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A51846 A second volume of sermons preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton in two parts : the first containing XXVII sermons on the twenty fifth chapter of St. Matthew, XLV on the seventeenth chapter of St. John, and XXIV on the sixth chapter of the Epistle of the Romans : Part II, containing XLV sermons on the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, and XL on the fifth chapter of the second Epistle to the Corinthians : with alphabetical tables to each chapter, of the principal matters therein contained.; Sermons. Selections Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1684 (1684) Wing M534; ESTC R19254 2,416,917 1,476

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the Holy Ghost and commissioned by the Authority of Christ as King of the Church And therefore the Apostles were to tarry at Jerusalem till Christ was ascended and seated on the Throne and seized upon the Kingdom and poured out the Holy Ghost upon them None are sent but such are also called and chosen by the Holy Ghost by whom also they are gifted with respect to God the Father's Consent and Christ's Authority 3. To whom are they sent I Answer To all without any distinction of Nation Sex Person or Condition Mark 16.15 Go ye into all the World and preach the Gospel to every Creature Men send an Embassy to Kings and Princes but Christ to every mean Creature without any restraint It is true the Motion and Course of the Gospel is directed by a special Providence to some Places and not to others Acts 16.7 After they were come to Mysia they assayed to go into Bithynia but the Spirit suffered them not But doth the Holy Ghost hinder the preaching of the Gospel We must distinguish between the Grant of Power and the Exercise of it Tho there be a general Grant that the Pale of the Church shall be inlarged yet this Grant is to be made good as the Lord will There is a general Grant that the Gospel shall be preached unto all Nations but as for the Exercise and making good this Grant God will have the World to know that the Preaching of the Gospel is a Priviledge and a special Favour and therefore he sendeth it to some and not to others as a Token of his Love It is a thing that doth not come by chance or by the Counsels of Men but by his special Grant and Designation Therefore it is notable that the Apostles were guided by the Spirit not only in their Doctrine but in their Journeys and the external Means are distributed by the Will of God as well as internal Grace that where-ever it cometh we may acknowledg it as a special Favour to some it cometh later to others sooner but to all as God will He oweth it to none and therefore tho the Pale be inlarged and there is a general Grant that all Creatures that live within the precincts of the round World shall have the Gospel in their turn yet to some it is sent before others Acts 3.26 Vnto you first God having raised up his Son Jesus sent him to bless you The Jews had the first Offer and liberty of Choice or Refusal So Acts 13.26 Men and Brethren Children of the Stock of Abraham unto you is the Word of this Salvation sent he doth not say it is brought by me but sent The Preaching of the Gospel is governed by God's special Providence and Care As the Scriptures came not in old time by the Will of Man but Holy Men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 So it is not preached by the Will of Men. It is not your Purses that procure it nor your Goodness that deserveth it but good Ministers are sent to you by Christ's special Love and Care and so should you acknowledg it I tell you many have laboured for the Gospel fought for the Gospel and yet they have missed it because they do not consider him that hath the Stars in his Hand and directeth and guideth their Motions God will have this Mercy taken out of his own Hand as a special Token of his Love therefore because they do not acknowledg God tho they fight strive and labour for it yet the Gospel is taken from them 4. For what are they sent or the End and Scope of the Gospel Ever since the Fall there is a quarrel between God and Man and God might send Heralds to proclaim War as he sendeth Ambassadors of Peace to pray you to be reconciled 2 Cor. 5.20 that is the purport and drift of our Message to gain Men to lay down the Weapons of their Defiance and to accept of Christ that in him they may find Life and Peace God might send Messengers into the World as he sent Jonah to Nineveh to warn the World of their Destruction or as he revealed the Law upon Mount Sinai to make Men sensible of their Bondage and obnoxiousness to Divine Wrath and Justice But he sendeth Messengers of Peace with an Olive Branch in their Mouths to tell the World of God reconciled and God pacified by Christ and invite them to be in Favour and Peace with God that so they may enjoy Communion with him in Grace here and Glory hereafter Col. 1.27 28. Christ in you the Hope of Glory Whom we preach warning every Man and teaching every Man in all Wisdom that we may present every Man perfect in Christ Jesus There is the Subject of our Ministry Communion with Christ and Reconciliation with God by Christ as the Hope of Glory the manner of managing it with Wisdom warning every Man the Persons with whom we treat every Man without distinction and our Aim and Scope that we may present every Man perfect in Christ Jesus Vse 1. It informeth us of four Things 1. The Excellency and Dignity of the Ministry They are Christ's Ambassadors they are sent not as a Post or Letter-Carrier but as honourable Messengers An Ambassador usually is one of the Nobility sent by a Prince or the Supream Power of a Nation not to private Men but to their Fellow-Princes or States not upon a light Cause but to treat of Matters of Moment and not in a low or base manner but with an Equipage and Pomp answerable to the Dignity of him that sendeth Or in short an Ambassador is an Eminent Person sent from some chief Prince with Dignity and Authority to transact Affairs of the greatest Moment and because he representeth the Person from whom he is sent therefore Credit and Honour is to be given to him suitable to his Place and Office Now the greater the King or Potentate is from whom he is sent the more Honour is done him if from an Emperor it is more Honour than from an ordinary Prince and the greater and more welcome the Business is still the greater Honour If the Nature of the Business be to require Satisfaction for Injuries to denounce War yet still he is respected according to his Place but if it be a Matter of Peace he is more welcome or if it be to establish a Correspondence of Traffick between Nation and Nation much more if it be about a Treaty of Marriage and to propound Terms of the highest Amity and Friendship he is much more respected and yet more especially if the State or Prince to whom he is sent be inferior to the other that sent him Now these are the Terms upon which the Ministers of the Gospel are sent they are Christ's Ambassadors they are sent from the greatest Monarch that ever was from Christ who is the King of Kings and Lord of Lords and they are sent to miserable and wretched Men to Rebels to the
So that they do not truly and savingly believe such things who are not seriously and constantly diligent in the spiritual life I cannot say that an assent separate from practice is no Faith but 't is no saving Faith 't is such a Faith as the Devils may have who know there is a God and a Christ and a World to come they believe it and fear it So may carnal men believe it so far as to stir up bondage and legal fears in their Hearts but while they improve it not and prepare not for their everlasting Estate their Faith is ineffectual to Salvation True Faith is tryed rather by Living than by Talking 1 John 2.4 He that saith I know him and keepeth not his Commandments is a Lyar and the truth is not in him There is a difference between an Untruth and a Lye now where the Actions do not correspond to the Profession that Profession is not only an Untruth but a Lye There is a denying in word as well as works Titus 1.16 Many Profess and believe as Christians but live as Atheists T is not notions but affections living rather than talking that will demonstrate true Faith Now the paucity of serious walkers sheweth the paucity of true Believers 2. In this Improvement there is an Appeal to Conscience for here is a question put to our own Hearts let Reason and Conscience speak After the serious consideration of the glory and terrour of Christs second coming what holiness and preparation is necessary on our part Surely the holiest upon Earth if they would put this question to their own hearts they would not be satisfied with that holiness which they had but would seek after more their desires would be strengthned their endeavours quickened their diligence doubled 'T is for want of self-communing that we are so dull and sluggish If men did oftner ask of themselves Reason would tell them that no slight thing will serve the turn But Truths are not improved First For want of a sound Belief Secondly For want of a serious Consideration Therefore in Scripture when any notable Truth is propounded and improved there are these Appeals to Conscience Heb. 2.3 How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation and Rom. 8.31 What shall we say to these things 3. In this Appeal the qualification of our persons is first regarded and looked after For pray mark the question 't is not How holy ought our Conversations to be but What manner of persons The state of the person must be first regarded and then the course of our actions and conversations There are some persons at whose hands God will not accept a gift God had respect first to Abel and then to his Offering The state of the person is to be judged of according to the two great priviledges of Christianity Justification and Sanctification 1. That we be justified and reconciled to God through Christ that we daily renew friendship by the exercise of a godly sorrow for sin and a lively faith in Christ. 