there are no outward pompous motives to perswade thereunto SERM. VIII In what sense Paul saith of himself He was an Apostle by the will of God Shewing likewise how all Church-Offices and Priviledges come meerly from the will and good pleasure of God 2 COR. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God c. VVE are now to consider the last particular in this Inscription as it is divided to us and that is the impulsive Cause or rather the Manner how Paul obtaineth this Apostleship which is said to be by the will of God Here is much comprehended in this expression for hereby is declared That it was
minds of men alike that he would bless the Church with this Unity Oh how greatly would godliness flourish errours be discouraged if it could be said of all believers which is spoken of the primitive Christians often That they met together with one accord and with one heart Oh how blessed is it to see the whole Church of God rather than one family or City to dwell together in Unity The next thing observable is in that Timothy who is here called a Brother is at other times very often called a Sonne And besides the Reasons insisted on the last day there is another mentioned Phil. 2. 22. that Paul was as a Father to him instructing of him about his Ministerial Office and therefore had two Episties wrote to him for the managing of Ecclesiastical affairs in a godly manner This great help and tuition as it were Timothy had from Paul being made a Church-officer while he was young Observe That it is of great consequence to such who in their young years are set apart for the Ministry to have the guidance of those who are more solid and experienced Thus Christ himself though he could have immediately furnished his Apostles with admirable and sufficient abilities for the great work of Apostleship yet kept them two years as the Harmonists gather under his peculiar charge and information In the Old Testament likewise though the gift of prophesie was by immediate inspiration yet we read that even then there was the Colledge of the Prophets and the sons of the Prophets 2 King 2. 7. So we read 2 Chron. 34. 22. of the Colledge of the Prophets Hence it is also in the New Testament that the Apostle directing of Timothy how to keep up the sound Doctrine of Christ after his departure giveth this notable instruction 2 Tim. 2. 2. That what Doctrine he had heard from Paul he should commit to faithfull men that should teach others That is a very full and pregnant Text. For the usefulness of Universities that there should be Nurseries wherein young ones should be trained up to deliver the sound Doctrine to their Posterity after them Though in those primitive times there was such a plentifull effusion of the Spirit of God in the gifts thereof yet he there commands that faithfull men should be chosen who should commit to posterity one age after another the true Doctrine of Christ and therefore in the primitive times before there were Universities the Bishops house was a Nursery to train up young Disciples And in Origen's time he began to be a Catechist and to set open a School in reference to the Christian Religion If there be in such publick Nurseries and Universities gross abuses men degenerating into laziness and not fulfilling the general intention of the Founders the abusers are to be purged away but not the order or manner of education it self If it be said The the Spirit of God is that which alone inableth a man to such Offices and Imployments We grant that the Spirit of God is the alone Sanctifier of all gifts and abilities but yet now the Spirit of God doth not work in an immediate and miraculous manner else why is there not working of Miracles Why do they not speak in all Tongues Why do they not understand Hebrew and Greek which are the original Languages the Scripture was written in If therefore we must not look for the Spirit of God in such an immediate way it must be in a mediate and acquired way And this ordinary way doth not exclude Gods Spirit but supposeth it For if in those days when miraculous gifts were ordinary yet see what charge Paul layeth upon Timothy to give himself to reading and studying of the Scriptures especially that is observed by Calvin 1 Tim. 4. 13. Till I come give thy self to reading he would not have him so much as neglect that little time No wonder if in these later days such duties are more vehemently to be pressed Use of Exhortation to you that are people to be of more publick spirits in your prayers not only regarding your present age but that the truths of God may be handed from age to age that the Universities may be pure fountains and hopefull Nurseries from whence may come such who shall be able to propagate the pure Doctrins of Christ Peter was carefull that after his decease the pure Doctrins of Christ might be preserved And so for your children and childrens sake that they may not live in times of ignorance and darkness importune God earnestly that he would keep up such faithfull men and good wayes that may propagate the Gospel to the worlds end SERM. XII Of the Name and Nature of a Church 2 COR. 1. 1. To the Church of God which is at Corinth c. FRom the Persons inscribing we come to the Persons inscribed or to those to whom this salutatory Preface and so the whole Epistle is directed and that is set down 1. More particularly and then more generally More particularly and they are described by the relative condition and estate they are in viz. a Church To the Church which is further described topically from the place where it is At Corinth Let us consider this particular first And for the opening the word Church we might spend much time therein but I shall briefly explicate it The word is used and that only in Act. 19. for a Civil Assembly Yea it 's said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Assembly was confused The Athenians called their publick meetings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word is used in Thucidides as the learned observe The Hebrew hath two words Cohel which is for the most part translated Ecclesia by the Septuagint and Gnedeth which is translated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Church doth rather answer Cohel than Gnedeth because under the New Testament it is not fixed As for such who would understand that place Mat. 18. Tell the Church of a Senate or Civil Power it 's so improbable that it 's not worth time to confute it The word therefore is most frequently used in the New Testament for an holy Society gathered together in an holy manner for holy ends And thus it is used either for the Catholick invisible Church which is the whole body of Christ that shall be saved as when he is said Ephes 5. To give himself for his Church and the Church is made the wife of Christ And Col. 1. 24. it 's called the body of Christ This Church is meant in the Creed when we believe there is an holy Catholick Church and so a Communion of Saints though some would have it a communion in holy things To this Church belonged all the godly that lived in the Old Testament For that is a dangerous errour of the Socinians that make the Church in the Old Testament specifically distinct from that in the New as if they were not saved by the same Christ and the same faith as we are under the Gospel Now it
writeth to them as if all were Gentiles as Chap. 12. 2. Ye know that ye were Gentiles carried away to dumb Idols c. Hence the same Author saith That it was one Church collected of all the believers in that place Licet esse potuerint in eadem civitate distinctae ut it a dicam parochiae As for the notion of a learned man That the Jewish believers and Gentile believers did make two distinct Churches and had two distinct Bishops which he thinketh would salve some seeming contradictions in Ecclesiastical History that being of an heterogeneous nature to my purpose I passe it by Thus also the Church of Jerusalem is called a Church which yet by many probable Arguments seemeth to be more than one Neither may we think that Christ hath invested one single Congregation ordinarily with all Church power For that president and example of a Councel or Synod mentioned Act. 15. doth inform That there are to be Synods not only by way of advice but by power and that over particular Churches We proceed to the next thing considerable in this description of the Church and that is the efficient Cause the Church of God This distinguisheth the Church from all civil and meer political Assemblies For though the Earth be the Lords and the fulness thereof yet the Church is the Lords in a more peculiar and appropriated manner Sometimes the Church is named absolutely without any addition as when Paul is said to persecute the Church Sometimes it 's restrained to the place Thus the Church of Ephesus the Church of Laodicea but most commonly it is the Church of God or the Church of Christ Sometimes both are put together as 1 Thes 1. 1. To the Church of the Thessalonians which is in God the Father and in Jesus Christ So also 2 Thess 1. 1. And certainly if so be the Apostle considering us meerly as creatures maketh use of and sanctifieth that of the Poet For we are his off-spring how much more is it true of us as members of a Church Observe That a Church is Gods people in a more peculiar and special manner Though he be the God of the world yet in a more special manner he is a God of his Church The consideration of this truth may tend much to our spiritual edification For if we are of God how much should it humble us to see any thing amongst us that is of sin or the Devil Is ignorance or prophaneness of God so are humane superstitions of God But to open this let us consider what is implied in this when a Church is said to be the Church of God First therefore this sheweth That a Church is a supernatural Society it 's spiritual company of men So that a Church is not like a civil Corporation or like Kingdoms and Commonwealths which are by meer humane Institution and agreement though Magistracy it self it be of God but are supernatural and therefore it 's called the Kingdom of Heaven and Jerusalem which is from above so the Church is called Gal. 4. 26. even while it is here on Earth before it is triumphant in Heaven Now the Church is a supernatural Society many wayes in which respect it may be called the Church of God in a more eminent manner For in respect of its Efficient so God alone is the author of it called therefore Ecclesia because God by his Word calls them from their Heathenish Idolatries and practises making of them a Church Thus the people of Corinth when they were securely indulging themselves in all manner of impieties having no thoughts or desires to be a Church God by Paul calls them to be one Even as God by his breath caused the dry bones to gather together and to live or as at the day of Judgment God by the voice of an Arch-angel will raise the dead in the grave who have no life or sense in them Thus it 's the Lord that made Churches every where in the preaching of the Gospel It was the gracious work of God that found us out in Britain and made a Church to himself so that we are loca inaccessa to the grace of God and his Spirit though to humane power It is true indeed God is the God of the world he created Heaven and Earth with all therein yet though God did thus immediately create the world at first we do not say the creatures therein are Gods grace or that they have a supernatural being For it 's not enough to make a thing grace or supernatural that God doth immediately create it but that his power be in a peculiar and extraordinary manner and that for supernatural effects and ends Oh therefore how greatly should we be affected with the grace and power of God in creating to himself a Church out of the world He might have no more made a Church here or there in the Earth then he did in Hell and he that at first planted a curious Garden and put man therein is much more wonderfull in making of a Church to himself yet how bruitish and earthly are we We can bless God for the world and the comforts thereof that the Earth brings forth food for us that we have the Air to breath in the glorious Sunne to be a daily light to us yet we are not thus affected with Church-mercies and Church-ordinances David indeed upon the former consideration cried out Lord what is man that thou art thus mindfull of him c But we may much rather from these supernatural respects Secondly It 's supernatural in respect of the purchase given for them the price paid to make them the Lords For you must know upon Adams fall all mankind was excommunicated unchurched as it were and therefore cast out from Paradise and Gods gracious presence and hence it is that we are said naturally to be without God yea the Devil is said to be the god of the world Thus untill God makes us a Church we are under the power of Satan wholly and therefore to be cast out of the Church is to be delivered to Satan Thus then being fallen off from the Lord and now become the Devils in whom he reigneth we could not be purchased from this thraldom but by the death of Christ and therefore we are called the Church of Christ as well as of God because though conquered by Gods Spirit yet we are bought by his bloud and this the Apostle urgeth That therefore we are none of our own but are to live to him We are to be his peculiar people zealous of good works Tit. 2. 15. Thus it cost more to be Gods Church then to be the world at first for he spake and it was made but here Christ died and so it was purchased What a powerfull ingagement is this for all of a Church to walk holily What did Christ die that you should wallow in the filth of your sins What will you deny the Lord that bought you If thou wilt be ignorant and prophane
this Salutation Some think because the work of the Ministry meets with much malice and froward opposition from wicked men which made Paul pray that God would deliver him from unreasonable absurd men who are led only by humours and passions not by Reason and Religion Therefore seeing those that do faithfully discharge their trust meet with little favour and love from men hence it is that he doth in a peculiar manner pray for mercy to them Others they think the word is inserted because of the great difficulty of the Ministry it being a burden too heavy even for Angels shoulders Insomuch that Chrysostome thought Few Church-officers could be saved Seeing then the work is so great so much grace is required to manage it and the best have failings therefore they need the mercy prayed for But this by the way Come we to the Text. In that we may consider the Matter prayed for And the Efficient Cause from whom it is to come The Matter and Benefit is set down in two words which though but two yet comprehend all that a godly heart can desire the first is Grace the second Peace In the original there is a defect and therefore most do supply it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as our Translators Grace be to you Though the Apostle Peter in the salutations of both his Epistles expresseth the word and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Be multiplied and so Estius would supply it here but there is no inconvenience to keep to the former Interpretation 2. There is the Cause of this which is two-fold God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ All these parts shall be opened as we take them in order only let us first take notice of the Manner and End of this Salutation in the general That it is not for any earthly or worldly thing but what is spiritual The Grecians they used commonly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in their Salutations as the Latines Salve and are relating only to temporal welfare And indeed the Heathens knew no better but the Apostle would lift up our hearts to higher things The Apostle James Chap. 1. 1. writing to the dispersed Tribes useth the word only Greeting which made Cajetan among other reasons reject it as not Canonical as if such a Salutation savoured of an humane spirit But this is no Argument For the Apostles gathered together in a Councel at Jerusalem sending a Letter to the Churches abroad use no more Salutation than that only in that we are to comprehend whatsoever is more expresly in Pauls Salutation Seeing then it s only spiritual things which Paul here doth wish to them Observe That spiritual mercies and priviledges are to be desired above all earthly and worldly ones what soever The Grace of God and Gospel peace is infinitely to be preferred before any outward advantage Psal 4. 6 7. when David had represented the natural desire of every man unregenerated Who will shew us any good He presently demonstrates the clean contrary disposition of those that are godly and spiritual Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us and Thou hast put more gladness into my heart then they have had when their wine or oyl increaseth By David you may judge of all the faithfull they esteem more of the love of God and the sense or perswasion of this more than the whole world Let the prophane bruitish men of the world say as some did in Chrysostomes time whom he reproveth Give me that which is sweet although it choke me So let me have my pleasures my lusts though they damn me The godly on the other side if raised up to this heavenly transfiguration as it were to have the spirit of Adoption enabling them to call God Father and to walk under the light of his grace and favour they will say It is good to be here So that the desires and earnest longings of mens hearts do divide the world into two parts Some and they are only few who with David say As the Hart panteth after the water-brooks so do their souls after God Yea Their souls break for the longing they have to God at all times But then others they seek the things of this world in the first place Let them have their pleasures their wealth their honours then with the Reubenites they will sit down and go no further because they see the Land is a good and pleasant Land never desiring to go into Canaan To open this Doctrine consider First That all the while a man is meerly natural and dead in his sins he is not affected with nor can he desire any spiritual mercy Even as dead men are not affected with pleasant sights or melodious sounds No wonder then though we do out of the Gospel shew such all the glory of Heaven yet they will not fall down and worship Christ because they are no wayes sensible or apprehensive of a better good Can a Worm that crawleth upon the ground live the life of an Angel or a man Alas that knoweth nothing but to crawl on the ground and feed on the dust of the earth Thus it is with every carnal man speak to him of the savour of God of the light of his countenance he knoweth no more what you mean than the bruit beast doth what reason is Besides sinne hath so infected and polluted the heart and appetite of every natural man that he calleth good evil and evil good he takes sweet for bitter and bitter for sweet That as the Swine loveth to wallow in its mire and delighteth in that more than in the sweetest garden that is Or as they say of those blind Beetles that live in muck and dung but sweet things do presently kill them thus it is with every natural man he is not only not affected but he is contrarily disposed to heavenly things Rom. 8. The wisdome of the flesh is enmity against God The wisdome the best understanding parts and knowledge that he hath is as full of malice against holy things as a Toad of poison The Greek word doth not only signifie his intellectual but his practical wisdom and affection he doth not say He hath savoury knowledge of heavenly things Sapientia est sapida scientia And as Bernard Sapiens est cui res sapiunt prout sunt Heavenly things savour as heavenly earthly things as earthly But in every natural man his appetite and taste is wholly disordered he finds no excellency loveliness in heavenly things which yet to a gracious heart are matter of exceeding delight and ravishment Hence in the second place Till a man be regenerated till he be made a new creature and endowed with an heavenly heart he is no sutable subject for these heavenly things Every one then as he is affected and disposed so he judgeth if earthly then all his affections move that way if heavenly then they are turned the contrary way As you see in mixed and compounded bodies