1 John 5.1 Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God And 1 John 2.1 Little Children these things I write unto you that ye sin not And if any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the Righteous Others are not accepted with God 2. That we be sanctified or renewed by the Spirit Tit. 3.5 and so fitted and framed by this general Holiness for the particular duties we are called to A Bowl must be made round before it can run round The Instrument must be framed and strung and put in tune before it can make any melody the Tree must first be made good before we can expect any good fruit from it Mat. 12.33 Actions are holy by their rule a person is holy by his principle Therefore till there be a principle of Grace wrought in our hearts we are not such manner of persons as God will accept Nor are we fitted to perform him any service or to meet him at his coming 4. When our Persons are in frame we must look to the course of our Actions or walking For the tree is known by its fruit and a man by the course of his actions We do but imagine we have holiness within unless we manifest it in our outward conversation and will strive to shew our selves mindful and respectful of Gods commands at every turn Psal. 119.1 Blessed are the undefiled in the way who walk in the law of the Lord not only undefiled in the rule but undefiled in the way A sincere constant uniform obedience to Gods Law or a careful endeavour to approve our selves to God in all our wayes is the mark of true blessedness A man is judged by the tenour of his life not by one action 5. This holiness must be in all the parts of our Conversation In all holy conversation In our outward carriage and secret practice common affairs and religious duties In the duties of Gods immediate Worship and the duties of Relations towards Superiors Inferiors and Equals 1 Pet. 1.5 in every creek and turning of our lives there is no part of a Christian conversation but should savour of Holiness and Godliness His common and civil actions in adversity prosperity at home and abroad So Tit. 2.12 13. The grace of God which bringeth Salvation hath appeared to all men teaching us that denying all ungodliness we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present world Soberly as to our selves Righteously as to our Neighbour Godly as to God To rest in a partial practice of holiness will not become the expectation of Christs coming who will examine us upon every point of duty 6. Godliness is added to Holiness to increase the sense and signification There is some formal difference between these two Holiness signifieth the purity of our actions and Godliness the respect they have to God that He be eyed and aimed at in all that we do That all things should be done in and to the Lord or for his glory This should be the supream end of all our wayes and actions If we consider Grace as it provideth for the rectitude of our actions positively it is called Holiness If relatively with respect to our dedication to God 't is called Godliness Well then we should be such manner of persons not only in all holy conversation but Godliness We should stir up our selves to do more for God in the World and love him and fear him and honour him in all that we do 7. In both we should endeavour the highest pitch that possibly we can attain unto For 't is in the Original all holy conversations and godlinesses which doth not only imply the extention as we render it in all holy conversation and godliness but the intention and degree as well as all the parts and points of Godliness Those that have made most progress in Godliness should still aspire after higher degrees the more will our comfort be now and the more our glory
when Christ cometh We cannot be over 't is easie to be short The most serious and the most painful do exceedingly lament their negligence when they come to die but none ever begrudged their pains or bewailed their diligence There should be Holinesses and Godlinesses Therefore we should not only keep what we have but seek to get more This is the Apostles use of the Resurrection of the dead and so by consequence of Christs second coming 1 Cor. 15.18 19. So Phil. 3.11 Secondly The next place is ver 14. Wherefore Beloved seeing ye look for such things be diligent that you may be found of him in peace without spot and blameless In which words observe First The Exhortation is generally propounded Be diligent Secondly Particularly In what this diligence is to be exercised and laid out 1. With respect to the Means That ye may be without spot and blameless 2. With respect to the End That ye may be found of him in peace In the Original the posture of the words is thus That ye being without spot and blameless may be found of him in peace All these circumstances deserve to be considered by us First The General Exhortation Be diligent Rouze up your selves set speedily and earnestly about it We are apt to delay therefore make haste we are too slight and sluggish therefore be earnest and zealous and hard at work Every slight endeavour will not serve the turn The Wife that looketh for her Husbands coming home will put all things in readiness the Servant that expects his Masters coming will ply his work Therefore let us not be remiss and negligent but make serious preparation A loytering Profession will fail us in our greatest need and when the Bridegroom cometh our Lamps will be gone out The Devils Bondslaves spare no cost to serve their lusts their faulty self-denial may put Christians to shame Isa. 5.17 They draw on iniquity with Cart-ropes The men of the World use all possible Diligence to obtain the good things of this life Psal. 127.2 Rise early and go to bed late and shall we put our hand in our bosome and think all will do well though we mind our business only by the By No. If your scope be to meet Christ with joy Religion must be your work and main employment Secondly Particularly wherein you are to shew your diligence For we flatter our selves with general notions 1. With respect to the Means That ye be without spot and blameless The one word relateth to the Heart That we may be without spot And the other to our Conversation blameless 1. The first thing wherein diligence is to be improved is the washing away of our sinful spots or the washing away of sin in the guilt and filth of it or in a way of Justification and Sanctification 1 Cor. 6.11 suing out our Pardon in the name of Christ and by his Spirit using all holy means for the cleansing of our polluted natures This is a work to be done not once but often For we are all washed but in part Prov. 20.7 Who can say his heart is clean And when we have once washed we are inclined to defile our selves again Joh. 11.13 He that is washed needeth not save to wash his feet Every day we contract defilement by living in the World Our final consummation is in Christs day when we shall be presented to God not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing Eph. 5.27 For the present still we are cleansing and making use of the Blood and Spirit of Christ for that end and purpose 2. Blameless That relateth to our Carriage and Conversation as 't is said Luk. 1.6 that Zachary and Elizabeth walked in all the Commandments of God blameless So should we take care that we incurr no just blame for all those things which Christ hath left in trust with us as to the improvement of our Talents keeping his Laws observing his Ordinances or carriage to his Servants and all men 2. As to the End That we may be found of him in peace The word found is often used with respect to Christs second coming 2 Cor. 5.3 If so be we shall not be found naked Phil. 3.9 That I may be found in him 'T is used because the last day is a day of exact search and tryal and because that day cometh upon the greatest part of the World by way of surprizal we do not look for it nor prepare for it but it cometh unthought of unexpected by the most But the word found noteth either a state of Reconciliation with God Rom. 5.1 or it noteth Comfort and Joy 1 John 4.17 The wicked are then at their wits end Rev. 19.18 call for the Rocks and Mountains to fall upon them But when you have made diligent preparation You may have boldness in that day and lift up your Heads because your Redemption draweth near A Peace that will hold out when Christ cometh is a Peace indeed otherwise what a terrour will unpardoned guilt and an unrenewed nature a fruitless life and a blemished Conversation breed in us Thus you see how the Scripture presses this Secondly What Reasons there are in the thing it self to awaken us to this serious Preparation 1. Because of the person coming our Redeemer the Bridegroom the Lord himself who is so great and holy If we mean to do him honour we must prepare to meet him in the best manner we can as the Bride would provide her Ornaments against the Nuptial day Oh what cleansing of Soul what fruitfulness and exercise of Grace should there be that we may not put our Redeemer to shame when he cometh to be glorified in his Saints and to shew forth the fruits of his Death in us I say this preparation should be not only for our own honour that the Bridegroom may not refuse us his Company and Approbation 1 Pet. 1.7 but for the honour of Christ that he may be glorified in the faithfulness and obedience of his Servants when it shall be produced to the view of all the World as the fruits of his Purchase and Spirit Eph. 5.27 That he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish 'T is begun here and consummated there Col. 1.22 and Jude 25. 2. Because of the manner of his coming In power and great Glory Every coming of Christ should be entertained with great reverence When our first Parents heard but the Voice of God walking in the Garden in the cool of the day they hid themselves from his presence among the Trees of the Garden When he came to give the Law Heb. 12. it was terrible and made them quake and tremble much more now he cometh to Judge according to the Law when Articles of Faith are to be made objects of Sense and God is no longer in a way of tryal with the World Christ in the dayes of his Flesh when he came not to
13. Watch therefore for ye know neither the day nor the hour wherein the Son of Man cometh HEre is the Conclusion of the whole Parable as the illative Particle Therefore sheweth Every passage in it will inferr this Conclusion First The Suddenness and unexpectedness of his Coming Watch therefore Secondly Only those that are ready shall enter into the Marriage-Chamber Watch therefore that ye may be alwayes ready Thirdly The Shutting the Door and Exclusion of the Unprepared Watch therefore Fourthly The Door is shut as never to be opened again When they beg Entrance they are refused and disowned by Christ as having not his mark upon them Watch therefore for ye know not the day neither the hour c. In the Words we have 1. A Duty 2. The Reason of it The one will explain the other 1. For the Duty What is meant by Watching Because we are pressed to it upon the account of the uncertain time of Christs Coming here it meaneth a care to get and keep our selves alwayes ready and in a posture to receive him for our Lord as himself explaineth it Mat. 24.42 Watch therefore for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come 2. The Reason For ye know neither the day nor the hour wherein the Son of Man cometh Mat. 24.42 For in such an hour you think not of the Son of Man cometh Doct. The great Duty that lyeth upon them that believe and look for Christs comeing is Watching My business will be to shew you what Watching is in the general notion of it As 't is taken Spiritually and Metaphorically it implyeth a diligent care and heed to the great affairs of our Souls For 't is a mixt thing made up of Prudence and Diligence It ●mplyeth a prudent foresight of the Souls danger with a diligent care to avoid it It is pressed in Scripture to a double end Partly that we may maintain the present state and partly that we may prepare for the future The one quickeneth the other And though the latter be of chief consideration in this place yet it will not be amiss to consider both For there is no hope to stand before Christ at his Coming unless we be careful to get and keep Grace for the present And on the other side the Argument to quicken us to present care and diligence is the blessedness we shall have at Christs Coming and the danger of being disallowed at last 1. Watching with respect to our present Preservation is pressed Mat. 26.41 VVatch and pray that ye enter not into temptation And 1 Cor. 16.13 VVatch ye stand fast in the faith 2 Watching with respect to future Acceptation That is pressed in other places Mat. 24.42 VVatch ye for ye know not in what hour the Lord cometh The particular time of Christs coming is kept secret that we may be moved at all times to prepare for it The Lord foresaw that we would be prone to negligence and carnal security and that the knowledge of the express time of his coming would be hurtful to us therefore 't is inter Arcana Imperii among the Secrets kept in the Fathers bosom that we might be alwayes ready So Luk. 21.36 VVatch ye therefore and pray alwayes that ye may be accounted worthy to stand before the Son of Man The meaning is that we may escape the Judgments then to be poured out upon the wicked and the careless that we may not causa cadere that we may have a Sentence of Approbation pass'd in our favour These are the two sorts of Watching pressed upon us in Scripture the one to avoid the Snares of the Devil the other that we may be ready for the coming of the Lord. First Watching with respect to our present State and Safety This again is twofold A watching to avoid evil and a watching for the careful performance of that which is good The Scripture speaketh of both and both are enforced by their own proper Reasons 1. For the avoiding of Evil There is in us all a sinfull proneness to evil which we must seek to cure and prevent Prov. 4.23 Keep thy Heart with all diligence for out of it are the issues of life The Heart is terminus actionum ad intra fons actionum ad extra 't is the Heart that God aimeth at in all that he doth upon us and 't is the Heart that is the Ground of all our Actions The Fountain must be kept pure from pollutions that the streams may be the more limpid and clear Every man hath a little Garrison to keep and he himself is the Watchman of it his Conscience is to sit Porter at the Door and to examine whatever cometh out and entreth in as a Watchman doth at the Gates of a City All the thoughts affections words actions are to be examined what they are whither they go whence they come whither they tend lest a Temptation be let in or a Corruption be let out otherwise the Heart cannot be kept pure and loyal to God Solomon telleth us Prov. 25.28 He that hath no Rule over his own Spirit is like a City that is without walls A Town without walls lieth open to every comer Sin and danger and all kind of evil motions go to and fro without any kind of check and controul Things will past out which should be suppressed and kept in and Temptations will enter which should be kept out Now this Caution is no more than needeth if we consider the Enemies of our Salvation the Devil the World and the Flesh. First The Malice of Sathan Our Adversary is very watchfull and getteth advantage by nothing so much as our security Vigilat hostis dormis 'T was an old word The Devil is neither dead nor asleep and shall not we stand upon our guard 1 Pet. 5.8 Be sober and watchful for your adversary the Devil goeth about like a roaring Lyon seeking whom he may devour Sathan is a restless Adversary full of Malice and Craft his end is to destroy and devour Souls and his diligence is answerable to his malice Night and day we are in danger every one of us There were but two Adams and they were both tempted though the one was made after Gods Image and the other had the fulness of the Godhead dwelling in him bodily Adam in Innocency and Christ in humane nature were tempted and can we hope to escape Neglect your Watch and you become a ready prey to the Devil When the Servants slept the Enemy sowed Tares Math. 13.25 He observeth all our drowsie fits and is waiting for some Advantage or at least some Occasion Sometimes we give him an Advantage by our folly and indiscretion 2 Cor. 2.11 lest Sathan should get an advantage against us Or if not he taketh Occasion as he tempted Christ when he was an hungry Matth. 4.2 and 2 Cor. 7.5 that Sathan tempt you not He can interpret the silent language of a blush a smile a frown a look the glance of a lustfull eye