incestuous person whom sorrow had almost swallowed up as a whirlpool These that call for a drop of water as it were to cool their scorching souls and cannot have it To such as these we are to apply our selves with all tendernesse to comfort them as the Apostle exhorted the Corinthians For seeing that a wounded spirit is more hardly born than any outward misery whatsoever no wonder that in this case if ever we come with all comforting medicines to heal them and revive them We read the Lord Christ when he was in those agonies conflicting with the sense of Gods wrath that even he himself had an Angel to comfort him Must Christ the Sonne of God have an Angel sent to comfort him How much more then a poor wretched sinner ready to fall into hell with the burden of his sins This is fully represented by Elihu Job 33. 28. where speaking of a man chastened by the Lord and consuming away so that he doth even abhor to eat his bread If there come an Interpreter a Messenger one amongst a thousand that can shew to such his uprightnesse that make it evident to him that he is no hypocrite but the truth of grace abideth in him then his flesh shall be fresh as a childs he shall pray to God and he will be favourable and he shall see his face with joy See what a wonderfull change such a messenger may make he doth even raise him from the dead he that was pininig away is returned to his youth and this is for spiritual troubles Again in the second place There are outward troubles and it 's our duty to comfort such also and endeavour to turn their water into wine and of such troubles happily the Apostle speaketh chiefly in this Text. For although God be ready to fill their hearts with joy yet he will have this done many times by the help of others because we being members in the same body are to be accordingly serviceable to one another Hence in the second place Every one in trouble doth greatly need the assistance and help of others to comfort them Take the most godly Minister or the most able Christian who have been most eminent and successefull to comfort others yet when they have been tempted and cast down themselves they have not bin able to make use of those directions they have given to others As Physicians though never so able to help others yet in their own diseases they need the advice of others Insomuch that there is no Christian in any trouble can say I need not the comfort of any the help of any I can support and comfort my self well enough Thus Paul Rom. 1. 12. though so eminent an Apostle caught up into the third Heaven yet he did long to see the Romans That he might be comforted with them though that might be in respect of their graces to see this flourish as in other places Ye are my Crown and my Joy if you stand fast in the Lord. But howsoever we see job though so eminent yet not able to pour oyl into his own wounds he is without comfort and cannot help himself Now there are these Reasons Why those who are afflicted though never so able and gracious yea excellently skilfull to comfort others yet they themselves need help from others in their temptations First Because their temptations do darken and obnubilate their own judgements and so they are not able to see that ground and those arguments of comfort which others may It is with them as those who would behold their face in a broken glass or in muddied streams like those that look through a green glass they judge every thing green while judgement is kept clear though faith be weak yet still there is some support but then is the soul wholly cast down when the eye is become darkness when in stead of a Father it apprehends God a Judge when instead of beholding the gracious works of Gods Spirit in themselves they think they see nothing but hypocrisie and rottenness in themselves Oh now how welcome is such an one of a thousand who shew to that man his uprightness Secondly The most eminent in their troubles need comfort from others Because the sense and feeling of their grief doth wholly possesse them so that they mind nothing else Whatsoever it be that is a burden upon them with this they rise and go to bed and groan under it now another Christian is very fit to put them in mind of such promises to remember them of such passages in Scripture which their immoderate sorrow had wholly driven out of their mind The soul of a man cannot be intent to many things at once therefore the sense and feeling of its particular exercise taketh up the whole heart as if there were no Scripture no promise no balm in Gilead for any then to be a Remembrancer a Monitor you forget such a place you remember not what the Scripture delivereth concerning your condition or you do not think of what you have formerly Say with David I will remember the works of the Lord of old Thus I say even the most eminent are so apt to be sensible of what is upon them that they remember not such things as may do them good Thirdly Even the most eminent who are in any trouble they cannot so bear it but they are subject to unbelief to discontent to frowardnesse to many sad exercises of soul And therefore no wonder if they need the help of others to allay that evil spirit in them as Martha said Lord if thou hadst been here my brother had not died So mayest thou say Oh if such a Christian such a Minister had been with me I had not been so impatient I had not been so dejected We cannot be in exercises especially in spiritual desertions and the sense of Gods wrath but withall there will arise much sinne there will be froth and mud that our hearts will send forth In this boiling of the soul there will arise some scumme It is true in Christ although he was under those disconsolate desertions destitute of comfort yet all the while there was no sinne in him no grace was weakned though his comfort was abated his soul was like a glass with pure water in it all the moving and tossing of it up and down could not cause any filth or mud in it but it is otherwise with us our souls have mud a sinfull sediment in the bottome and no sooner are we tossed and moved up and down but this cometh to the top our corruption sheweth it self presently and therefore we need the prayers the advice of others yea rebuke sometimes because like Rachel We refuse to be comforted Fourthly Every one needeth comfort from others in trouble Because the Devil is then most forward and busie He is ready to accuse God to thee and to accuse thee to God He moveth in job's wife that he should curse God and die He
Disciple must not be above his Master Yea that we are appointed and set by God to afflictions they are the effect of our predestination as well as grace and glory is Now in this we may be comforted Christ hath done is no wrong he hath told us what we must look for it 's no more then we expected The fiery trial is not a strange thing Surely this maketh way for much comfort that we looked for afflictions aforehand we prepared an Ark against the deluge should come The Devil he being a deceiver dealeth contrary to Christ for he tempts with pleasant baits hiding the hook he sheweth thee pleasure and profit but not a word of that hell and torments which will necessarily follow thereupon But Christ tels thee of the worst at first and keepeth his best wine to the last Thirdly Christ comforteth us by informing of us of his Sovereignty and conquest over the world So that both Devils and his Instruments are but Lions in his hand and so he lets them loose and pulleth them off as he pleaseth If our enemies were equal or superiour to Christ in power then we might justly be left without comfort but what Christ spake to his Disciples belongs to all I will not leave you John 14. 18. I will not leave you comfortlesse Orphans in the original your condition is as good as if Christ were here corporally upon the earth and should speak to thee to be comforted Would not this rejoyce thee in thy afflictions if Christ himself should come to thee and say Be of good comfort I am with thee I will support thee Now Christ giveth his Spirit to be a Comforter in his room That as Tertullian calleth the Spirit Vicariam vim Lib. de praescript in respect of Doctrine so also it is in regard of comfort and wherein can it more be manifested then in teaching of us that the world is conquered by Christ John 16. 33. In the world ye shall have tribulation but be of good cheer I have overcome the world Faith maketh us behold this conquest over principalities and powers as also over all adversaries so that thou art to receive comfort because there is no argument of discouragement but it may be answered from Christ and if thou art dejected it is because thou hast low thoughts of Christ Thou doest not judge of him as he is Fourthly Christ comforteth by vertue of his prayer put up in that very behalf In that solemn valedictory prayer of Christ John 17. 13. one end why he poured out that so affectionately before his death was that believers might have Christs joy fulfilled in themselves It 's Christs joy and their joy Christs efficiently theirs subjectively So that as there is fulnesse of grace in Christ to subdue every corruption thus there is fulnesse of joy in him for every tribulation and that this may be applied to thee Christ who cannot be denied by his Father for he heareth him in all things hath thus prayed to God for it And therefore 〈◊〉 by virtue not onely of his death but also of his prayer and intercession that thou art made to rejoyce Lastly Christ comforts in sufferings by instructing thee of the good use and heavenly advantage all these tribulations shall turn unto which is two-fold they shall 1. Turn to thy own spiritual and eternal good Thou shalt hereby be more purified from thy filth and corruption this will winnow away thy chaff this fire will purge out thy drosse this will be a School wherein thou wilt learn more spiritual and divine knowledge in heavenly things then ever before Sufferings have taught more than vast libraries or the best books can teach Again They will conduce to thy eternal Glory God taketh up every tear in his bottle how much more every drop of blood For indeed by suffering in the work of the Lord thou art more than Angelical though the Angels do the will of God purely chearfully and constantly yet they meet with no troubles nor persecutions for it as believers do No wonder therefore if God at last take his Joseph's out of prison and sets them on thrones of glory Besides believers are comforted because they know all their sufferings will turn to the advantage of the Church Others are comforted and encouraged by this what rejoycing doth this create in the heart of a believer as we may shew more largely in the next verse Use Of Instruction to all such who take upon them the profession of Christ let them not be in jest do not fall upon it by custome and education only but remember when thou profferest to follow him that he will ask whether thou canst be baptized with his Baptism or no he will tell thee of the troubles that follow his way his advice is to sit down and consider with thy self whether thou canst build this house or no fight this warfare or no For it had been better for thee never to have owned Christ than by carnal fears to apostatize saying I did not look for these reproaches these troubles I thought not the way would have been so difficult Luke 9. 57. We have some come voluntarily to Christ proffering to follow him whithersoever he did go but Christ accepted them not because they understood not how much they must suffer in his way and therefore when they had put hand to the plough they would look back Oh then again and again look upon what terms you professe Christ If thou canst not be a Martyr in thy soul how wilt thou be in thy body If thou canst not leave thy sins thy lusts for his sake how canst thou thy life SERM. XLIX How and why God alwaies proportions a Saints Comforts to his Sufferings and often makes them to overflow And why he often denies Comforts to his People in their troubles 2 COR. 1. 5. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolations also aboundeth by Christ WE shall now put a period to our discourse about this text there remaineth the last Observation to be improved which is from the habitude or proportion that is between our sufferings and our comforts as the one aboundeth so the other aboundeth Should we have great sufferings and small comforts this would be to put some few drops of honey into a fountain of gall The bitternesse would still abide The Lord therefore doth commensurate his comforts according to our afflictions he layeth a Gyants burden upon Gyants shoulders and Childrens burden upon a Child Doct. That God doth proportion our comforts to our sufferings If our sufferings increase our consolations increase So that if thy afflictions are greater and more multiplyed then ever thou hast no cause to fear for thy supports and cordials shall also be more increased As thou art a man of sorrows so thou shalt be also a man of joys if thou callest upon all that passe by as the Church did Lam. 1. 12. Behold and see if there be any sorrow
Moral Patience Natural Patience I call that which cometh much from the constitution and complexion of their bodies they are more mild quiet and enduring of grief than others Moral patience I call that when men by wisdom and reading of moral precepts can harden themselves heroically to bear the tribulations up on them but Christian patience is that which comes from a regenerated and sanctified nature eying Gods glory his will and command only not regarding other sinister respects So that a Natural Patience a Moral Patience under thy sufferings will not advance thy salvation but that which is Christian You have a notable place for this 2 Pet. 1. 6. To patience godlinesse The Apostle doth there exhort to have the chain of graces linked together not to think it enough to have one grace unless he have all And therefore patience must be added to temperance for that requireth the denial of our pleasures the crucifying of our delights which cannot be without patience but then to this patience we must adde godlinesse implying that though we be never so meek so still so Lamb-like under our troubles yet if godliness be not added to this patient deportment if it be not from divine principles and to divine ends then our patience is greatly defective Look we therefore that when we quietly and patiently suffer it came from the grace of patience not from a counterfeit patience for this is not true gold and so will not enrich us This distinction being premised whereby a Christian may be inabled to know when it is Nature and when it is Grace that doth bear when flesh and blood doth suffer and when a divine Nature within him In the next place let us consider What goeth to the producing of this grace of patience for we cannot of our selves perform this duty of patience no more than a wildernesse can bringforth roses Therefore First The efficient cause of patience is God only The heart of man under any afflictions is like a wild bull in a net there is nothing but raging and repining under every exercise till God give a patient spirit Hence Rom. 15. 5. he is called The God of patience For what a wild unruly bedlam is an unsanctified man under any pressure upon him Like Cain he crieth out It is greater than he can bear Like Jobs wife he is tempted to curse God and so die Doest thou therefore under thy trials want patience Doth it grieve and sadly afflict thee to see thy self so passionate so impassionate Then let this make thee to run to the throne of grace improve this title God is the God of patience Say Oh God it is but speaking the word it is but saying Let there be patience and there will be patience How often have I resolved for patience How often prayed for patience and yet Lord my heart is tormented and tossed up and down like that Lunatick which could not be bound by any chains Not only my tongue but my heart are worse than unruly and savage beasts they may be tamed but this no man only God can tame it It 's God only therefore that maketh in us patience The grace of patience is farre above our power Tertullian wrote a Book of Patience but in the very beginning he apologizeth for himself why he should write of that subject which he had so little experimentally and practically attained unto and he excuseth it thus That he doth as those who are sick they delight to be talking and praising of health So I saith he who am Aeger caloribus impatientiae sick with feavorish impatient heats do delight to write of patience Thus do thou seeing it is more then of thy self thou art able to do The least tryal the least affliction is ready to heat thee with impatience pray to God importunately let him not alone till he blesse thee with this composed patient spirit Say with the same Tertullian Pereat seculum dummodo patientiam lucrifaciam Let the whole world perish so that God will give me patience Secondly As God is the efficient cause so the word of God that is instrumental The Word is like Davids harp to drive out this evil spirit So the Apostle Rom. 15. 14. That we through patience of the Scriptures might have hope When thy impatient flesh doth suggest this and that argument to discontent and repining Oh remember what the word of God saith It is for want of Scripture-consideration of Scripture-arguments that thy heart is so clamorous and unruly such a command such a promise would presently have made all calm and quiet The Heathen adviseth an angry furious man to look in the glasse while he is in those passionate fits that he may see how deformed he is made thereby but how much rather when thy heart hath boiled over with impatient repining thoughts art thou to recover thy self immediately and to look into the Word See what that faith what that requireth and then thou wilt be ashamed and abhorring thy self as a very beast Thirdly Afflictions themselves according to Scripture-expression they work patience also Thus Rom. 5. 3. Tribulation worketh patience Jam. 1. 3. The trying of your faith worketh patience Here you see afflictions are said to work patience but not of themselves it 's the power of God in and through them only as the beast accustomed to the yoke is more tame than at first so when we are constantly exercised with afflictions that they seem to be no new thing then through Gods grace we come to be more ready and willing in a patient enduring of them It is said of Christ himself He learned obedience by the things which he suffered Heb. 5. 8. not that he could grow properly in grace or be more obedient than he had been formerly but it is spoken in regard of experimental obedience he had the sense and feeling of it more than before but the adopted sons of God they do increase in obedience and patience by the things that they suffer Therefore thou who hast more afflictions than others it is a reproach to thee if they have not taught thee more patience and meeknesse than others Fourthly The exemplary or ideal cause of patience is God and Christ From them we have a most exact and compleat rule of patience Mat. 5. 48. Be ye therefore perfect as your heavenly Father is To be perfect is there to be patient for he had before instanced in the patience of God that even to the unjust he causeth the Sunne to arise and from this inferreth Be ye therefore perfect To be patient and that to enemies may be called perfection because this alone is taught in Christianity To love our friends is acknowledged a duty by all Nations but to love enemies is only professed by Christians Well then may we be patient under all the persecutions reproaches and vexations the enemies of God bring upon us For is not God patient towards them and yet they are more his enemies then