the good and honest Heart that receiveth the good Seed so as to keep it so as to be a Principle of Life to them to these shall be given And then here is the other occasion when Christ speaks this The taking away of the Talents is after the Lord had been reckoning with his Servants after he had been a long time absent and in a far Country Therefore this taking away the Talent is not meant of the Gift its self as of the Comfort Benefit and Reward of it For all trading then is at an end that 's the time of Recompense and the Talent is lost it will do us no good to have had Estates and to have lived in Pomp and Splendour in the World if we have not made use of it for God Our Fall will be the greater because of our heighth 'T will do us no good to have born Office in the Church if we have not been faithful Matth. 7.22 Many shall say unto me in that day Lord Lord we have prophesied in thy Name Such as have taken up Office and Imployment in the Church and made no Conscience of doing the Duty that belongeth thereto these will not have but lose their Reward These are idle Shepherds Zech. 11.17 Their Unfaithfulness and Idleness in their Trust will cost them dear So for the Orninances and Means of Grace Luk. 13.26 Then shall they begin to say We have eat and drank in thy Presence 'T will be no Plea That you have been at God's Board nay you will have the greater Judgment Matth. 11.23 And thou Capernaum which are exalted to Heaven shalt be brought down to Hell A Place that enjoyeth the Gospel is near Heaven 't is the Suburbs of Heaven but where not improved these Priviledges plunge a Man deeper in the State of Condemnation Sins against the Law do not weigh so deep in his Ballance as sleighting and neglecting the Gospel that brings on heavy Wrath So for common Gifts good Affections partial Reformation 't is all lost as to any Reward Ezek. 33.13 Yea 't is worse 2 Pet. 2.20 21. For if after they have escaped the Pollutions of the World through the Knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ they are again entangled therein and overcome the latter End is worse with them than the Beginning For it had been better for them not to have known the way of Righteousness than after they have known it to turn from the Holy Commandment The Wrath against them that return back to their Sins is much greater than if they had never been so enlightned and reformed Those that have had more Light and some taste of the Sweetness of Heavens way If they fall away 't is hard to renew them to Repentance This is the principal Sense intended in this Place yet because the Words are so contrived that they comprehend also the Loss we may sustain in this World while we are trading for God I shall shew you how God punisheth naughty and sloathful Servants in this World with the Loss of their Talents 1. Sometimes God taketh from them Opportunities and Liberty of doing Good Nothing is so soon lost as this Gal. 6.10 As we have therefore Opportunity let us do Good to all Men. There are some fit Opportunities offered us by the Providence of God for doing our Duty in this kind as are soon gone and being past and gone 't is hard to say whether ever we may enjoy the like As when we are specially fitted and there is a concurring Harmony of all Circumstances Therefore we should take hold of them without Delay or Foreslowing Opportunities are not alwayes as long as Life Eccles. 11.1 2. Cast thy Bread upon the Waters and give a Portion to seven and to eight for thou knowest not what Evil there may be upon Earth Embrace the present Opportunity thou canst not foresee how soon thou may'st be deprived of it Thou may'st die and leave thy Wealth to those that will shut up their Bowels Thou may'st be in want God may disable thee therefore make use of the Season for Liberality for doing Good while you have it So Office Authority Respect in the Church is an Opportunity God may cast us out of the Vineyard by the Malice of Men or as unsavoury Salt Matth. 13. Mal. 2.9 Therefore I have made you contemptible and base before the People Though all that are cast out are not so Matth. 21.35 the Husbandman took his Servants and beat one and killed another However it will be a discomfort if we have been negligent 2. Ordinances Means of Improvement may be lost Gen. 6.3 My Spirit shall not alwayes strive with Man that is by the Ministry of Noah And God threatneth to take away the Hedge of his Vineyard when all his Cost is lost Isa. 5.5 6. What could I have done more for my Vineyard So Luk. 13.7 And he said to the Dresser of the Vineyard Lo these three Years came I seeking Fruit on his Fig-tree and I find none Cut it down why cumbreth it the Ground 3. Common Gifts God justly taketh them away from those that abuse or make no good use of them Many that excelled in Gifts that seemed to have great Parts are pitifully blasted afterwards 'T is no hard matter to discern a Maim and Decay of Gifts in them that use them not as if the Spirit were departed from them Zech. 11.17 The Idol-shepherd's Arm shall be dryed up and his Eye darkned That is his Gifts shall be taken away at least the Power and Life of them Many lose the Freshness of their Gifts of Prayer the Liveliness of their Knowledge 4. Initial Grace Heb. 6. Saving Gifts and Graces are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without Repentance Rom. 11.29 Where there is Life begun 't is not quenched But where there are some hopeful Inclinations they begin to draw off their Hearts from the World to God though they had escaped the Pollutions of the World their latter End may be worse than their Beginning 2 Pet. 2.20 5. Dona Sanctificantia ought still to be improved that the Grace of God be not received in vain 1 Cor. 15.10 Grace in some measure may suffer Loss by our Negligence 1 Thess. 5.19 Quench not the Spirit despise not Prophesying Fire is quenched by pouring on Water or with-drawing Fuel So the Spirit is quenched by living in Sin which is like pouring on Water or not improving our Gifts and Grace which is like with-drawing the Fuel Gradus remitritur actus intermittitur habitus non amittitur Though the Habit be secured by God's Covenant yet such Portions and Degrees of Grace may be lost as may not easily be recovered again VSE Is to commend to us Diligence and Industry especially in the Work of our Heavenly Calling A Man's Life is divided between Waking and Sleeping so is his Waking time divided between Labour and Rest For Humane Nature cannot endure continual Exercise without Intermission Therefore a spiritual wise Man should so govern his Life
Better lose all things than God Exod. 33.15 If thy Presence go not with us carry us not up hence Object But is it any grief to the Wicked to want God from whom they have such an extream Aversness and Hatred Answ. They are sensible of the Loss of Happiness their Judgment is changed though not renewed Fogs of Errour Atheism and Unbelief then vanish they are confuted by Experience There are no Atheists in Hell they know there is a God and that all Happiness consists in the full Enjoyment of him which Happiness they have lost by their own Folly as by their bitter Experience they can find being in a Place most remote from him Therefore as rational Creatures they cannot but be sensible of their Loss and that Sense must needs breed Sadness and Dejection of Spirit being they look not upon God as lovely in himself but as one that might be profitable to them Oculos quos occlusit culpa apertat poena It would lessen their Torments if their Understandings might be taken away They know what it is to want God though their Hatred of him still remaineth 2. The Sight of Christ They had a Glimpse before they went into Hell by the Glory of his Presence 2 Thess. 1.9 They shall be punished with everlasting Destruction from the Presence of the Lord. That short Experience of Christ's Appearing will remain in their Minds to all Eternity 't will stick by them How are they thrust out Christ himself who hath the Keyes of Death and Hell shall bid them go as if he had said I cannot endure your Presence 3. From the Company of the Blessed Luk. 13.28 There shall be weeping and gnashing of Teeth when ye shall see Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and all the Prophets in the Kingdom of God and you your selves thrust out Envy is a great part of their Punishment as well as Horror Luk. 16.27 And being in Torments he lift up his Eyes and saw Abraham afar off and Lazarus in his Bosom 'T is a torment to think that others of the same Nature Interests Instruction do enjoy what they have forfeited 4. From an Abode in the Palace of Heaven Revel 22.15 Without shall be Dogs and Sorcerers and Whoremongers and Murtherers and Idolaters and whosoever loveth and maketh a Lie If the Pavement of Heaven is glorious what will the Place it self be And from this glorious Place they are banished Secondly This utter Darkness implyeth positively a State of Woe and Misery most remote from this Blessedness For as they are shut out of the Palace of Heaven so they are cast into the Prison of Hell where all is dark without hope of ever comin out more 2 Pet. 2.17 To whom the Mist of Darkness is reserved for ever Hell is a Region upon which the Sun shall never shine They know they