particular act had some immediate inspiration and divine instinct upon his soul whereby he was raised up to trust in God assuredly for that particular deliverance And this is the more probable because of the manner he did encounter Goliah with going out against him In the Name of the Lord with a sling and stones out from the brook By which preparation it is plain that David was therein guided by immediate revelation And happily Paul in this act of trusting which here he professeth he might have more than the general and ordinary promises which all the people of God have to relie upon there might be some special assurance and revelation vouchsafed to him that he had more work to do for God that all his enemies could not for the present take away his life Therefore he addeth He will yet deliver not alwayes but as yet he will till he had finished his course and fought the good fight of faith he was called to Thus we read that Paul had a vision Acts 18. 9 10. while he was at this Corinth commanding him Not to be afraid for no man should set on him to hurt him Thus many of the people of God in former times they had immediate revelations and personal discoveries made to them whereby they were called to believe in God for such a particular temporal mercy and that every way absolutely But then 2. There are common general mercies which are to work upon all the godly and such are those universal propositions revealed in Gods word whereby we are antidoted against diffidence and distrust in any estate whatsoever So that although thou hast not that peculiar revelation made to thee for such mercies as those Ancients had yet thou hast as sure a word of promise to depend upon For it is the same God which speaketh in a general promise to thee that did in a particular to them Hence we find the Apostle comforting and encouraging the godly by such a promise as was peculiarly made to Joshua in that extraordinary Office he was called unto Heb. 13. 5. For he hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee from this see what he inferreth So that we may boldly say The Lord is my helper which proveth that even particular promises made to any godly man do in the general reason of them belong to every believer Even as we say of the Judicial Law though the particular duty or punishment may not oblige us Christians yet the moral equity and reason upon which it was grounded doth So though the very particular thing promised belong not to thee yet that protection support and preservation which is necessary to thee in thy way that thou mayest relie upon God for Know then that it is but the deceitfulness of thy heart when thou thinkest Oh if God would speak from Heaven to me or if an Angel should come from God and bid me Be of good comfort this or that shall be done for thee then I could rest satisfied For if thou doest not believe God speaking in a general promise neither wouldst thou in a particular one Mary Magdolen and some others had a peculiar particular testimony from Christ That her sinnes were forgiven her yet every humbled and repenting sinner may apply the promises of pardon to his own soul as fully and as boldly as she did For Christ doth still in the world speak so to every unfeigned convert It is true we grant that in the Apostles dayes when the gift of miracles was necessary for the Church then some had a peculiar command and promise by faith and trusting wherein they were able to do miracles and wonders and this was called The faith of miracles And for any to conceive such a thing of himself now and to trust in God for to performe some miracle is to be ignorant of what spirit we are yet still we are called to a faith and trust in God which is almost as wonderfull as that of Miracles The trusting in God for the pardon of thy sinnes for thy preservation in temptations for thy safe conducting thee to Heaven through all the oppositions in the way is as difficult as miraculous faith So also the trusting upon God in temporals when thy condition hath been like a wilderness when no visible hopes or props have appeared is like a miraculous faith Hence there are learned Divines Synopsis puri Theol. that do grant there is still in the godly a faith though not miraculous yet answering that which they call Fides specialis whereby the Spirit of God doth in a peculiar manner raise up the soul to trust in God For this particular God sometimes when he provideth a mercy for his people doth prepare their hearts to expect it Onely we must take heed that we do not baptize our delusions and the strong conjectures of our humane perswasions with the name of this special faith The summe of this head is to informe the people of God that the general promises are as sure an anchor to fasten thy soul in the midst of waves as particular are Secondly It is good to consider What are the immediate opposites and contraries to this grace of trusting in God that so we may avoid those rocks from splitting our souls thereat The first enemy to it is Presumption and that is When men do not trust in God in his way We represent God to our selves in our own carnal imaginations and then we trust in him which is indeed nothing else but to trust in our vaine lying hearts Now this presumption which hath the appearance of trusting in God but is not so may be discovered these wayes 1. When we do not judge of God according to the Scripture-discovery made of him when we walke not by Scripture-light There can be no trusting in God without a true knowledge of him out of his Word Now if you observe ignorance herein is the cause of all that presumption which drowneth many souls in perdition Take the most prophane and profligate wretch who like Cain almost have the marks of Gods displeasure against them palpably manifesting themselves yet they will tell you they trust in God for mercy they rest on Christ to be saved Is not all this because they do not know God out of his Word If they did would not they find there that he is angry with the wicked every day That he is a consuming fire That if a man regard iniquity in his heart God will not hear such a mans prayer Are not these so many thunder-bolts to strike thee out of thy presumption 2. It is not trusting in God but presumption When we are confident and bold where we have no promise from God For this you heard That Gods promise and our trust doth necessarily respect each other So that if you take away the promise you remove the foundation and so faith must fall to the ground And this doth plainly also discover that that which some call their
is it How slavish and unbelieving Hence is it that the people of God need so many instructions and informations Hence is it that they are often in prayers and groans unutterable ere they can truly and cordially call God Father They fear him as a Judge and flie from him rather as an enemy Even as if there be never such glorious and delightfull objects to refresh the eyes with yet if a man be in the dark he cannot take any pleasure therein Thus many of Gods dear children who walk with a tender conscience who are diligent in all the wayes of holiness yet have not this testimony of conscience to comfort them it is hid from their eyes only because the Spirit of God doth not enable them thereunto Now the Apostle telleth us 1 Cor. 2. 17. It is the Spirit of God whereby we know the things that we have freely received of God 2. The Spirit of God doth witness unto us Objectively as I may so call it and that is by some effects and fruits of his grace upon our hearts by which we gather as by so many sure signes that we are in the state of grace and not hypocrites But because this will come in more fully in the ensuing particulars I shall only touch upon those effects by which the testimony of our conscience is rightly guided in witnessing to us And First By having a full and serious purpose to avoid all sinne as it shall become manifested to us As David professed That he did hate every evil way Psal 119. 104. He that doth allow and indulge himself in any known sinne cannot have the testimony of this good conscience It is true as is to be shewed there is no man living though never so holy but his conscience convinceth him of much sinne and many infirmities and this maketh him so highly esteem Christ and a Gospel-righteousness but yet it doth not witness to him that he liveth in the customary acting of grosse sinnes if it doth the Spirit of God never witnesseth with such a mans conscience that he is the child of God No if thou livest quietly without the smitings and condemnations of conscience it is because it is stupid and the Devil hath deluded and hardened thee for Gods Spirit witnesseth with our conscience and by this effect that we have a tender respect to avoid all known sinne Secondly Another effect is A zeal for the glory of God to honour him to magnifie Christ and to set up his Kingdome as much as we are able The more zeal and fervency men have had for Gods honour the more powerfull testimony of a good conscience they alwayes enjoyed As we see in this Paul in his whole ministerial course with what burning zeal did he flame forth continually and on the contrary so much remisness so much negligence and lukewarmness so much is the abating of consciences testimony Thirdly An holy confidence and boldnesse in our approachings to God And of this the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8. The Spirit of Adoption removing our fears our unbelief and dejection raising us up also with an holy confidence and humble boldness doth hereby testifie with our consciences that we are the children of God Hence the more distrustfull fears the more tormenting doubts that we groan under the weaker and more feeble is the witness of our conscience yea if those prevail and are predominant then our conscience is set against us and witnesseth against us and then the child of God is in sad desertions when his heart witnesseth against him that he is an hypocrite that he did serve the Lord without integrity For though this be false yet till Gods Spirit remove this darknesse and fill thee with an Evangelical confidence thou art not able to hold up thy head Fourthly Another effect by which Gods Spirit witnesseth with our conscience is An unfeigned love to the brethren a delight in all those that love God Where this is that thou lovest godly men for their godliness sake this demonstrateth thou art born of God and hast the same Image in thee as they have And if thy love also extend to thy enemies if thou findest that thou canst pray for them that curse thee do good to them that revile especially thou pitiest their souls and wouldst be helpfull to them in the way to Heaven though they are enraged adversaries to thee and that without cause By this frame of heart the conscience doth give a full and precious evidence Fifthly In daily and faithfull exercises of self-denial in the wayes of God doth the Spirit of God greatly assure the conscience In sufferings for Christ in enduring the losse of name liberty and li●e it self for Gods cause is the clearest testimony of our conscience Hence the Martyrs had so much serenity of spirit such unspeakable consolations because they found they loved Christ better than all things As they gave a testimony to the word of God called therefore Martyrs so God also gave them a testimony within whereby they did glory in tribulations and triumph over all aduersaries We see that if men suffer in false wayes if they be Martyrs for the Devil if they die for that which is highly offending God they many times glory in the comfort they have from the testimony of their conscience Now if a deluded conscience if deluded joyes can do so much what shall not the Spirit of God do sealing and confirming his love to us by our patient sufferings for him Thus when happily the world doth witness against thee wicked men they condemn thee and lay many heavy accusations against thee as the false Apostles did here concerning Paul yet this testimony with in will answer all and God doth come in with fuller evidences of his love in such passages of self denial Lastly The Spirit of God doth witness to our spirit in this blessed effect viz. When we do with delight and joy meditate think and speak about heavenly things when the Ordinances of God are matter of pleasure to us David doth often pro●efs what delight he had in the Ordinances of God how the word of God was more precious than gold more sweet than the honey-comb Now when the heart is thus affected to holy things that they find more joy as David professeth Psal 4. in the things of God then worldly men do in their corn and wine when these increase By this excellent heavenly temper the Spirit of God witnesseth with our conscience that we are the children of God But I shall enlarge no more on this because the Doctrine of Assurance will follow upon the next words We shall now lay down some distinctions to clear this truth to you because it is plain That many times the people of God being cast down with black thoughts that cannot say with Paul The testimony of our conscience is our rejoycing And on the other side many heretical pharisaical and self-deluded persons will at least outwardly boast
as the Spirit of God doth sanctifie them But naturally the hearts of all men are deceitfull full of lies and falshoods towards God as if they loved him as if they repented when yet self is the motive that setteth all on work and no lesse false is it to man also It is true indeed commonly it is interpreted by good Expositors as if this speech did come from David in unbelief that it was the weaknesse of his faith thinking as if Samuel and other Prophets had deceived him about the Kingdome But in this sense there would have been a falshood in the speech neither would the Apostle then have made that use of it as he doth Besides at the verse before he saith I believed therefore have I spoken which the Apostle also maketh use of 2 Cor. 4. 13. for freedome and boldnesse in the profession of our faith therefore it may very well be that David from the strength of his faith now in his persecutions for that haste he speaketh of is to be understood of his flight and running from place to place doth encourage himselfe from the truth of God and is not dismayed to see Absolom and all his people prove false and perfidious for the corrupt nature of man inclineth him to no better If then the heart of a man be so naturally prone to be false towards God and man to be mercenary to seek our selves to be hypocrites This is the excellency of sincerity that it eateth away the rotten flesh at the bottome Hence In the third place It is because of this sincerity that the way to Heaven is such a streight and narrow way That Godlinesse is so rare a Jewel That many are called but few are chosen because though there be many duties many religious professions yet little sincerity of spirit Oh if there were no more required to goe to Heaven than to hear pray keep up an external forme of Religion different from the course of the world How easie and broad would the way to Heaven be Many thousands more would goe to Heaven than doe But this is that which makes it so difficult a thing to be saved because no duty no religious performances are entertained but rejected by God which come not from a sincere and true principle of grace within It is not then praying but sincere praying It is not hearing but sincere hearing Yea Martyrdome without sincerity is but the Devils Sacrifice So that experience will teach thee to set upon religious duties from principles of sincerity is a farre more difficult task then thou ever thoughtst of while going on in a formal customary way Heaven could never be so difficultly obtained neither could those Texts of Scripture which speak of the holy violence and agonies that must be in the way to Heaven were the externals of Religion enough but it is sincerity in these actings that maketh the streights When we set upon that then we see how far nature education custom and formality may carry us and yet want the soul and life of all Therefore Fourthly Sincerity is the proper characteristical difference between a temporary in Christianity and a true convert It is one of the greatest practical Questions in Divinity that is What is that which differences between the common graces of Gods Spirit and the special Or What are the bounds and limits whereby we may know to distinguish between an enlightned hypocrite fervent in all external religious duties and he who is cordially and truly so The Question is Whether it be a specifical or gradual difference And what is that which the truly godly doth And the foolish Virgin or foolish builder cannot do And if we descend not to particulars but speak in the general then we must say Sincerity is the essentiall difference So that as rationality maketh the essential difference between a man and a beast so doth sincerity between the truly godly and the seeming so onely This made the difference between Saul and David between Peter and Judas between many Kings recorded in the Old Testament who did very much in the wayes of the Lord and those who did seek God with all their heart So that by this you see how much it lieth us upon to look after sincerity in duties more than duties after sincerity in gifts and religious abilities more than gifts for this maketh the Christian The other are but as the body and garments this is the soul All thy glorious building must be pulled down if this be not the foundation It is no matter what standing thy Discipleship to Christ is of nor how famous thy gifts and parts are nor what an interest thou hast in the thoughts of Professours nor what a stricter way of Church-order thou mayest seeme to set upon if sincerity be not the salt to season all Oh then that Christians would study more in this point meditate about it read about it knowing that this is all in all If this be not the first stone laid in thy spiritual building when stormes arise thy building will fall and thy fall will be the greater by how much the appearances of holinesse have been the greater Therefore it is that sincerity is usually called by Divines the Gospel-perfection when many are said To seeke God with a perfect heart the meaning is not as if there were no sinnes or imperfections cleaving to them but because they were upright and sincere Though weak faith yet if sincere faith Though imperfect love yet if sincere love this hath a kinde of Gospel-perfection Hence of all the deceits in the world none is more dangerous and pernicious then when we take our selves for upright and sincere but are not Fifthly Sincerity doth carry a man on in religious wayes from principles of voluntarinesse and delight within Outward motives may make false hearts towards God set upon many notable services as we see in Iehu and Iudas c. But here was no voluntary and delightsome principle within For a man will never sincerely leave the sweetnesse of his lusts and profits he had in a carnal way till he finde infinitely more sweetnesse and delight in heavenly things So that this doth necessarily accompany sincerity that it maketh a man voluntary and willing with joy and delight in the whole work of God Psalm 110. 3. Thy people shall be willing willingnesses in the day of thy power It is true even the most upright doe sometimes finde much deadnesse and unwillingnesse to ho y things there is a wearisomnesse and aversnesse they sometimes feele but this is an heavy burden to them They cry out to God to quicken them to draw them to enliven them whereas the insincere man is carried out by external motives Even as when the water maketh the Mill runne round that of it self would never move because it wanteth life within Therefore that expression of Iob is observeable Iob 27. 10. Will he delight himselfe in the Almighty Will he alwayes call upon God The