shall never be reconciled to God nor their Punishment ended or lessened Their Worm shall never die their Fire shall never be quenched Mark 9.44 They can never hope to be admitted into God's Presence more There are many Ups and Downs in a Christians Experience God hideth his Face sometimes that he may shew it afterwards the more gloriously The Church prayeth Psal. 80.19 Turn again and cause the Light of thy Countenance to shine upon us and we shall be saved But this is an everlasting Darkness God doth as it were by Chains hold them under everlasting Torments 'T is a Curse that shall never be reversed a comfortless Life that shall never have an end Men might lose the Face of God if they were annihilated but the Souls of Men and Women do not go to nothing or die as their Bodies but subsist in a dolesom miserable State of Darkness and in the Place of everlasting Imprisonment where the Devils and damned Spirits torment one another All here are kept safe without any possibility of escaping here God holdeth them in everlasting Chains Now this is just they that rejected the Light are thrust into utter Darkness they reject the Light of the Gospel Joh. 3.19 Men love Darkness more than Light They despise the Light of Glory in comparison of worldly Things and present Satisfactions Psal. 106.24 They despised the good Land They forsake God and their own Happiness That which is now their Sin is then their Misery They first Excommunicated God Job 22.17 and that for a trifle They think his Presence a Torment Matth. 8.20 What have we to do with thee Art thou come to torment us before the time Rom. 1.28 They did not like to retain God in their Knowledge They could not endure to think of God and abhorred their own Thoughts of God that they were their Burden II. 'T is a doleful Place and State Here are two Notions the one expressing their Grief and Sorrow The other their Vexation and Indignation 1. Their Grief and Sorrow In Hell there is nothing but Sorrow and Fear overwhelming Sorrow and despairing Fear 't is an helpless and hopeless Grief Carnal Men are prejudiced against Godly Sorrow but that is useful and profitable 2 Cor. 7.10 These Sorrows would prevent those that the damned suffer in Hell The Sorrows of Repentance are Joyes in comparison of these Sorrows the Sorrows of Repentance are full of Hope God will afford Comforts to his Mourners but the Sorrows of the Damned are heightned by their own Desparations 't is for ever and ever These are small those swallow us up these are curing those tormenting Here 't is like pricking a Vein for Health hereafter wounds to the Heart These are mixed with Love Luk. 7. She that loved much wept much The Cup of Wrath is unmixed confounding and overwelming us with continual Amazement These are short those endless 2. Their Vexation and Indignation The grinding and the gnashing of the Teeth is usually in Pain or Rage in pain of Body and Soul But of that afterwards when I come to speak of Hell under the Notion of Everlasting Fire Now as 't is a Token and Effect of Rage Now the Damned are represented as full of Rage Blasphemy and Indignation against God against the Saints and against Themselves First Against God they have despised his Favour and now feel the Power of his Justice and Displeasure against them and have still an implacable Hatred against him We see in Revel Chap. 16.9 when they were scorched with great Heat they blasphemed the Name of God which had power over these Plagues and repented not to give Glory to God They blasphemed the God of Heaven because of their Pains and Sores and repented not of their Deeds I know that this Prophesie doth not concern the State of the Wicked in Hell but their Plagues and Disappointments in this World However the Fashion and Guise of the Reprobate is to be observed here when they will not repent so there when they cannot repent Like Men distracted and mad they gnaw their Tongues and gnash their Teeth like mad Dogs that bite their Chains or Wild Bulls in a
reward those that trust in him Psal. 2.12 He that hath so often pleaded with God for us he is to pass Sentence upon us Would a Man be afraid to be Judged by his dearest Friend or think his Sentence would be terrible If the Devil were our Judge or wicked Men we might be sad But 't is your dear Lord Jesus Therefore let us comfort our selves with the Thoughts of it David's Followers were afraid but when he came to be Crowned at Hebron then he dignified and rewarded them Christ's Followers are now despised but when he shall come in his Glory they shall be invited into his Kingdom Come ye Blessed of my Father SERMON XIX MATTH XXV v. 31. When the Son of Man shall come in his Glory and all the Holy Angels with him then shall he sit upon the Throne of his Glory I Come now to the Second Point Doct. 2. That Christ's Appearance for the Iudgment of the World shall be Glorious and full of Majesty I shall prove it by opening the Circumstances of the Text. Three things are offered here 1. His Personal Glory 2. His Royal Attendance 3. His Glorious Seat and Throne First His Personal Glory Let us see what it is and why he will come in such an Appearance First What it will be we cannot fully know till we see it but certain we are this Glory must be exceeding great If we consider 1. The Dignity of his Person he is God-Man And now that Mystery is to be discovered to the utmost therefore he must needs have such a Glory as never Creature was capable of nor can be but at that Day the Creatures are capable of great Glory For 't is said Matth. 13.43 The Righteous shall shine as the Sun in the Kingdom of the Father And if it be thus with the Saints how shall it be with Christ The Saints are but Creatures they are not Deified when they are Glorified But He is God-Man in one Person The Saints are but Members of the Mystical Body but Christ is the Head and therefore he must needs far excell the Glory of all the Creatures Ours is but a derived Ray the Body of Light is in himself We read 2 Thess. 1.10 that he will be admired in the Saints That is in the Glory he puts upon them All the Spectators shall stand admiring at the Honour he puts upon them that are but newly crept out of Dust and Rottenness But how much more may He be admired for his own Personal Glory 2. The Quality of his Office He is the Judge of the World who now cometh to appear upon the Throne to be seen of all Therefore there must be a Glory suitable We read Acts 25.23 that Agrippa and Bernice came to the Judgment-Seat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with a great deal of Pomp and State And we see in Earthly Judicatures when great Malefactors are to be tryed the whole Majesty and Glory of a Nation is brought forth The Judge in gorgeous Apparel accompanied with Nobles and Gentry and Officers and a great Conflux of People to make it more Magnificent and Terrible So here is a Conflux of the whole World Angels Devils Men from all Corners of the Earth all the Men that ever were and ever shall be And Christ cometh forth in his greatest Glory 3. Consider the Greatness of his Work and that will shew that his Glory must needs be discovered His Work is on the one side to gather together to convince to Judge and punish Creatures opposite and Rebellious and to honour and reward his Servants on the other There is not such an Union and Confederation of Miracles in any one Point and Article of Faith so much as there is in this of the general Judgment The mighty Power and Dominion of God is seen in dissolving the Elements in raising the dead Bodies and giving every Dust it s own Flesh and bringing them together that they may be Arraigned and Judged And then in separating them into their several Ranks in which his Omnisciency and Wisdom is seen that not one of the Reprobate shall lie hid among the Elect. In Judging them his Justice cannot be eluded he that seeth all things in the Light of the Godhead cannot want Evidence Then one of the Books that is opened is in the Parties Custody and yet they cannot deface it or blot it out And then for Execution the Majesty of his Person and Presence will be enough to confound a wicked Man How will the Wolves tremble at the sight of the pure and unspotted Lamb Revel 6.16 Oh! 't will be a piercing Sight to them to see him whom they have despised upon the Throne That Jesus whose Word they have scorned whose Ordinances they have neglected or corrupted whose Servants they have molested When Joseph who was so great and high in Egypt discovered himself to his Brethren I am Joseph they were abashed and confounded because of the Injury they had done him Much more shall Sinners be confounded when he shall tell them I am Jesus and that he is come on purpose to be Revenged on all the Abusers and Despisers of his Grace and the Troublers of his People How can they then look him in the Face We read that when they came to attacque Christ Joh. 18.6 as soon as he had told them I am he they went backward and fell to the ground He would convince his Enemies in the midst of his greatest Abasement how full of Majesty and Terror his Presence is if he should let out the Glory of it upon them If the Lamb's Voice be so terrible how dreadful will he be when he roareth as a Lyon And if then when he was taken and led to be Judged you may guess how glorious his Presence will be when he cometh in all his Glory to Judge others And by this you may understand the Apostles Expression 2 Thess. 1.9 That the Wicked shall be punished with everlasting Destruction from the Presence of the Lord and from the Glory of his Power From there is as much as By it doth not signifie there the kind of the Punishment the poeni damni but the Cause The Majesty of Christ is the Cause of their Torments and his Look and Face will be Terror enough to Sinners And as he cometh in Glory to shame and punish those that despised him so to comfort and reward his People who have trusted in him and served him and suffered for him He shall come from Heaven in State to lead them into those blessed Mansions with Honour 1 Pet. 4.13 Rejoyce in as much as ye are Partakers of Christ's Sufferings that when his Glory shall be revealed ye may be glad also with exceeding Joy They have seen him in his worst and now in his best also The Glory of Christ's Appearing is sometimes expressed by Fire and sometimes by Light To the Saints 't is as Light and as a comfortable Sun-shine but to the Wicked 't is a dreadful Fire 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
13.18 I know whom I have chosen Though there be so many thousands of them scattered up and down in the World yet he is acquainted with every individual Person every single Believer and all their Necessities John James Thomas As the High-Priest carried the Name of the Tribes upon his Bosom so hath Christ the Names of every one that belongeth to God's Flock engraven upon his Heart though they may be despicable in the World mean Servants employed in the lower Offices of the Family Psal. 34.6 This poor Man cryed unto the Lord. Poor Soul he lieth under such Temptations encumbred with such Troubles employed in such an hard Task and Service my Father gave me a charge of him I must look to him Luk. 15. we read that when one was missing he left all to look after the stray Lamb. His Knowledge is Infinite 2. The goodness of a Shepherd lieth in his Pity and Wisdom to deal tenderly with the Flock as their State doth require so is Christ a good Shepherd by reason of his tender respect and gentle Conduct Isa. 40.11 He shall feed his Flock like a Shepherd he shall gather the Lambs with his Arm and carry them in his Bosom and shall gently lead those that are with young He guideth his People with Dispensations suitable to them In his Life-time he taught them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He spake the Word unto them as they were able to hear it Mark 4.33 As Jacob drove as the little ones and Cattel were able to bear Gen. 33.14 He calleth to work and suffering according as he giveth Grace and Strength 1 Cor. 10.13 Proportioneth their Temptations according to their Growth and Experience He sendeth great Tryals after large Assurances Heb. 10.32 As Castles are victualled before they are suffered to be Besieged There is a sweet Condescention in all his Dispensations to every ones State and Condition 3. The goodness of a Shepherd lieth in a constant performing all Parts of a Shepherd to them Ezek. 34 15 16. I will seek that which was lost bring back that which was driven away bind up that which was broken strengthen that which was sick But I will destroy the Fat and the Strong and feed them with Judgment There is all necessary Attendance and Accommadation conducing to the Safety and Welfare of the Flock to protect them from Violence from without to prevent Diseases within to keep them from straying by the Inspirations of his Spirit and the Fence of his Providence Blessed be God that sent thee to meet me this Day saith holy David and to reclaim and reduce them when strayed It were endless to instance in all 4. There is this Particularity in this good Shepherd of which there is no resemblance found in others Joh. 10.11 I am the good Shepherd that giveth my Life for the Sheep He doth not only give Life to them but his own Life for them by way of Ransom This is a Flock purchased by the Blood of God Act. 20 28. He came from Heaven to find out lost Sheep left a Palace for the Wilderness and the Throne for the Fold David was called from the Sheep-hook to the Scepter but Christ from the Scepter to the Sheep-hook Lost Man had never been found if Christ had not come from Heaven to seek him We were forfeited and therefore to be ransomed and no Price would serve but Christ's own Blood 5. There is this peculiar in this good Shepherd that he maketh us become the Flock of his Pasture and Sheep of his Fold Psal. 100.3 When other Shepherds have the Sheep delivered into their Hands he searcheth up and down for them in the Woods and Desarts Where-ever they are scatterd abroad a Lamb here and a Lamb there Free Grace findeth them out Ezek. 34.4 I will search out my Sheep and seek them out Z●ph 3.10 I will look after my Dispersed from beyond the River of Aethiopia In the farthermost and unknown Countries in every Land Christ knoweth where his Work lieth though it may be but One in a Village in the midst of Wolves and Swine He maketh them to be what they are not by Nature turneth and changeth Swine into Sheep and Wolves into Lambs 2. He is the Great Shepherd 1. Great in his Person the Son of God Dominu● exercitum fit Pastor Ovium saith Bernard The Lord of Hosts is become the Shepherd of the Flock He needed us not if he had delighted in multitudes of Flocks and Heards there are ten thousand times ten thousand Angels that stand about the Throne He needed not leave his Throne and die for Angels as for us And 2. He is Great in regard of the excellency of his Gifts and Qualifications He is King Priest and Prophet in the Pastoral relation he manifesteth all his Offices he feedeth them as a Prophet dyeth for them as a Priest defendeth them as a King never Sheep had better Shepherd Redimet preciosè Pascit cautè Ducit solicitè Collegat securè Jacob was very careful yet some of his Flock were lost or torn or stollen or driven away but it cannot be so with Christs Flock we are safe as long as he is upon the Throne 3. Great in regard of his Flock He is the Shepherd of Souls millions of them are committed to his charge and one Soul is more worth than all the world 3. He is the Chief Shepherd Though he doth imploy the Ministry of men to feed his Flock under him yet doth he keep the place and state of Arch-shepherd and Prince of Pastours as the chief Ruler and feeder of his Flock from whom all the under Shepherds have their Charge and Commission Math. 28.19 20. their Furniture and Gifts Eph. 4.8 11. Upon whose concurrence dependeth the Efficacy and Blessing of the Ordinances dispensed by them 1 Cor. 3.6 7. And to Him they give an Account Heb. 13.17 as he doth to God Now this is a great Comfort that Christ taketh the prime Charge of the Flock Some thrust in themselves but he will require his Flock at their Hands VSE Let all this encourage you to look for your Supplies by Christ He professeth by special Office to take charge of you and you may be confident of his Care and Fidelity Besides his Love to the Flock he is bound as God's Shepherd B● Distrust you carry it so as if Christ were unfaithful in his Charge and Office When you come to the Ordinances you do directly cast your selves upon Christ's Pastoral Care to feed you to Everlasting Life and he will give you Strength and Refreshing Only be not lean in Christ's Pasture nor faint as Hagar near a Fountain Secondly The Godly are as Sheep 1. Sheep are Animalia gregalia such kind of Creatures as naturally gather themselves together and unite themselves in a Flock Other Creatures we know especially Beasts of Prey lively singly and apart but Sheep are never well but when they come together and live in a Flock Such are Christians and such as are