Chap. 3. he sheweth their folly by many convincing and piercing arguments in falling off thus from him and Chap. 4. 15. puts them in mind that they had other thoughts of him once Paul was once a blessed man and his preaching blessed preaching Where is the blessedness you once spake of Yea he saith their affections were so vehement and hyperbolical That they would have pluckt out their eyes their dearest and tenderest part and have given them him if this could have done him good yet how quickly did these boiling affections turn into ice They will receive other mens doctrines rather than his And if we see the Apostles of Christ that had their call immediately from him that were furnished with a large measure of the Spirit and inabled to do such wonderfull miracles before their eyes may come to be contemned and vilified and that by their own people who had once so highly honoured them No wonder if ordinary Pastors and Officers do often meet with such entertainment in the world Yea was it not thus with Christ himself Did not he find the grosse mutability of the people when one while they honour him crying Hosanna and at another time Crucifie him If they do thus to the green tree will they not much rather to the dry And shall the servant be above his master To inlarge this Consider First That it is an imbred corruption in all inferiours to be mutable and changeable to their Superiours Wise men do observe this mobility in the people even to their best Governours so unthankfull and ingratefull are people by nature Is not this plain in Moses What a faithfull Governour had he been to the people of Israel like a tender father he even carried them in his arms God had honoured him exceedingly before their eyes working many miraculous mercies for them by his means yet how often did they murmure against him which was a great sinne because as Moses telleth them Exod. 16. 8. Your murmurings are not against us but the Lord. Yea they are ready to fall off from Moses and to make themselves a Captain that they may go again into Aegypt Thus the people also dealt with David when they were in bitterness of spirit for the losse of their wives they spake of stoning David Among the Heathens there are plentifull examples of this unthankfull mutability Camillus and Themistocles with others which made the latter say when they had cast him off after all the good service he had none for them That they did with him as beasts doe in a storm runne to a tree to shelter themselves and when that is over they fall a browzing on it and breaking the boughs thereof How many of their famous Worthies have the Heathens banished most ingratefully and then in their necessities intreated them to come again Which made one wise Roman say when perswaded to enter upon some publick design for the common good but dangerous deny saying Why should wise men venture themselves for fools The Athenians were impetuous to put Socrates to death and after he was dead then they were grieved and impatient till they had destroyed those that were the Authors of it Now if it be thus in civil affairs no wonder if there be more changeableness and more ingratitude in Church-matters For in the faithfull discharge of our spiritual office there we directly oppose the natural inclination and love of men to their sinfull pleasures we deal chiefly with the inward man and the matter we propound for the Doctrine of it to be believed is wholly transcendent to their humane apprehensions and the goodness of it is altogether supernatural Yea contra-natural take man in his sinfull naturals Hence it is that spiritual governing is far more difficult than civil men being more willing to receive what maketh for their bodily good and welfare then for their souls and spiritual estate Secondly This inclination to changeablenesse and mutability in matters of Religion hath greater temptations in rich and famous Cities than in villages and small parochial places Now Corinth as you heard was a famous and rich City eminent for trading yea and for earning and gifts Hence Paul doth in none of his Epistles so much debase the wisdome of the world indeavouring to exalt Christ above all things as in his Epistles to these Corinthians and it seemeth they did a bound with many excellent gifts and abilities as the Apostle many times witnesseth Now this was their snare and temptation this made them proud of their knowledge this made them admire gifts more than grace this caused them to make parties and factions some cried up one teacher some another So that their wealth and gifts did prove a great temptation to them and by this means Paul came to be undervalued Thus it falleth out many times in great and populous places where are variety of Ministers and of gifts and a people raised up in knowledge and wealth it is very hard for them to keep in a constant real esteem of sound and soul-saving truths but with the people of Israel to be weary of Manna to desire even garlick and onyons above it The Gospel was at first preached and planted in Cities and their Churches were first constituted it being a long time ere the little villages in the Countrey did receive the Christian faith Hence to this day say some we call Heathens Pagans à pagis from villages because they did last of all receive the Christian faith But then they have this advantage that they are freed from those many temptations that are in the Churches of Cities for they having not many Officers nor hearing variety of gifts are not so tempted to be alwayes lusting after some new thing as in the fore-mentioned places yet for all this they have the same corrupt inclination and if they have not the temptation brought to them they will seek out for the temptations and hence many villages are quickly poisoned with corrupt and erroneous wayes For the Devil he goeth up and down roaring to seek whom he may devour whether in Cities or villages Now let us consider of the Causes which make such a change and alteration and that many times in those who are very good or at least apparently so And 1. This ariseth from the ficklenesse and inconstancy that is in many men There are few that profess Religion that do obtain to a sound mind that are well rooted in the first principles of Religion They content themselves with general and confused apprehensions and therefore can speak of those things which yet they have no clear understanding about Now how can such straws and feathers as these but be blown away with every wind of doctrine It is the Apostles expression Ephes 4. 14. implying that it is childishness levity want of a serious weighty and solid judgement that maketh us leave the faithfull Ministers of God and greedily run after false teachers 2. An overhasty and unadvised receiving of the
so infinitely transcending all earthly comeforts and therefore such who find no matter of rejoycing herein it is because they are carnal sensual they abide under the Dominion of their lusts they never found the Ministry spiritual and powerfull to them They never had the experience of the blessed effects thereof upon their hearts and then How can they rejoyce in i● 3. Seing that this mutual assistance is appointed by God as a special means to destroy the Kingdome of Satan Hence it is that he doth most assault this indeavouring to make discords and differences between Minister and people That so both the benefit and comefort of such unity might be frustrated It is true the Devil delights to sow his Tares in every field therefore in civil estates in domestical relations he throweth his Firebrands and loveth to see all in Passions and discontents but especially his design is against those spiritual relations because the well mannaging of them doth more immediately oppose his throne of darkness For this end he stirred up so many fals Prophets and Teachers whose works was to divide between the people and their faithfull guides And can we think the Apostles would have written so Apologetically in many places condescended so much in the wayes of Humility and diligence to win their affections but that he knew by such Dissentions the Devil would inlarge his Dominions Hence it is that Calvin upon that place of 2 Cor. 2. 11. Lest satan should get an advantage of us though he take notice of their exposition who refer it to the Incestuous person as if Satans designe was upon that occasion to have him swallowed up with excessive sorrow yet he doth in a great part relate it to the Dissention that the Devil endeavoured to make between them and Paul for if Paul was for the confirming of their love to that person now repenting but the Corinthians under a pretence of zeal against sin should be against him This would have caused sad Divisions and so thereby Satan would have prevailed It is observed as one of Julians devilish designes against Christianity to make a difference between the Christians and their godly Pastors and therefore he did craftily and secretly pour all the oyl he could into such flames to make them greater and truly the Instances of such differences even in the Reformed Churches do give too full a testimony of the Devils labour herein Should we speak of the Churches troubles at Franckford though exiled and under Persecution The sharpest whereof was between the Flock and their Shepherd yea of the hot contention between Geneva and Calvin and in many other Churches we may easily be perswaded that there is scarce any one thing wherein the Devil goeth more about as a roaring Lyon to deceive them than to break the slaves of beauty and bands between Shepherd and Sheep which should make both Minister and people the more watchfull and diligent and also much in Prayer that God would disapoint all such purposes of Satan and his Instruments This may suffice in the General Let us now proceed to the respective particulars and first In what sence and how a people may rejoyce in their faithfull Guides And first They are to rejoye in them as those instruments which God hath used to bring spiritual light unto their minde and heavenly heat into their heart For this it is the Apostle doth so much insist upon to convince the Corinthians That if ever they did believe if ever they felt any thing of the saving efficacy of Gods spirit upon their hearts it was by his Ministry and therefore they would be unthankfull to God if they did not take notice of Gods special blessing to them by his means It is true 1 Cor. 3. we see there the Apostle zealously beating down their factions and Contentions which they raised by setting up one Officer and Teacher to the despising of another and thereupon exalteth Christ onely But yet though Christ be the principal only and he alone giveth the encrease yet he granteth the Necessity of the Ministry withall Paul must Plant Apollo must water and these are Ministers by whom they believed Ver. 5. Although then it be our duty to lift up our hearts to God alone as he in whom and by whom all spiritual success doth arise to us yet we are to rejoyce in such instruments as God useth For if we may be glad of such Instruments that cause our temporall comforts and supports If the Childe may rejoyce in the father if an indigent man in him who is potent and bountifull no wonder then if we do cry out How welcome are the feet of those who bring glad tydings of peace Rom. 10. 15. How beautiful are the very feet of such So that it plainly demonstrateth all such to be delivered up to the spirit of slumber and prophaneness or of Error and Heresie who do not find this cause to rejoyce in them as Gods Instruments to their Soules 2. We are to rejoyce in them because of their works sake and the Faithfull discharge of their duties And the more powerfull they are herein the greater ought our joy to be Thus the Apostle 1 Cor. 4. 1. Let a man account of us as the Embassadours of God and Stewards of Christ Thus the Apostle also commandeth 1 Thessal 11. 13. To esteem very highly of those who are over them and admonish them and that for their works sake Though they do admonish and reprove you which is as unpleasing to a sin as salt to a sore yet you are to esteem highly of them This requireth not onely external respect but cordial and Internal and this must be for their works sake Many times a people may glory in the Abilities in the Learning and admirable gifts of their Teachers thinking that thereby they surpass other Congregations This is a vain-glorious thing too often seen in great Cities but the Apostle saith it must be for their works sake because they do faithfully and powerfully lead you into the paths of Eternal Life Thus as David esteemed the word of God above gold and silver because thereby he was forewarned from sin The spiritual and holy commands of God not induring any sin made him thus in love with it So it should also be with our people they should delight and rejoyce in the Ministry because it is efficacious against sin because it enlighteneth it converteth it destroyeth the works of the Devil so that this particular discovers the Prophanenesse and impiety of such men who rejoyce most in such Ministers as are either lazy and negligent or that are dissolute and carnally humouring men in their evil wayes These they boast in and rejoyce in they account none like them Thus God of old complained of the people of Israel that they loved such who did sow pillowes under their armes and encouraged the hearts of those that were wicked but made those sad whom the Lord would not have made sad Ezek. 13. 10
complain of such a dull and liveless Ministry yet how little do people think that many times they give the cause so that its Gods punishment upon them in that very thing yea though Ministers be never so faithfull and godly yet as Calvin observeth they cannot go on in their Ministerial work with that vigor and alacrity they ought to do when their hearts are bound up with sorrow and discouragements about their people All cannot attain to Pauls excellency who could have enlarged bowells to that people who had streightened ones towards him SERM. CVII Of the Necessity of a constant Ministry not only for the constituting but to an establishing the Church 2 COR. 1. 15. That you might have a second benefit IN these words we have the End of Pauls purpose to come to them It was wholly spiritual It was not for any advantage any earthly respects but but wholly for their good to encrease and confirm their graces The End is expressed in these words That ye might have a second benefit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some as Chrysostome interpret for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea their are some who would have that to be the word in the Original It is no doubt but that much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or joy did follow upon this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All spiritual effects and heavenly exercises are apt to breed much joy Hence none have true joy but those that are godly and so by consequence none are blessed but they for Joy is a great ingredient to Happiness Hence Aristotle maketh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to come of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exceedingly to rejoyce yet is more consonant to other places of Scripture to read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thus Rom. 1. 11. He desired to see them that he might impart to them some spiritual benefit The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is chiefly used in the New Testament for the free grace of God towards us in reference to our Eternal Happiness so that the very name ought to be sweet and precious to such who labour under the sense of their unworthiness and see no power or works of their own any wayes able to save them It is of grace therefore that doth not onely exclude merit but supposeth thee unworthy for such mercies of thy own self It is sometimes in Scripture applyed to such Almes as were freely given for the use of distressed Churches 2 Cor. 8. which is therefore called Grace partly because it is of Gods special goodness to give us such a free and liberal Disposition as the first Verse in that Chapter implyeth I do you to wit saith Paul of the grace of God bestowed on the Churches of Macedonia and that was to be liberal to the other afflicted Saints and partly because it cometh from the bountifull disposition of a man to such as are in want In this Text it is to be applyed to spiritual bounty that is to be willing and ready in all serviceableness to promote the spirituall good of others for there are spiritual almes as well as temporal which lieth in reproof in Admonition and frequent Exhortation to what is good Now this Grace or Benefit is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some translate iterated and repeated though it be more than the Second or third time Chrysostome referreth it to his Epistles and his presence for by both these he communicated spiritual benefit unto them But it is most probably and generally referred to his first and second coming whether Paul did come a third time to those Corinthians is disputed by Commentators because of some passages in the 12 and 13 Chapters of this Epistle of which in its time It is enough that by the first grace or benefit we mean the first work upon them by Pauls Ministry when they were converted from their Paganism and planted a Church of Christ And the second benefit was to confirm them in the same Faith and also to quicken them up unto further degrees of Holiness and this was the second Benefit Paul desired to impart unto them For it appeareth that though this Church of Corinth was a garden planted by Paul yet many weeds and some poysonous ones began to grow up amongst them There were both in Doctrine and Manners many things amiss which needed Pauls presence to reforme Observe That it is not enough to be a Church planted and gathered from out of the world at first but there needeth a constant and dayly Ministry to be tilling and dressing of it That Garden which God planted and put Adam into yet was to be dayly dressed and so it is still with the best Churches even those that are of the Apostolical Plantation yet needed the Apostles care and diligent visitations which was one main cause of writing those several Epistles to several Churches They were not written to convert them or make them Churches but to admonish instruct or confirm and comfort as occasion did require and upon this ground it is that though the office of Apostles and Prophets as also the gift of miracles are now ceased because the Church is now planted yet the office of Pastors and the Ordinances Christ hath instituted are perpetual and must be continued to the end of the world So that the opinion of the Socininians about the Ministry as it were only a thing of order and not of Divine Institution is grosly repugnant to Gods Word as also their Doctrine about Baptism That it was but a temporary Ceremony instituted for the beginning of the Church is full of falshood Churches though constituted yet must be dayly watered neither is it enough for a people once to be brought home to the Faith but they need a second and a third yea a continual benefit For though the Apostle haply did come but the second time to these Corinthians yet he appointed Officers in an ordinary residence amongst them as wel as in other Churches which were continually to watch over them The particulars wherein the Ministry is necessary for perfecting work as well as foundation work for progress as well as ingress for consummation as well as imitation are these First To inform against those Errors which false Teachers do easily insinuate into the hearts of people No sooner hath God sowed his field with precious wheat but the envious one commeth and soweth his tares As the April showers that make grass and flowers to come cause also weeds to grow Thus at the same time God is building the Church the Devil and his instruments are raising their Babel No sooner have the Ministers of God with Isaac digged up Wells but the Philistines have been ready to throw their earth and mud therein If then Errors and damnable Heresies may so quickly infect a Church formerly pure no wonder if there be such necessity of Pastors and Guides who are to lead the people into all truth by their Ministry as the spirit of
because none believe enough none love enough none are heavenly enough Several wayes the best Hearers may grow First In the amplitude of their knowledg They may know more things in Christianity than they did for seing we know but in part 1 Cor. 13. this light in our mind may still encrease more and more not indeed in more necessaries and Fundamentalls for then none could be saved because still ignorant of some Fundamental or other but in the Additionalls and Superstructures which have also a special use and efficacy to carry on the work of Salvation Even a Godly man may live in many Errors in many sinnes and not know them to be so as we see in many Ages when clearer light hath discovered that to be Superstition and a dishonour to God which was accounted once the great onour due unto him When God dispelled the Egyptian darkness of Popery from of the face of the face of the Church their Image-Worship their Indulgences their vowed Obedience and poverty which were admired as such eminent acts of Religion were manifested to be contemptible as having no foundation upon the Scripture and also very injurious to the Offices of Christ and in how many things do the best of men still continue ignorant and therefore with David though he had more understadding than his teachers are to pray that God would open their eyes that they might understand the wonderfull things of Gods law Psal 119. 18 Davids eyes were opened yet they must be opened more all the scales are not fallen from his eyes and therefore the Apostle prayeth for those Ephesians whose understandings were already enlightened Ephes 1. 17. that their eyes might yet be more opened and that God would give unto them the spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledg of him 2. By the Ministry they are to grow in the efficacy and experimental power of their knowledg For these two differ exceedingly men may grow much in speculative knowledg understand controversies in Divinity and dispute much about the Doctrines of the times that are agitated but unless a man grow in the savoury power of it he is but a tinkling cymbal if he do notgrow in the love of the truth if that knowledg doth not make him more pure more sanctified more reformed this will turn to his greater condemnation Therefore Tit. 1. 1. It s called the acknowledging of the truth which is after godliness Savanarola Hom. 3. p. 29. bringeth a distruction of Divinity out of Aquinas to this purpose a man may know a thing saith he either per modum studii or per modum inclinationis men may know many things by way of study in Divinity and yet not have the least knowledg of them by way of inclination to love and delight in them May not a man have obtained much discoursive knowledg about Christ in respect of his Person and Offices as to be able to confute Arrians and Socinians yet be far from that heavenly inclination which Paul found in himself to know nothing but Christ crucified and to judg all things dung and dross in comparison of this knowledg That knowledg then which doth bring a savoury tast and experimental inclination to the good things we know that is to be imbraced that we are to grow in more every day He that knoweth a Country or a City by a Map cannot be so affected as he that hath really seen it 3. We may by the Ministry have a continued benefit in respect of the firmness and strength of our faith It is noted sometimes of the Disciples that upon some miracle that was wrought by our Sauiour that then they believed Not but that they did so before onely their Faith was then more strengthened and confirmed and truly this firmness of Faith this steadfastness of it is a precious Antidote against all fickle and sceptical Opinions Men do not grow in Faith but fancy and that maketh inconstancy in Religion How can a man be a Martyr for Christs truth now can he lose all he hath rather than deny it unless he have this quieting and satisfying work of Faith upon the soul Hence Faith is called Heb. 11. 1. The substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen Those two words substance and evidence do denote the great power that Faith ought to have upon the soul Again this firmness of Faith is not onely seen in dogmatical Assent but in in fiducial Application of the Promises to our selves in which sense it is said twice or thrice The just shall live by his faith Such are the weak actings of our Faith so strong are our temptations so supernatural and mysterious is this way of believing that all have cause to cry out with the Apostles Lord increase our faith Lastly The best hearers need the Ministry for increase in Godliness to grow in grace more Thus the Apostle writeing to those whom he supposeth as converted already yet exhorteth to put off the old man and put on the new To be renewed in the spirit of their minde Epes 4. 23. 24. And our Saviour prayeth for the Apostles even in that Prayer wherein he acknowledgeth that they had believed and received the word of God That they were not of the world John 17. 17 That God would sanctifie them by his word which is to be understood of the progress therein There is no Doctrine so practically opposite to the Scripture as that of Perfection for every where the Godly are commanded to grow to be mortifying the body of sin to be perfecting holiness which were ridiculous Exhortations if we had already attained Perfection Hence we are compared to those who run in a race and therefore till death do not come to our prize Thus where the Minister may have little to do in respect of Conversion it may have very much to do in respect of Edification And the Godly are to Examine whether every Sabbath day the Minister doth not come with a new benefit a new advantage to them look for a new grace and favour in every new Sermon And so we proceed to the Use which is of Instruction What all people should look at under the Ministry Spiritual advantages spiritual light spiritual heat spiritual quickenings As where Christ went up and down he healed their diseased people so where the word of God is preached it should heal soul-diseases Thou art not to have the Pride the passions the worldly cares as thou usest to have but oh how rare are such Hearers who aimeth at this who prayeth for this in every Sermon he heareth Oh fear least some spiritual judgment upon thee deprive thee of this benefit If an Israelite had looked upon the Brazen serpent and yet not be healed If a diseased person had stepped first in order into the Pool of Bethesda and yet not have been recovered they would have been greatly troubled to see their hopes frustrated No less ought it to make thee grieve and tremble
men Ama tanquam aliquando osurus yet it may have its use considering how wicked and uncertain men are But true Religion inclineth a man to a setled and fixed way of love to those that are fit subjects thereof The Scripture speaketh of a love to all men and of a brotherly love which is upon more peculiar and holy respects Now truly if we speak in a moral sense onely we may take up Solomon's complaint Prov. 20. 6. Most men will proclaim their own goodnesse but a faithfull man who can find Men will talk and boast and professe much love and kindnesse but as it was in David's time so it will be in all ages Psal 5. 9. For there is no faithfulnesse in their mouth their inward part is very wickednesse they flatter with their tongue Hence is that Rule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But why is there such hypocrisie dissimulation and falshood in mens hearts and tongues It is because there is so little true godliness for that maketh a man sincere and of a single heart both towards God and towards man If then Paul was so afraid of being thought a light and inconstant man any was this sheweth what gravity constancy and faithfulness of spirit we ought to walk even to men in the world godliness and Religion teacheth us these things whereas to be double-hearted double-tongued cannot consist with a man that is made a new creature Labour then to inform thy self of the extent of Religion how farre godliness will put forth its self not onely in religious duties towards God but righteous just and faithfull actions towards man Now that we may have such plain and faithfull spirits consider the aggravation of this sinne in our civil actions to be yea and nay to be inconstant and changeable And First This is directly contrary to the glorious nature of God whose image ought to be stampt upon us we are to be like God in our holinesse Now how often doth the Scripture proclaim this glorious property of God that he is unchangeable that he is faithfull in his Word and promises And truly this is the comfortable support of our selves for it 's not any worth in us but Gods faithfulness in his promises that preserveth us to eternal glory Thus he is called a faithfull Creator 1 Pet. 4. 19. so faithfull is he that hath called us 1 Thess 5. 24. If God were not faithfull in his promises even when we have unfaithfull hearts how miserable would our end be It 's Gods faithfulness not our own we are to depend upon Now the children of God they are to have this Image of God established upon them to be faithfull as he is faithfull There is no yea or nay with God See this notably affirmed Numb 23. 19. God is not a man that he should lie neither the sonne of man that he should repent hath he said and shall not he do it So 1 Sam. 15. 29. The strength of Israel will not lie or repent for he is not a man that he should repent The Scripture maketh it a necessary property to a man to lie and to repent unlesse he be assisted by grace For such is the weaknesse and ignorance of his understanding that he cannot fore-see things and therefore must necessarily alter his resolutions and then so corrupt is his heart that as there are several objects to entice him so accordingly he transformeth himself but God is infinitely wise and infinitely holy and therefore there is no shadow of change in him Oh then be in love with this glorious Attribute of God and according to a creatures capacity do thou imitate it Shew forth the Image of God in this thing that thou art even a man and wilt not lie wilt not sinfully change thy words and promises I say sinfully because we are so apt to be ignorant to mis-judge of things to be deceived in what we resolve of that many times it is our wisdom and duty to be of another mind and to take up contrary resolutions to what once we pitched upon of which more in its time Secondly Endeavour after such constancy in words and life because as it is a great sinne against God so it 's an heavy reproach and scandal to Religion It thou shouldest study to do the Devil service and to promote his Kingdom so as to have Religion stink in the nostrils of all men thou canst not take a more compendious way then to lie to deceive to be unjust to make no conscience of words and promises This is to betray godliness to the scorn of all wicked men You see that even the most holy men that are that walk in a most tender conscientious regard to all their words and works yet cannot scape the censure of men in the world that they are hypocrites that they are lyars that they have no truth in them Oh then what a woe will be pronounced to thee who should give just occasion for such men to blaspheme the holy calling wherewith we are called When one by his apostasie and inconstancy had betrayed the true Religion of Christ he was afterwards troubled in heart for it he could have no rest in his spirit thought himself unworthy of any Church-communion and therefore cried out Calcate me insipidum salem Trample upon me as unsavoury salt If then thou wouldst have Religion honoured the Gospel well spoken of look to thy self in these things let no lie no falshood no deceit be found in thy words and dealings For if there be presently Religion is wounded then the carnal ones rejoyce this is their godliness this is their Religion Certainly a godly heart cannot but bleed exceedingly if at any time he hath in this way been so overtaken as to make men think the worse of godliness wherers on the other side to be true righteous and faithfull in all thy wayes as it is an ornament to Religion so it maketh thee have an awe and a reverence in the consciences of the most profligate persons Thus because John was a just man therefore even Herod the King did reverence him Mark 6. 20. John was both just and holy and this wrought reverence Thirdly It is a great sinne to be thus rash and inconstant because hereby a man maketh himself unfit for Gods service either in Church or Commonwealth such an unfaithfull man can never do any good but be scorned and reproached as one Bishop was called Euripus in antiquity for his inconstancy and mutability and this was the great reason why Paul doth with so much earnestnesse and affection take this calumny off from himself for this would be a special means to bring his person and Doctrine into contempt if there had been just cause to judge him such a mutable man Paul's preaching would never have done good more as we hear him saying at another time Gal. 2. 18. If I build again the things which I destroyed I make my self a transgressour Thus it always falleth out that a man of
our knowledg true when it is conformable to the thing it self but then is the thing true when it is conformeable to the knowledg of God So that herein is the Infiniteness and excellency of Truth as it is in God manifested above that which is in man So that man may well respectively to God be called a lyar There is no truth in him Now because truth as it is in God is invisible and the same with his Essence and we are never able to cown to know Truth but by God Hence we have the Scriptures given to the Church as the rule of truth All truth is from God whether it be natural or supernatural When any of the Heathens have found out Truth it was from God even as all fashood is from the Devil so that when the Godly do lye 't is from the Devils temptation the Father of lyes Thus when wicked and ungodly men have uttered truth it hath been of God Now because Supernatural truth could not be discerned but by Divine Revelation and pacefaction Hence it pleased God to make known in his Word What is that truth which will lead us to Salvation So that seing we are not able to behold truth as it is in God we must look upon it as it is in his Word for God is the hidden Truth as it were the Word is the revealed truth Therefore whatsoever is Scripture we may conclude of it as sure and firm Truth coming from the supream truth If then ye ask as Pilate did another way What is truth I answer thee The Scripture is truth No men are true any further than guided by Scripture and led by the Spirit of God accordingly Oh that therefore you did more aw your hearts with the truth of Gods Word If that say sin will be bitter in the latter end though it may bring profit and pleasure for a while believe it against all the wicked men in the world and say I do more believe this Text this Place of Scripture than all which the wickedness of men may oppose against it 3. In that God is true Herein he differeth from man and is thereby opposite to the Prince of darkness He differeth from man Therefore it is said Numb 23. 19. God is not as man that he should lye or Repent To trust in man is to lean upon reads Yea hence it is that because God only is Truth no pastors or Officers in the Church are to be believed any further than they bring the Word of God It was Christ alone God and man that could say I am truth Neither Austin nor Luther nor Calvin can say I am truth Not that therefore the Ministers of God are therefore to be laid aside because they are not infallible For God hath commanded us to hear them and to submit to them only we are not ultimately to depend on them The Church is called the Pillar of truth because she doth declare and hold out the Truth but she is not the Author of it We are then to conclude of all men that of themselves they have no Truth they need the Spirit of God to guide them therein And then hereby is an Opposition in God to the Devil As God is true so the Devil is the Father of Liés John 8. 44. when he speaketh of his own he speaketh a lye Now then consider how inexcusable every wicked man will be For on the one side Christ who is Truth it self he speaketh to the sinner to repent to reforme promising Everlasting Happiness to him Christ saith Thy sinnes have no pleasure no profit in them thou wilt finde them prove a lye to thee On the other side The Devil he tempteth thee contrary to Christ he telleth thee sin is sweet it is good and profitable to sin he biddeth thee follow the lusts of thy soul thou shalt not be damned for all that and now thou believest this Devil this Father of lies rather than Christ Oh how unsufferable is this how great is the Patience of God towards thee What hearken to the Devil before God But even thus Eve did at first she believed the Serpent more than God and thereby brought ruine upon her self and Posterity Oh that we could convince you enough herein that you may see with what madness and folly your sinnes carry you away while you listen to the Father of Lies who is the Adversary of your soules rather than Christ who mourneth over you saying Oh that such a sinner did know the things that maketh for his peace 4. From this truth of God Hence it is that we are so much commanded in Scripture to believe on him to trust in him and to depend upon him which indeed is a quiet and blessed life For what is that maketh thy heart like a Sea What is it that causeth one wave to rise up after another in thy soul Is it not because thou dost not depend upon this truth of God Were thy soul more assured here in the frame of thy spirit would be more joyfull Two Temptations amongst others there are wherein the soul cryeth out as in a Whales belly not knowing what to do● whereas the confidence of Gods truth would presently satisfie the soul The first is In matters to be believed about the Doctrine that is delivered there For because that is wholly supernatural above our humane reason though not contrary to it hence it is that we have many fluctuations of spirit and our understandings are with difficulty captivated unto the Word of God Though these temptations about the Truths of Christian Religion are not incident to all the Godly and it is a special mercy to be preserved from them yet upon some they have come like a violent storm and therefore there is no way to stand disputing and arguing but to say God is true the Word is true I believe when I cannot dispute as one Martyr said But then a Second temptation which is like a continual thorn in the sides of the Godly is their Diffidence and distrust about the Promises of God They do not live and walk as if they were true So that never did any Heretick more subtilly cavill against the Doctrine of the Scripture than they do argue against the Promises of the Scripture Whether they be such as belong to the Church or to themselves To the Church when they read the Scriptures they finde such glorious and excellent Promises that they exspect she should alwayes have Halcyon dayes that her enemies should alwayes be vanquished but alas they finde experimentally the contrary They cannot see how Gods Words and his Works how his Promises and Providences do concurre together But the reason of this is from themselves They do not take a right way to understand the truth of God in this particular for these three Causes which commonly make the sense to erre about the Object although to speak properly the sense doth not erre but the judgment of a man discerning according to sence for