many Years it breaketh out 2. We know not how soon God may take the Advantage of this Curse and cut us off from the Possibility of his Grace Christ cometh as a Thief and stealeth upon Men e're they are aware We are indebted to God's Justice and we know not how soon God may put the Bond in Suit Other Debts have a Day set for Payment God may demand it before to Morrow Gen. 4.17 Sin lieth at the Door like a Serjeant to surprize us every Hour and then we go to Prison and remain there till we have paid every Farthing Luk. 12. Solomon wisheth a Man to hasten out of Debt as a Bird out of the Hand of the Fowler Prov. 6.5 A condemned Malefactor that is only reprieved during the Pleasure of the Prince is in danger of Execution every hour Wrath breaketh out of a sudden what Provision have you made How stand Matters between God and you If a Man were informed that his Servants had a Plot to take away his Life to carry away his Treasure which is speedily to be put in execution he would not be quiet till he had rid his Hands of them So is Sin 3. At the last Day this Curse is ratified by Christ's Sentence Go ye Cursed Depart ye cursed Creatures When others are acquitted by Proclamation as at the Day of Judgment we receive our solemn Discharge Act. 3.19 then your curse is revived before all the World And as cursed Creatures you lose all Pity from God Men and Angels As Adam was driven out of Paradise with a bitter Taunt Gen. 3.22 so with a terrible Bann and Proscription that shall never be reversed 4. It shall be presently executed Esther 7.8 As soon as the Word went out of the King's Month they covered Haman's Face These are Considerations to beget a Feeling of Wrath. II. Flee from it to Christ. Poor Sinners they stand in continual Fear of Execution Oh Fly to Christ to get the Sentence reversed For Motives to perswade us to come to Christ for Help 1. Consider how willing Mercy is to receive those that fly from the Curse This was God's Design in shutting us up under the Curse that there might be no other way of Escape Rom. 3.19 That every Mouth might be stopped and all the World may become guilty before God That we may become obnoxious that we may acknowledge our selves to be quite undone So Gal. 3.23 The Scripture hath concluded all under Sin and Rom. 11.32 For God hath concluded them all in Vnbelief The Law in the Name of God arrests us accuses us convinceth us leaving us dead all Preparations to Damnation that through the Prison-doors we may beg for Mercy He alloweth an Appeal from Court to Court 2. With what Honour to himself God may shew us Mercy T is no wrong to appeal from the Law to the Gospel Gal. 3.13 Christ hath redeemed us from the Curse of the Law being made a Curse for us Christ hath taken the Curse into his own Person Psal. 69.4 I restored that which I took not away That Honour to God which he took not away 3. The great Offence in refusing Christ Heb. 12.15 Esau was called a prophane Person because he sold his Birth-right for a Mess of Pottage He was no Drunkard no Swearer To refuse the Father's Riches of Wisdom and Grace the Son's Self-denyal and Sufferings is the greatest Ingratitude that can be When all the Labours and Wooings of the Spirit are in vain 't is the greatest Spight we can do to God 't is the greatest Prophaneness to set light by holy things especially this great Mystery when we do not think it worthy our Care and Thoughts Matth. 22.5 SERMON XXVI MATTH XXV v. 41. Depart from me ye Cursed into everlasting Fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels NOW we come to the Sentence its self There we shall First Take notice of the Poena Damni the Loss Depart The Point is Doctrine This is the Hell of Hells That the Reprobates must all depart or lose the Fruition of God in Christ. But before I begin to set forth this Part of the Punishment let me observe something 1. In this Part of the Torment all are equal There are Degrees elsewhere but here the Reprobates are all equally excluded Christ will thus profess Matth. 7.23 Depart from me all ye Workers of Iniquity I know you not 2. 'T is the greatest part of the Punishment The Punishment of Sense is finite in Nature though Infinite in Duration Though it be from the Wrath of God 't is still according to the Capacity of the Creature But Poena Damni is the Privation of an Infinite Good 'T is indeed a question which is the greater Punishment whether Everlasting Separation from God or Everlasting Torment Whether Depart or Everlasting Fire According to the present State Pain is more sensible than Loss In the Bodily State we judge altogether by the Senses But in the other World when all Objects are taken away and there is a ceasing of Temptations and our Judgments are mostly Spiritual there 't is otherwise The Greatness of the Punishment will appear I. By the Loss They shall lose all Heavens Joyes the favourable Presence of God the Sight of Christ the Company of the Blessed and their Abode in those happy Mansions which are in Christ's Father's House 1. The Favourable Presence of God Hell is a deep Dungeon where the Sun-shine of God's Presence never cometh God is summum Bonum the Chiefest Good and in the other World omne Bonum All in All. All things are immediate from God Comforts and Punishments Psal. 16. ult In thy Presence is Fulness of Joy and at thy Right Hand are Pleasures for evermore Paul's Departure how grievous was it when he said Ye shall see my Face no more Act. 19.28 Better lose all things than God Exod. 33.15 If thy Presence go not up with us carry us not hence The Appearance of the Son of God to the Three Children cast into Nebuchadnezzar's fiery Furnace how comfortable was it to them Object I but this is not to be presupposed of the Damned Is it any Grief to the Wicked to want God against whom they have such an extream Averseness and Hatred I Answer They are sensible of the Loss of Happiness their I●dgments are changed though not renewed Foggs of Error Atheism and Unbelief then vanish and they are convinced by Experience There are no Atheists in Hell they learn to prize Happiness by bitter Experience As Rational Creatures they cannot but be sensible of their Loss that know the worth of what is lost and so great a Blessedness lost cannot but breed Sadness and Deiection of Spirit They look on God not as lovely in Himself but as one that might be pro●itable to them Oculos quos occlusit culpa aperiet poena It would lessen their Torments if their Vnderstandings might be taken away By sad Experience they know what 't is to want God though still their Hatred
of God remaineth Heaven that I am shut out of is a Blessing which others enjoy Lazarus is in Abraham's Bosom 2. The Sight of Christ. They had a Glimpse before they went into Hell of the Glory of his Presence 2 Thess. 1.9 They shall punished with Everlasting Destruction from the Presence of the Lord. That short Experience of Christ's Appearing will remain in their Minds to all Eternity 't will stick by them how they are thrust out Christ himself that hath the Keyes of Death and Hell shall bid them go as if he had said I cannot endure your Presence any longer 3. From the Company of the Blessed Luk. 13.28 Ye shall see Abraham Isaac and Jacob and all the Prophets in the Kingdom of God and your selves shut out Envy is a part of their Torment as well as their Loss Luk. 16.27 And in H●ll he lift up his Eyes being in Torments and saw Abraham as●r off and Lazarus in Abraham's Bosom 'T is a Torment to think that others of the same Nature and Interest do enjoy what they have forfeited 4. Their Abode in those Happy Mansions which are in Christ's Father's House Rev. 22.14 15. Blessed are they that do his Commandments that they may have right to the Tree of Life and may enter in through the Gates into the City For without are Dogs and Sorcerers and W●●remongers and Murtherers and Idolaters and whosoever loveth and maketh a Lie II. This Loss is the more bitter and grievous because 't is a Loss of their own procuring Forsaking of God was their Sin and now their Misery They first Excommunicated God for a Trifle Job 22.7 Depart from us we desire not the Knowledge of God Man is like the Devil Art thou come to torment us before our time Rom. 1.28 They did not like to retain God in their Knowledge therefore God gave them over to a Reprobate Mind They abhorred the Thoughts of God 't was their Burthen The Fool hath said in his Heart There is no God Now they are filled with their own Thoughts Man was first a Fugitive before he was an Exile III. The Loss is irreparable Despair is a constant Ingredient to their Sorrow They cannot hope ever to be admitted into Goa's Presence any more There are many Ups and Downs in a Christian's Experience God hideth his Face that he may shew it afterwards the more gloriously This is a Curse that shall never be reversed 'T was the Churches Prayer Return again and cause the Light of thy Countenance to shine on us and we shall be saved Psal. 80.19 like the Sun-shine after a cloudy Night But here are Foggs of Darkness for evermore The Sun is to shine no more on them to all Eternity 2 Pet. 2.17 To whom is reserved the Blackness of Darkness for ever Hell is a Region upon which the Sun shall never shine 1. VSE Lay to Heart your Distance from God by Nature Let us not draw this great Judgment upon our selves Our Sin will be our Torment We are estranged from the Womb Isa. 58.3 As a Stream runneth away from the Fountain further and further so are we absent from God both in Heart and Affections as well as in State Ephes. 