when an adult person so did God with his Church But then if we come to the Doctrinals we shall finde that the same truths necessary to salvation were in the Old Testament as the New Abraham David and all the Godly were justified by faith in Christ as well as the Believers in the Gospel This indeed is that which the Socinians pertinaciously deny they think that the Godly in the Old Testament did not believe in Christ that this is a peculiar new duty required under the Gospel and never before viz. to believe in Christ But the Apostle in his Epistle to the Hebrews doth admirably open the mysterious signification of those Jewish ceremonies and sacrifices shewing that Christ was represented therein and that it was not the blood of Rams and goats but of Christ that did take away sin Hence Abraham is said to see Christs day and rejoyce 1 Cor. 10. they are said to drink of the spiritual rock which was Christ and Act. 15. 10 11. Peter and the Councel speaking of the yoke laid upon our fathers addeth But we believe that through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved even as they The Doctrine then of Jesus Christ of the Trinity of eternal Life were in the old Testament as well as the New only more implicitely and obscurely the Old Testament being the New hidden and covered the New being the Old revealed and explained so that the Old and New Testament do not contain old and new Doctrine essentially but gradually as we say the old and new moon not meaning two moons but distinct discoveries of light therein 2. We are to distinguish between progress and growth in the same truth and the alteration or change of truth into errour And truly this is of great consideration for this very particular will obviate all the calumnies of the Papist Let it be granted that the first Reformers did not did not at first view see all the truths of the Christian Religion but that by degrees they had scales fall off from their eyes and some things that at first they thought true or tolerable afterwards they rejected as false and abominable And thus Calvin de scandalis answereth the Papists who calumniate us saying If you had the spirit of God why did ye not see all truth presently Why was it that some things did appear false to you afterwards which did not so at first This saith he is to envy us proficiency in the truth and to expect that the Sun in the morning should shine as gloriously as at noon day So that it is one thing addere aedificium fundamento as Austin calleth it and another thing to make a new Foundation Thus Lyrinensis when he made this Objection To what use are Doctors and Officers of the Church if so be they must only receive the Doctrine delivered and not excogitate new by their own wit He answereth There is profectus but not permutatio allowed a growth but not a change The work of the Ministers of the Gospel is not to finde out new real fundamental truths no more than a new Christ or a new Bible he that cannot see by one Sun would not by twenty and he that will not be convinced by one Bible would not if there were more Yet they are not useless for these Fundamentals they are dayly to confirm to explain to polish and affectionately to improve for Sanctification more and more so that as he saith they must not deliver nova yet they may nova not new things but in a new manner When a childe groweth up into a man he still retaineth his humane nature though there be an increase in his stature but if this childe should grow into a horse or a bear then this would be a change of his species and his na●u●e Thus the Church and her Officers they are to grow in more light in more knowledg in more faith but still in the same truth whereas if they degenerate into Errors and false Doctrines then the species is altered now it is not hony but gall it is not gold but dross not meat but poyson So that if we see eminent men growing out of those errors and those Superstitions they were once intangled in you must not call this yea and nay but a laudable duty for we see the spirit of God communicating it self by degrees Even as the Sun doth not presently arise to its vertical point so neither doth the spirit of God reveal all things at once It cometh in by degrees he could perfect our understandings even in this life as much as they shall be in heaven so that we shall no longer know in part but he is pleased to work gradually even as he did make the world not in an instant but successively Thus we see he did to the very Apostles they were under his Instruction and Government a good while and yet were ignorant in many particulars till at last he confirmed them from his spirit from above The Protestants then are not guilty of yea and nay though they did not at first d●scover all the abominations of Popery Neither may we charge any particular Minister for yea and nay if out of error he proceed to truth if from darkness he attaineth to more light For although many Heretical persons may shrowd themselves under the serious name of new light yet it is plain that both Pastors and people are to grow in new light gradually though not specifically Thus the Apostle Peter 1 Pet. 1. 19. commendeth the believers for attending unto the word of God as unto a light that shineth in a dark place untill the day dawn and the day-starre arise in their hearts not as if ever they could come to light enough that they need not to attend to Scripture any further that they may throw away the Bible as useless having light enough within them No but that donec that until is continual and alwayes as sometimes it is used 3. We are to distinguish between Yea and Nay indeed and a seeming yea and nay between 〈◊〉 constant new Doctrines indeed and those that are apparently so We grant that such corruptions such darkness may cover the face of the Church that the true Doctrines of Christ may seem new and be condemned for novelllsm and the Doctor who preached them be thought to come with his yea and nay And thus again Luther and Melancthon with many others are condemned for their inconstancy They were once ours say the Papists they did once believe as we believed worship as we worshipped but now they are a nay to their yea This calumny will easily vanish if you distinguish between new things indeed and new things appearingly so The Protestant Doctrine was not new indeed if you look to the Scripture and Christ it is old as they are but then we grant that if we consider the Chaos the Church was in at that time what superstitious abominations did then prevail we grant what the Reformers
exhorteth all that hope in God Psal 31. 24. To be of good courage and God shall strengthen their hearts Of all temptations none are so grievous to be born as those which arise from Gods withdrawing of himself and hiding of his face from us then we apprehend no promises do belong unto us then we question very principles and so are like a ship tossed in the Sea without Pilot or Anchor Therefore spiritual fortitude to withstand these strong assaults is above all required How many have sunk irrecoverably into this pit of destruction So that unlesse Gods power settle us unlesse that compose our hearts we can as well remove mountains as this sad and sainting spirit of ours Lay then fast hold on Christ thou canst not sink in these waters if his arm doth uphold thee Thus Timothy is exhorted To be strong in the grace that is in Jesus Christ 2 Tim. 2. 1. there is his duty to be strong but how must he come to have this strength It is by Jesus Christ you would think the exhortation were superfluous for why must I be strong if it be the grace of Christ that must enable me But the exhortation is usefull howsoever for hereby we are taught our duty as also to go out of our selves renouncing our own strength and laying the faster hold upon Christ himself To this purpose we have the like exhortation Ephes 6. 10. Finally my brethren be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might when he had before laid down several precepts then knowing how impotent and unable we are he saith Be strong in the Lord. Here you see what we are commanded but it is the power of his might that is his mighty power that must confirm us and where this is present then we wonder how we are carried through such temptations led through such wildernesses as we have been we stand and admire to see what red Seas we have gone thorow and how the waters have yeelded unto us Thus Paul I can doe all things through Christ that strengthens me Phil. 4. 13. Fourthly Divine hope doth exceedingly conduce to stablish the soul upon the promises as you heard from those admonitions of David to his soul Hope thou still in God Faith is carried out to the truth of God and hope to the mercy and power of God and therefore he that hopeth in God is got into the Ark while others float in the waters Heb. 6. 19. it is compared to the Anchor of the soul both sure and stedfast and which entereth within the vail By this we see that hope doth notably settle the soul Faith indeed and hope are two sisters and twins and look so like one another that we can hardly make the difference yet faith establisheth the soul upon the promises by apprehending them as present so that the soul is in as holy a manner secure as if it were already in Heaven But hope doth settle the soul on Gods promises as the things promised are future and to come For seeing between Gods promises and the accomplishment of them there happen so many crosse providences in appearance yea so many difficulties and seeming impossibilities are in the way we need some divine grace to overcome all these and that is hope compared excellently to an Anchor for as that doth fasten the ship which otherwise would be tossed up and down and in danger of splitting upon every Rock so the soul of the most godly man is tossed up and down with such sad temptations that did not this hope bear up the heart all would fail within us But this spiritual anchor exceedeth all material ones for this is sure and stedfast Sure so that no outward violence of storms can break it and stedfast in respect from within there is nothing without or within that can disanu●l this But then whereas other anchors are fastened into the earth this is in Heaven in God and invisible things A godly mans hope cannot be seen by the bodily eye Take heed then of weakning this grace of hope it 's an excellent corroborater of the soul staying it up with that glory which will be revealed hereafter Lastly Another habitual principle whereby God doth exceedingly establish the heart on the promises is Spiritual joy and heavenly consolations This is one great reason say Divines why Angels and Saints in Heaven are so confirmed in that estate that nothing can tempt them off from God they never will be weary of the presence of God even because they are filled with so much infinite delight and joy that they cannot desire any better thing than God Now the godly they have the beginnings of these consolations here upon earth for by the spirit of adoption they are so filled with joy and delight that all the world is no more than an husk unto them they look upon the world as a wildernesse and Heaven as the Canaan So that spiritual consolations when wrought in the soul are like a mighty pillar to bear up the heart Hence the Apostle prayeth 2 Thes 2. 17. That God would comfort their hearts and stablish them First Comfort and then establish How hardly is the heart dejected and full of despondent thoughts established But comfort and joy is oil to the wheels Thus Nehemiah spake Neh. 8. 10. Be not ye sorry for the joy of the Lord is your strength So much sinfull grief as thou lettest in it is like the letting in of waters at some leak in the ship it may sink the ship at last Blesse God therefore for any gladnesse of heart for any consolations of soul through the Spirit of God these support the soul these make it rejoyce in the midst of all afflictions It is true sometimes the people of God for wise and holy ends are deprived of them but when they are vouchsafed they come like pleasant gales of winde to carry the ship to its Haven In the next place As God doth positively establish by these habitual principles so also by the actual motions of his Spirit upon us There is not only habitual grace but efficacious grace whereby the Lord worketh in us both to will and to do How many times do the principles of grace like Christ in the ship lie asleep in us insomuch that till they be awakened we are in danger of shipwrack Therefore when the Apostle exhorteth us To work out our salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2. 13. he giveth a wonderfull reason for it 's God that worketh in you to will and to do and that of his good pleasure So that the confirming power of God lieth chiefly in this in actuating those habitual principles within us whereby we depend upon God continually as the beams of the Sun do upon the Sun This Doctrine Pelagians and Papists cannot relish but certainly if God come not with efficacious actual help as well as habitual the instances of the fals of Gods people in all ages will palpably declare they are undone
this and then from those conjoyned we may be able to finde out the nature of this obsignation for although our principall endeavour is to be made partaker of it yet it is very necessary in its kinde to know what it is Though it cannot be denied but many of Gods people may have it and yet not give the definition of it Even as they may beleeve and be regenerated and not happily be able to give an exact description of these things As many a man hath health may sleep well and yet is not able to tell you what health or sleep is The first Text which will afford much light to this we are upon is that famous place set like a beacon upon the mount and much agitated between Papists and Protestants in the doctrine of assurance Rom. 8. 18. where the spirit it self is said to bear witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God I shall not insist upon the controversies on this place either grammaticall or reall but take the positive truth plainly delivered Here the godly who all have the spirit of God first sanctifying and leading them on in all their waies whereby they are said to be spiritually minded are in the next place declared to have the spirit of God in another manner working upon them and that is to witnesse with our spirit So that the spirits Testimony is not single and immediate as when there was a voice heard saying This is my beloved Sonne No such Enthusiastical impressions and impulses are to be dreamed of but mediately and conjunctly with our spirits By it our consciences are so enlightned that we are thereby enabled to be perswaded that we are the Children of God for that you see is the object of the Testimony that is the matter witnessed that we are the children of God You see then here is no encouragement for the Popish doctrine of doubting nay when they go the highest allowing a moral certitude such which excludeth all fear to the contrary yet it doth not rise up high enough to this glorious priviledge spoken of For as with the spirit in Sanctification of us moral vertues came far short of the graces and fruit of the spirit So doth an humane perswasion from the sincerity of our conscience within us of this witnessing and sealing of Gods Spirit A second Text reducible to this is Gal. 4. 6. Because ye are sons God hath sent forth the spirit of his Sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father This is nothing but the sealing in my Text only the words are 〈◊〉 of divine worth Because ye are sinnes Therefore none but the Sonnes of God have this priviledge Children of the devil cannot pretend to this Thou who art not born of God stand aloo● off this doth not belong to thee As thou knowest not what it meaneth yea with Esau for thy mo●sels dost prophanely despise this priviledge so neither doth God give such childrens bread to dogs or Pearls to swine Again God hath sent the spirit of his Sonne you see our Son-ship is built upon Christs Sonship our Son-ship of Adoption is established upon that Son-ship which is by nature in him He doth not speak here of that eternal mission of the Holy Ghost proceeding from the Father and the Sonne but a temporal one bestowed on beleevers and he saith the spirit of his Son because by Christs death this spirit in its peculiar operation is as it were purchased for the godly For had not Christ made an atonement the Spirit of God could not have been given us either for sanctification or consolation Further This is sent into our hearts not into our memories or mindes only for the temporary beleever hath some superficial and vanishing perswasion of Gods favour towards him but it is sent into our hearts implying the full deep and through possession that it hath of the godly Lastly Here is the notable and glorious effect it maketh us to cry that is fervently confidently and boldly God Father Abba Father Some reade it indicatively in this sense God is my Father Some by way of wish and prayer it cometh all to one These are two words signifying the same thing teaching us that both Jew and Gentile is indulged this priviledge or else it 's germinated for assurance sake Oh then how unquiet and restlesse should the people of God be till they finde this work of the spirit of Adoption upon them Thou daily enquirest after the spirit in its sanctification of thee how it maketh thee more heavenly how it mortifieth thy lusts and dost mourn because thou dost not partake of it in a greater measure Why doth not thy soul also long after the fruit of this spirit of Adoption in thee Dost thou observe how it subdueth thy slavish fears how it inclineth thee to a filiall and Evangelicall affection towards God as a Father I tell thee thy life is never a Gospel-life till this be obtained As therefore these blinde men cryed Jesus have mercy on us though the Disciples reproved them and bid them hold their peace so also let it be with thee whatsoever temptations guilt and fears thy heart suggesteth to the contrary do thou notwithstanding boldly cry God my Father The third Text to illustrate this 1 Cor. 2 12. Now we have received not the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are freely given us of God Here we see two principles opposed as contrary to one another the spirit of the world and the spirit of God and he who hath the spirit of God hath it for this end partly that he might know the things which God hath freely given him implying that without this spirit we could not discern of these things Even as if a man had not a rationall soul bestowed upon him he could not discern the things of reason but would be as a beast So did not God bestow his spirit upon us we were no wayes able to discern of those Gospel-mercies which are bestowed upon us He saith which are freely given us us in particular that we might not think he speaketh of the priviledges of the Gospel in the generall remission of sins and sanctification in the generall but as applyed to this and that subject So that if a man have no more than the spirit of the world if he have not as yet this spirit of God dwelling in him he is not a fit auditor for this truth If Aristotle thought not young persons fit auditors for his morall Philosophy how much more are we to judge every man though of never such abilities and parts yet if destitute of the spirit of God altogether incapable of this truth Therefore the spiritual hearers are only such who can give their testimony to these things There must be a spiritual life a spiritual foundation before there can be this spiritual superstruction A fourth Text is 1 Joh. 3. 24. and indeed that Apostle doth often
grace so a God of all consolation and Gal. 5. Joy is the fruit of Gods Spirit as well as Faith Love and Repentance are in other places attributed to God But you will say It may easily be granted that a man being dead in sinne he needeth the mighty work of Gods Spirit to raise him up and to give spiritual life but doth it follow that he needeth the same spirit to establish and assure him of Gods love Yes no doubt but that the same Spirit of God which bringeth thee out of the gulf of thy lusts must also out of the gulf of thy doubts and fears It 's as impossible for thee to have comfort of thy self as grace of thy self And therefore you see the Scripture speaking of this twofold operation of Gods Spirit as being necessary to antidote against our twofold corruption and the grounds of this necessity of Gods Spirit are these First The heart of a man is naturally opposite to any thing that is spirituall Whatsoever is of God though never so desirable in it self yet meeting with our corrupt natures it findeth opposition therefore we cannot of our selves any more receive the promises though infinitely needing of them then we can obey the commands We cannot endure honey any more then gall The way of Gospel-joy is contrary to a troubled heart as well as Gospel-obedience to a secure carnal heart Secondly We need the Spirit of God to this sealing because that which doth oppose this is indeed nothing but the fruit of sinne running down another channel He that once lived in divers pleasures did continually grieve the holy Spirit of God Let this man finde the guilt of sinne Let the Law wound and sting him then he grieveth the comforting spirit of God by fears and doubts No wonder then if it must be Gods Spirit only that sealeth because that alone can remove the guilt within thee that only can take off these objections these discouragements that are upon the soul As God raised an East-winde that suddenly delivered Pharaoh from those Locusts that molested him this was miraculous none could do it but God so it is the Spirit of God that alone can take off the heavy burthen of sinne upon thee It is Gods Spirit alone that can overrule thy conscience that can pacifie it that can comfort it It is the Spirit of Adoption that maketh us cry Abba Father but more of this may come in afterwards SERM. CXXXV A further Discovery of the Spirits sealing the People of God 2 COR. 1. 22. Who hath also sealed us THe third particular in the Description of the Spirits sealing cometh to be considered and that is the subject thereof which is two-fold 1. Of Inhesion And 2. Of Predication First Of Inhesion so it is said to be the work of Gods Spirit upon the hearts of the godly For after this manner the Scripture speaketh He hath sent his Spirit into our hearts Gal. 4. 6. And in this Text He hath given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts By this expression is denoted that deep radicated and full possession which the Spirit of God hath upon the hearts of true believers So that hereby is excluded that vanishing and superficial perswasion which may be in a temporary believer of his interest in Christ As a temporary believer hath something like true faith like true joy and like true grace upon the soul so he hath also something like this sealing and like this assured perswasion upon his heart Therefore as the former is much disputed and it doth greatly exercise tender hearts viz. How they may know when they are carried on in the work of sanctification beyond those inchoate and imperfect workings which an hypocrite may have So this latter also doth cause great sollicitude and care of spirit in many gracious souls How shall they know their assurance is not a delusion is not a false perswasion arising out of an inordinate love to their own selves For the Devil doth not only transform himself into an Angel of light as light is taken for holinesse but also as it is taken for comfort Now amongst other characteristical differences this is one the perswasion of a godly man is more full plenary and powerfull Even as sanctifying grace entereth efficaciously into the heart so also doth this sealing grace whereas what hypocrites feel is in a confused general and flashy way neither is it drawn out upon permanent and enduring motives Although doctrinal characters given by the most able Ministers of the Gospel are not enough to make us find out this difference in our selves without a rectified constitution of the powers of the soul within unlesse we attain to that qualification spoken of by the Apostle Heb. 5. 14. who by reason of use or habit or perfection as the word may be rendred have their senses exercised to discerne between good and evil This Text is much to be pressed upon you For it is not every godly man at first that can separate the precious from the vile in his soul but there must be an habitual use of the senses this way Where mark also the Apostle attributeth to the soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a metaphorical manner That as the taste when well constituted is able to discern between bitter and sweet the eye between white and black the ear between what is melodious and what is harsh and displeasing Thus the soul of a godly man being used to heavenly and spiritual things can know what is of God and what is of Satan or of nature in him For you must know there may be four principles of operations in us 1. Nature and that when polished with education and moral principles may appear very glorious 2. Satan insinuating himself as a subtil Serpent as an Angel of light imitating the works of God though he cannot efficaciously work the heart to any thing all that he doth is by suggestion and moving the imaginative and sensitive part of a man 3. There is the Spirit of God and that worketh in us either in a common way by gifts and assistance or by a sanctifying way Now is there not required much spiritual skill and experience to discern which is which of all these So that it is no wonder if he require these senses to be exercised 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a word from those who did exercise themselves in the Heathenish games and that naked thereby to fit and prepare themselves to be more agile and expedite for that service In this dispute therefore enquire not onely for doctrinal symptomes and signes of this sealing of Gods Spirit but heartily pray for these exercised senses in spiritual things The other subject is the subject of predication of whom it is affirmed that they have this sealing of Gods Spirit and that is sanctified persons We speak of adult persons for it is plain that infants though they may be sanctified yet because not having actual faith they neither have this sealing And
if you ask Have all the sanctified persons of God this sealing Have none the sanctification of the Spirit but they must also have the witnessing of the Spirit I answer this Question because of great practical importance shall God assisting be handled by it self after the description hath been explained That which I shall here take notice of is That sanctification is necessarily presupposed to this sealing A great Prince will not set his seal to dung to make an impression there neither will God to an heart unsanctified For as in matter of Doctrine God will not vouchsafe miracles to confirm that which is a lie neither in practicals will the Spirit of God witnesse to that heart which is not made holy For indeed it should witnesse a lie in such a case informing such they are the sonnes of God when indeed they are the children of the Devil This order of Gods Spirits first sanctifying and then sealing is clear Ephes 1. 13. In whom after ye believed ye were sealed Those eminent Divines who defined faith to be assurance making it the same with the sealing of Gods spirit are gravelled at this Text and therefore make this Objection If faith be assurance be the sealing how doth the Text say After we believed we were sealed To this therefore Piscator answereth not yeelding that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should be rendred Having beleeved as of a thing past but beleeving as in the present but there is too much forcing in this interpretation Others they consider of faith as it hath two parts Illumination of minde and fiducial assurance Now say they the Apostle meaneth by faith the former work of faith and so the meaning is After you were enlightned to know the truth you were confirmed and assured but that opinion making faith justifying to be an assurance that Christ is mine is justly refused It is plain then that when the Spirit of God hath in order of nature for in time they may be both together sanctified a man throughout whereby he is made a new creature then the Spirit of God maketh this glorious stamp upon him then he giveth him this seal as an honourable priviledge whereby he may know himself to be the Lords Even as in antiquity none might have seals but persons of honour and dignity So that the natural and unregenerate person is to stand aloof off thou hast nothing to do in this priviledge thou art not the man whom the great King of Heaven and earth doth purpose thus to honour We proceed in the Description and there we meet with the formal Nature of it wherein it doth essentially consist with the object thereof The Nature of it is In confirming and establishing the heart of a man For this is the chief and usual end of seals to ratifie a thing and to make it no longer uncertain and doubtfull And to this property doth the Scripture chiefly attend For whereas the soul though sanctified is apt to be in daily fears and doubts about Gods favour and grace towards it it fluctuateth up and down having no subsistency the Spirit of God cometh and consolidateth the soul inabling it to rest satisfied in this that God is his God that his sinnes are pardoned that he is become a reconciled Father in Christ And if you say Why do we not need the Spirit of God to do this Cannot we by our graces by our repentance and holy life sufficiently establish our own souls in peace No by no means we need the Spirit of God to comfort as you heard as well as to sanctifie and that for these Reasons First It is very hard for a man whose guilty conscience doth presse him and condemn him daily telling him that he hath deserved at Gods hands to be eternally tormented in hell not to thinke because God may doe thus that therefore he will do so In such terrours and affrights we look more to what we have deserved we look more to what God may do then what he will we are naturally suspicious and think the worst of God even as we doe to man If we have offended a man greatly and it lieth in his power to undo us we are never quiet we cannot but think when ever the opportunity is he will be avenged and therefore we dare not trust him Yea though we have given no just cause if others have taken up an unkind spirit towards us we expect nothing else from them but our ruine when it is in their power Therefore for all Saul's tears and good works to David yet he would never trust him Now although there be no cause for us to have such suspicious thoughts about God for he hath graciously promised that he will receive us insomuch as not to believe him herein is to give more credit to a man whose words many times satisfie us than to God who is truth it self yet the heart being guilty and full of fears doth work in this doubtfull manner about God How hard is it to bring the afflicted sinner to good perswasions about God and that though by promises and other wayes God hath so abundantly provided against such distrust Here then is the reason why we need the sealing of Gods Spirit we cannot perswade our selves but God will doe what he may do and what we have deserved And A second Reason followeth upon the former We can hardly be perswaded that the great and good things which we stand in need of God will ever bestow upon us who are so unworthy of them Can a beggars daughter be perswaded that a great King will marry her But here is a farre greater disproportion What will the great God of Heaven so holy so full of majesty look graciously upon me and not only forgive me my sinnes but advance me to eternal glory These things are very improbable Shall Joseph be freed not only from the prison but promoted to the greatest honour in the Land next to the King Who would have believed it And thus it is here the soul having low and humble thoughts of it self cannot be perswaded that the great God of Heaven will look upon such despicable wretches as they are 3. The way of evangelical confidence with the comfortable effects thereof are wholly supernatural And therefore no wonder if we need the Spirit of God to help us therein Not only holinesse and grace is supernatural but assurance and joy are likewise supernatural As we cannot pray without the Spirit helping our infirmities so neither are we able to call God Father If faith in Christ by which we are justified be supernatural then also is the comfort and peace flowing from the knowledge thereof As the Doctrine of the Gospel is by divine revelation flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto us that Christ is the Sonne of God so neither can flesh and blood enable us to the perswasion of this Mediator as loving me and giving himself for me Certainly if it be the gift of
God to have a dogmatical faith to be kept from heresie it 's no lesse to have this fiducial application with the sense thereof upon our souls Wonder not then if we make it the Spirits worke to have this assurance 4. We need the Spirit to confirm us because the flesh within us is full of objections and bringeth many plausible arguments against it Insomuch that what Bellarmine and other subtil Papists bring as Engines to demolish this foundation are very sutable to the corrupt heart For they think the heart is very deceitfull there is much hypocrisie I may think I do that for God which I do for vain-glory that I am humbled for sinne when worldly motives only afflict me Again flesh doth doth suggest there may be much unknown evil in thee thy heart may be worse than thou takest it to be Though the Sea seeme calme sometimes yet there are dangerous Rocks under the water and thus though outwardly there may appear much tendernesse yet there may be a rock in the bottome Furthermore the flesh may suggest Wilt thou be perswaded of Gods favour to thee in particular Is not this to enter into Gods secrets Is not this to climb up into Heaven in an arrogant manner Yea is not this the way to nourish security in thee and make thee presume of Gods favour though thy iniquities be never so many and grosse Lastly The flesh telleth thee of former sins thou didst once wallow in as also the present failings that thy own soul doth frequently condemn thee for Now are not these very plausible Do they not importune to diffidence And certainly these would overwhelme thee did not the Spirit of God overcome all and support thee against them Yea 5. We need the Spirit of God to seal us because the Devil is very busie and active in destroying this perswasion He knoweth that those who enjoy this priviledge walk with joy peace thankfulnesse with strength and activity in the wayes of God therefore to weaken them herein that their graces may wither he tempteth about their comforts that they may wither thus the Devil as he opposeth the Spirit of God in its holinesse called therefore the unclean spirit so he doth also in its comforting effects and therefore is called the tempter Yea 2 Cor. 2. we reade how active he was to have the incestuous person humbled for his sinnes even swallowed up with too much sorrow And do not many of Gods people feel this experimentally Doe they not see they should sink and fall into all horrour and despair did not the Spirit of God support Little doe the natural men of the world apprehend what the agonies and spiritual conflicts are which a tempted soul endureth in this case Lastly The Spirit of God must seal us because this assurance is not obtained in a natural way as if we had perfectly obeyed the will of God and therefore we merited pardon but it is by the gracious promises of God made to a believer though accompanied with infirmities Indeed if it were thus that we could purge out all sinne from our selves and be perfect in every good work then assurance would naturally follow as the Saints in Heaven because cleansed from all sinne cannot doubt of Gods favour but our establishment is more upon the promises of grace without us than any thing that is within us while we behold our own unworthinesse and are deeply humbled under it yet even then are we inabled to assure our selves of the grace of God towards us SERM. CXXXVI Of the Object Manner and End of the Spirits sealing 2 COR. 1. 22. Who hath also sealed us THe next particular considerable in this Description of the Spirits sealing is the Object about which it is conversant and that is said to be the Promises of Grace as belonging to a sanctified person in particular and herein doth the most expresse and efficacious effect of this sealing appear that it particularizeth the Promises of grace what is spoken generally that it doth bring home in a peculiar manner to our own breast What is it to hear of health if it be not thy health What of wealth if not thy wealth So what comfort is it to hear of a Christ if not thy Christ To know there are blessed and precious promises if they doe not belong to thee Doe not the Devils know in the general that Christ is a Saviour that there are excellent promises declared in the Word But they are miserable and wretched howsoever because not applicable unto them We may therefore divide Faith according to the object thereof First Into a general Faith whereby we are carried out to believe the whole word of God upon a divine motive whether it be the historical or comminatory part as well as the promissory Thus whatsoever is revealed in the Scripture though it be but an appendix to any History as that Sauls father had asses though we cannot call it an Article of the faith yet when sufficiently propounded to us then not to believe argueth a wicked and an obstinate spirit because we despise the authority of God and his testimony in that particular though but little Secondly There is a special Faith and that I call The worke of Gods grace for all faith is the gift of God whereby a man is enabled to believe the promissory part in the Scripture whereby he believeth this truth that Jesus Christ is a Saviour to those that believe in him And this the Papists yea and others too make all the faith that is required of us that this is it which doth justifie us but very absurdly Thirdly There is a particular Faith and that is When the Spirit of God doth enable us to receive Christ as our Christ to apply the promises as belonging to us in particular To say with Thomas My Lord my God And with Paul Galat. 2. Who loved me and gave himself for me Such a particular faith is not onely possible but a duty of which much excellent and profitable Discourse might be made but I forbear because I am to treat of it God assisting upon another account Therefore for the present you are to know that this worke of Gods Spirit in confirming and sealing of us is especially manifested in this particular and appropriating way of the promises of grace as our portion Therefore it is said to cause us to call God Father which implieth our peculiar interest and propriety in him Doe not then be discouraged from this Canaan because of the Anakims that are in the way Fear not to call God thy Father though thou findest many discouragements within thee The Devil would not have thee taste of this honey But I proceed and the next particular in the Description is the Manner how the Spirit of God cometh thus to witnesse unto us how we come to be sealed and that is said to be First By the meanes God hath appointed thereunto This is very observable
in his heart in somuch that an Angel was sent to comfort him This might make us wonder that God should not spare his own Sonne but it was necessary for our redemption for as he could not have wrought our reconciliation for us unlesse he had a passible body that could suffer death so neither unlesse he had a suffering soul by fears and grief though all without sinne It was Jobs case likewise to be without sealing for he could have no comfort in his heart while he complained the Arrows of the Almighty did stick fast in him while he was terrified with dreams and visions in the night Thus the Lord still doth exercise his soveraignty therein he withdraweth the light of his favour from many choice sanctified ones They wander in a wildernesse their lives are a burthen to them they cannot meet God in any ordinance as if they were become like so many rejected Sauls when yet the favour of the Lord is exceeding great to them only they perceive it not But then secondly On our part many times yea too often when the cause is that we have not this sealing We may thank our selves for bloaching the Paper so that no comfortable thing can be written upon it I shall instance in one or two waies how we come to keep off this sealing And the first is by falling into some grievous and grosse sinnes if such do drive away the naturall peace of a meer natural conscience as is plain in heathens how much more the supernaturall peace of a tender enlightned conscience Davids penitentiall Psalm 51. doth fully speak to this he there complaineth of his broken bones he prayeth to have joy restored to him all which argueth that by sinne he had lost all comfortable enjoyment of God That he was in a chaos and dark confusion and truly if there were no hell no damnation to threaten the people of God with to keep them from grosse sinnes This of Gods iron turnace to be cast into is enough to make our hearts tremble Oh the wofull condition that godly manis in who in stead of the spirit of Adoption he once enjoyed is now delivered up to Satan to be under his fears his black temptations No outward comfort in the world can then give him a drop of case Oh then come not near any grosse sinnes fly from the appearance of it for this sealing cannot consist with that Secondly Any carelesse and remisse walking though we do not fall into grosse sins is enough to put this Sunne into an Eclipse Any angry and bitter words to another will do it Any loose and wanton discourse may bring thee into this deep dungeon For so you may see Eph. 4. 30. Grieve not the spirit by which yeare sealed But how is that done for so you may see the verse before by corrupt communications by unsavoury gracelesse words and then see the subsequent Verse Let all bitternesse all wrath and anger be put away Dost thou then complain thou hast not this sealing how can it be otherwise How many frothy foolish speeches hast thou How many angry bitter words come from thee If you hereby grieve Gods spirit no wonder that he leave thee to thy grief Thirdly By any inward security and secret self-confidence we may deprive our selves of this sealing For seeing this is a Gospel-privi edge a ray from the Sunne of righteousnesse it is only conveighed in an Evangelicall method Now all Gospel-dispensations are to the broken in heart to the poor in spirit to the humbled sinner renouncing all righteousnesse and worth of our own so that as it is in the work of sanctification no sooner hath a man any secret confidence in his own power but sanctifying grace in some measure leaveth him As we see in Peter when he said Though all men should for sake Christ yet he would not Thus it is also in the way of consolation no sooner doth a man begin to be lifted up within because he hath these comfortable refreshments but presently they are substrated from us Thus David did but say his mountain was established that he should not be moved and immediately God hid his face and he was troubled Psa 30. 6 7. Therefore that man who would enjoy this desirable priviledge must walk with a tender humble and yet an Evangelicall fiducial frame of heart Fourthly When we speak of Gods sealing you must rightly understand the meaning of it It is not as if thereby such a certainty were wrought in the soul that it doth exclude all fears and doubts No that is a proper priviledge to heaven as the flesh lusteth against the spirit in matter of sanctification so it doth also in consolation As therefore when the spirit of God sanctifieth on the spirits part grace is pure and perfect but on the subjects part which doth receive it so it hath much drosse and imperfection cleaving to it Thus it is also in this sealing though the testimony and witnesse on the spirits part be infaliible and undoubted yet as we receive it so there is much unbeleef and doubting adhering to us This sealing therefore and many fears and doubts may consist together because it is not absolutely predominant and prevalent only here is a conflict we are to strive against these doubts we are to pray against these fears till the Lord cause light to arise out of this darkness Therefore the godly may have this sealing and yet not attend to it nor perceive it because the corruptions of our heart are most perceived by us and we are so exercised by them that we do not consider what the spirit of God doth witnesse at that time This then maketh the godly think they have not this sealing at all because they have it not with that dominion as they desire to exclude all conflicts and troubles within and so as in respect of sanctification there is some grace under much corruption so there is also this certainty under many fears And if you say that it is a contradiction that a man should be assured and doubt also I answer No no more than that a man should be sanctified and yet have some corruption in him for they do not respect the same thing Certainty ariseth from the Promises of God set home by his spirit upon us ahd fears arise from the sence and feeling of our own weaknesses So that what the holy Apostle speaketh concerning the work of grace in him with the oppositian thereunto the good he would do he doth not and he findes evil present with him Thus it is here the sealing the assurance the comfort he would have he cannot obtain but the doubts and slavish fears which he hateth they carry him away captive Lastly Suppose a godly man hath not this sealing yet let him not limit God to the times and seasons he would but leave all to the merciful dispensation of a wise and righteous God Thou hast not assurance yet no more thou hast
because we by our sins might justly have expected Gods vengeance and his condemnation So that the word Grace is still to debase us more and more in our own eyes For it doth not only proclaim that all cometh meerly from God but also that we are wretched sinners who have deserved the anger and frowns of God when now we have the light of his countenance To Adam God was very bountifull and full of love yet some Divines say That we cannot call that Gods grace to him because Adam was not in a sinfull and contrary estate deserving the wrath of God 3. This grace of God is more especially demonstrated in those effects which relate to the happiness and blessedness of the soul Therefore it 's the grace of God in calling and justifying us in sending his Sonne to redeem us in vouchsafing Gospel-mercies to us In this the grace of God is made most apparent and this should teach us what we should prize most what we should be affected most with even these spiritual mercies The Scripture doth seldom or never call it the grace of God to give us wealth health and temporal mercies these are not worthy to be mentioned when we speak of Justification Remission and Salvation and yet how carnal and corrupt are we We desire the grace or favour of God for our bodies for outward happiness but who is sensible of the need of Gods grace in this spiritual manner Thou canst not therefore argue Gods grace is to thee because thou livest in prosperity and hast what thy soul can desire For these may stand with Gods anger and wrath thou mayest be a fire-brand of hell and one prepared for destruction for all this Oh then be sensible of that which the Scripture attributeth to Gods grace but none save an holy heavenly heart can do this 4. This grace is communicated to us in and through Christ So that it is called in Scripture The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ in a two-fold respect 1. Efficiently because he is able to bestow it upon us You see in the Text Paul prayeth it from him as well as God the Father And 2. Meritoriously because Christ by his bloud hath made a way open and free for grace to manifest it self Oh then let us know that without Christ God is a consuming fire a condemning Judge that there was no more possibility without him to have so much as a drop of grace as there was for Dives in hell to obtain a drop of water No no there was too great a gulph between God and us Indeed the Socinians they blaspheme and say If we hold the merits and satisfaction of Christ they say this overthroweth the grace of God making it none at all What grace is it say they for God to forgive and pardon when he receiveth full satisfaction for it But though it be of Justice to Christ yet it is meer and only Grace in respect of us and that many wayes but especially in these two particulars 1. That God was not bound to take a Surety for us he might have stood for satisfaction in our own persons that we who had sinned should also be punished And then 2. Although this price be paid yet the application of it is wholly of grace For how many are damned How many have no sinne forgiven or pardoned to them although Christ came as a Saviour into the world It is therefore meer and only grace to make thee partaker of this grace which cometh by Christ God is gracious but Christ made way for it 5. Gods grace therefore is the same with that which the Scripture calls the light of his countenance Which is an allusion to men who when they were pleased and delight in any they look in a smiling and chearfull manner upon such Thus it is with God when he is reconciled through Christ with those that are his he doth presently cast away his anger doth no longer turn his face from them abhorring and loathing their persons and duties but he accepts of them looketh upon them with delight Insomuch that the Scripture makes this to be the utmost blessedness that a godly man can desire to have The light of Gods countenance shining upon him to be under his gracious favour as you see by Davids earnest petition for it and the sad troubles and distresses which were upon his soul when he hid his face from him So that to partake of Gods grace comprehends all the comfort glory and blessedness we can desire 6. This property of God of being gracious though it hath alwayes been to the Church since Adam's fall yet it hath broken out by degrees Insomuch that the Gospel time is the time of grace in a more eminent manner Abraham and Noah and David these were all justified by grace as well as we though in Christs time this glorious light break out into its full lustre God telleth Moses Exod. 22. 27. He would hear the cry of the oppressed for he was gracious And David often Psal 86. 15. Psal 111. 4. doth acknowledge this comfortable property in God that he is gracious So that in the old administration though every thing was more covered and obscure yet then it was the grace of God alone that they made their refuge yet this was so dark comparatively that the Evangelist saith John 1. 17. The Law came by Moses but grace and truth by Jesus Christ as if those former dispensations were not dispensations of grace Hence the expression is Tit. 2. 11. The grace of God hath appeared viz. in a most visible irradiant manner that our eyes are dazelled with it as when the Sunne shineth in its full strength at noon-day So that all those Doctrines which in these Gospel times do obscure the grace of God are more intollerable than those who pleaded the Law and the works of the Law in former times 7. Let us consider What are the opposites to this grace of God or What are those sinnes that do keep off this grace of God from us For though this Sunne shine never so gloriously though this Ocean be never so full yet if we shut our eyes or wilfully stop the streams of this fountain we shall not receive any good by it And there are these remarkable sins like so many opacous bodies that do interclude this grace from us I shall not meddle with Doctrinal opinions but practical indispositions And 1. He who seeketh to be justified by the works of the Law by his external obedience thereunto he will never come under the sweet benefit of Gods grace A man that is fully confident in his own righteousness and the good of his own heart will alwayes be neglective of the grace of God You may see this largely by those arguments the Apostle hath in his Episties A pharisaical spirit is alwayes an adversary to Free-grace but oh the proneness in all to this sinne especially men civillized and meerly moralized that are kept from the gross pollutions of
the world You may as soon remove the earth as such from their supposed righteousness The Apostle speaketh it as the general sinne of the Jews Rom. 10. 2. That being ignorant of the righteousness of God they went about to establish their own righteousnesse They would fain set up this Dagon This is the sweet poison that is the death of so many Intus existens prohibet alienum And when the sensible object is put upon the sensitive faculty it cannot perceive And hence it is that there are very few that do indeed admire and set up this grace of God If the Prodigal had fared as deliciously every day as Dives he would never have desired his Fathers house 2. Another indisposing thing to esteem of the grace of God is the consequent of this When men are not sensible of original corruption in the efficacy of it when they do not see or feel how miserable they are These two go alwayes together he that maketh nothing of original sinne hath also as low and slighty thoughts of grace You see it in Paul while ignorant of this what high and great thoughts he had of himself but when once he came to be anatomized when once the dark corners of his soul were made known then who did more long for and breathe after the grace of God than he 3. A third indisposition which is a natural consequent of the former Where there is not poverty of spirit brokennesse of heart and thereby an hungring and thirsting after the grace of God With such also this hath no precious acceptance Matth. 11. 28. Come unto me ye that are heavy loaden and I will ease you Ho every one that thirsteth Come saith Christ But alas where are these tender contrite and hungring Christians No marvel that you see so few crying out Oh if we could have the light of Gods countenance if we could but feel the grace of God shining upon us we would not matter any outward condition whatsoever Such flowers as these grow but in few places Christ and his grace are not importunately desired and wrestled for in prayer because so few are of a contrite hear SERM. XXIV Who are fit Subjects to partake of the Grace of God As likewise Rules and Scripture-characters of the Grace of God by which we may rightly understand and judge of it 2 COR. 1. 1. Grace be to you c. WE have heard That the grace of God is the chiefest and most eminent mercy that we can desire either for our selves or others We have been informed who are those capable and fit Subjects that may partake of this grace of God There remain some more Qualifications to be insisted upon And First Such only partake of Gods grace without who have true inward sanctifying grace For although it be true that the grace of God without us is to be preferred and esteemed above all inherent grace yet these are inseparably conjoyned together None can claim Gods grace and plead the mercifull effects thereof but such who have this testimony and evidence within It is true this grace as is to be shewed maketh way for it self and begins the first stone in this spiritual foundation but then the subsequent effects of this grace are only to those who have the inward work of it upon their own souls And this must be diligently observed that so wicked and ungodly men may not think to taste of this tree of life What hast thou to do to speak of Gods grace to hope in Gods grace who hast no grace in thy heart Think not that God will extend it to such as thou art for then it would be such grace as would encourage to sinne and imbolden in evil wayes Then we might truly take up that resolution which the Apostle with so much indignation rejecteth Let us sinne that grace may abound No the whole word of God speaketh no grace no peace to a wicked man It 's not the grace of God but the anger the fury and the wrath of God to such persons Hence Exod. 14. even at that very time when God is pronounced gracious and long-suffering it is added Who will in no wise acquit the guilty yet who can keep off these swine from running into this sweet garden Let them live graceless persons yet for all this they prefume God will be gracious to them But be not deceived Gods word is not a lie thou wilt find the issue to be as that speaketh And although thou mayest for the present have much outward prosperity many temporal advantages yet the curse and anger of God may be upon thee all the day long for all this Dives had great store of earthly benefits but needed as much a crum of Gods grace as it were as Lazarus did a crum of bread from his Table Therefore judge thy condition though overflowing with many outward comforts no better than an hell till the grace of God be dispensed towards thee Secondly Those only are preparrd to enjoy this grace of God who do exercise faith in the promises of the Gospel For faith is like opening of the window that lets in this glorious light upon the soul The grace of God is no otherwise communicated unto us but by believing Joh. 1. 12. To them that did believe he gave them power to become the Sons of God Rom. 3. 24. Justified freely by his grace through faith in his bloud So that faith is the hand to receive this precious pearl And for this reason it is that Gods children are no more filled with this grace it doth not like oil runne into all their wounds because by unbelief they shut up their souls and make sad obstructions unto this grace of God Oh then if thou who are truly godly walkest in a dejected manner saying with David Hath God forgotten to be gracious Know God is as gracious as ever yea and as willing his grace should overflow to thy soul but thou art unwise and froward thou doest not set upon this great work of faith which is the key as it were to open these treasures of Gods grace Know then that so much faith as thou bringest so much of Gods grace thou shalt partake of And therefore it is That to be justified by faith to be saved by faith and to be justified by grace or saved by grace is made all one by the Apostle and he argueth from one to the other and this way of Gods grace with the manner of receiving it cometh wholly by revelation It 's alone by the word of God that we come to know God to be so gracious and it 's alone by the same Word that we come to know what faith is and how by that only and not working we do receive of this grace No wonder then if the troubled and humbled sinner be so longere he comes to be replenished with this grace that he keepeth constantly in fears and doubts for till he put himself upon this way of faith there is not the