2.13 Ye were afar off As the Prodigal went into a far Country Thoughts of God are not only Strangers but unwelcom Guests The Devils believe and tremble So we Guilt will not suffer us to look God in the Face Psal. 10.4 2. Be not quiet 'till you come out of this Estate by Christ He is the Bridge between Earth and Heaven Joh. 14.6 There can be no Familiarity between us and God but through him Luk. 16.26 Christ is the Ladder by which we ascend the Means of Intercourse between God and us When Man was driven out of Paradise the Tree of Life was guarded by a Flaming Sword There is no Coming to God but by him And he is able to save to the utmost Heb. 7.25 3. Avoyd Sin that separateth between God and you Isa. 59.1 2. How will you pray when you cannot look God in the Face Fear followeth Guilt The Israelites when they had sinned worshipped at their Tent-Door You cannot come to God with such Confidence 4. Let us often delight in Communion with God and Acquaintance with him 'T is Heaven begun Heaven is for Gods Familiars Strangers here will not be owned and hereafter Mat. 7.23 Christ will say unto them I know you not But Christ will take notice of his old Friends Oh then love his presence make him of your Councel your Bosome-Friend 5. Live in an holy Sensibleness of his Accesses and Recesses For his Accesses that you may be thankful for his Recesses to be humble 'T is a Question which is worst not to take notice of his Accesses or Recesses not to mourn for his Absence or rejoyce in his Presence both are bad Not to mourn for his Absence is the worst sin because Absence is most sensible In the present Life when our enjoyment of him is lost 't is a temporary Hell yet 't is foul Ingratitude not to take notice of his Presence when he counselleth you in Doubts guideth you in Straits God will have his Acts of Familiarity to be observed 't is his Complaint Hosea 11.3 I taught Ephraim also to goe taking them by their Arms but they knew not that I healed them The one argueth little Feeling the other little Gratitude only want of feeling is the worser Sign for that is a sign of Deadness When God suspends all Acts of Familiarity some are stupid and insensible so they can take up with the comforts of the Creature they never mind Spiritual Visits Mi●ha mourned for his Gods Love is discovered by Grief in Want as well as Delight in Enjoyment The main of Christianity lyeth in observing how 't is between us and God When actual Influences are suspended either of Grace or Comfort when Prayer finds not such an Answer and when we do not find such Excitation to holy Duties and God hideth himself from our Prayers We have handled the Loss Now we come Secondly To speak of the Pain There are sad Gripes at the parting of the Soul and Body what then will there be at the parting of the Soul and Christ when the terrour of Christs face shall banish them out of his Presence Secondly The Poena Sensus Here I shall take notice of 1. The Nature of the Torment Fire 2. The Aggravation from the Duration Everlasting 3. The Company and Society Prepared for the Devil and his Angels First The Nature of the Torment Fire By Fire is not meant material or ordinary Fire that cannot hurt Spirits Now this is such a Fire as is prepared for the Devil and his Angels All the other Expressions are Metaphorical the Wood the Brimtone the Lake the Smoak the Worm the Chains and why not this But observe though it be not Fire yet it noteth real and horrible Torments such a● are more painful than Fire 'T is called Wrath to come
Page 133 Hell a state of Torment as well as a state of Death Page 193 Hell a State of Torment and Place of Torment Page 193 The greatness of the Torments of the damned Page 207 Torments of the Body what they shall be Page 206 Torments of the damned why eternal Page 208 Eternity of Hell Torments consistent with Gods Iustice. Page 194 Few believe the Torments of Hell Page 195 Trimming of Lamps what it signifies in the Wise Virgins Page 40 What it signifies in the Foolish Virgins Page 40 Who do not trim their Lamps Page 41 Trade what it is to trade with our Talents Page 90 In trading for God our Returns must carry proportion to our Receipts Page 94 Reasons of it Page 95 Cautions in judging of our Returns in Trading Page 94 U. UNion of Believers with Christ represented by Marriage-Union Vid. Marriage Page 56 The Benefits of Union with Christ. Page 57 Virgins Visible Professors why so called Page 3 Virgins foolish why many have great confidence of their good Estate that shall be found foolish Virgins at last Page 45 Visible Church the State of it in this World Page 4 W. WAtching spiritual what it is Page 72 Watching as it respects our present state to avoid sin and do good considered Page 74 75 Reasons why we should watch to avoid sin Page 73 Watching unto Prayer in Prayer after Prayer what Page 75 Watching as it respects the future State opened Page 75 Who are to watch Page 78 Reasons why we should watch Page 77 The Causes of it Page 73 How long we are to watch Page 78 The Blessing promised to watching Page 78 The danger of not watching Page 78 Means to help to Watchfulness Page 79 Wisdom of Christ Divine and Humane explained Page 143 Wisdom Spiritual wherein it lyes Page 22 Wonder a great Wonder that any should reject the Christian Faith Page 136 214 And that any should embrace it and live sinfully Page 137 214 Three Causes of it Page 137 The Reward of the Righteous at the day of Iudgment shall be matter of wonder to them Page 183 The Reasons of this wonder Page 183 Work Christ appointed every man his work at his departure Page 84 How good Works must be performed Page 180 The Godly described by their fruitfulness in good Works Page 206 Comfort to sincere Christians from their good Works Page 180 The doing some good Works cannot excuse men for the omission of others Page 180 The respect of good Works to the future sentence Page 178 Works assigned as a Reason of the Sentence of Absolution at the last day Page 174 Works at the last day produced as an Evidence of Faith Page 175 Trusting in Works very natural but very dangerous Page 179 Works are not the moving Cause to incline God to give us Christ. Page 179 Nor the Instrument of applying the Merits of Christ. Page 180 Yet no man can maintain his Comfort without them Page 182 Worm that never dyes what it is Page 206 Wrath of God the greatness of it Page 207 Some Instances of it Page 208 FINIS A TABLE OF SCRIPTURES EXPLAINED In the SERMONS on the 25 th of MATTHEW   Chap. Vers. Pag. EXodus 34 5 6 7. 112 Job 11 20. 47 Psalm 32 31. 13 141 3. 79 Proverbs 3 16. 199 19 15. 28 26 9. 121 Ecclesiastes 10 2. 14 Isaiah 30 33. 192 Jeremiah 17 11. 207 Hosea 2 19 20. 59 Zechariah 11 17. 131 Matthew 6 3. 183 11 23. 130 26 45. 26 28 10. 187 188 Luke 13 7. 206 Acts 20 21. 14 24 10. 7 Romans 2 12. 159 9 11. 200   22. 199 1 Corinthians 3 8. 107 2 Corinth 11 2. 3 Ephesians 2 10. 14 4 18. 12 6 8. 107 Colossians 1 24. 36 2 Thessalon 1 9. 149 2 Timothy 2 12. 66 Titus 1 16. 14 2 12 13. 42 Hebrews 2 11. 187 6 12. 119 8 10. 13 10 22. 22 James 3 16 17. 93 1 Peter 1 3. 172   7. 104 2 Peter 1 4. 12   7. 186 3 11. 40   14. 42 1 John 2 16. 74 Revelations 20 12. 102 21 8. 209 ERRATA in the Sermons on the 25 th Chap. of St. Matthew The Reader is desired to Correct these following Errors with some others less material which have been occasioned by the faultiness and Imperfection of the transcribed Copy PAge a. line 51. for thus read as l. 52. for grew r. drew l. 53. r. so he was ib. for to r. from p. 4. l. 39. r. meant of p. 12. l. 51. dele of p. 18. l. 8. for never r. neither p. 21. l. 31. r. not to waste it l. 49. for Transfiguration r. Presignation p. 22. l. 43. for Wisdom is r. Rectum est p. 47. l. 56. r. hope of p. 48. l. 43. r. profession and l. 44. dele without that l. 45. dele should l. 46. r. Now these Temporaries p. 51. l. 19. for that we might r. but we must l. 36. r. in the names of their little ones avouch God to be their God p. 55. l. 48. dele 3. p. 57. l. 9. for name r. terms p. 59. l. 46. r. he comes p. 63. l. 56. r. would not now die p. 66. l. 13. r. if he were not heard and l. 61. for assigneth r. ascribeth p. 67. l. 25. for beareth r. leaveth l. 26. for thereto r. on them p. 69. l. 8. r. ever be l. 34 35. dele not fully p. 70. l. 16. for indefinitè r. distinctè p. 71. l. 3. for separate r. despise l. 5 6. for promote r. promise p. 76. l. 8. r. they both see things future and things future with clearness and certainty l. 11. r. the light of Faith l. 16. for design r. Decree ib. for they are r. that Decree is p. 79. l. 6. after Judge adde before they are ready to be judged p. 81. l. 50. for commutative r. cumulative p. 82. l. 47. for Duty r. Entity p. 84. l. 33. dele and undertakes p. 92. l. 9. for is r. as p. 94. l. 15. dele mans l. 38. after boldeth adde Crescentibus donis crescunt rationes donorum Gregory p. 97. l. 24. for Ministry r. Minister p. 104. l. 53. for Fruits r. Smells l. 53 54. for Pleasure consists r. And lastly p. 105. l. 17. r. delight to meet them l. 25. for This r. His p. 114. l. 47. dele by their failing p. 117. l. 48. dele no p. 121. l. 61. r. a sleight Eye p. 124. l. 27. for Many r. Man l. 41. dele First l. 42. dele Who p. 127. l. 4. dele or p. 141. l. 35. for of r. at ib. after coming dele l. 40 41. for Soul and Body r. humane Body p. 146. l. 18. for with r. without l. 39. r. bonum p. 155. l. 26. r. You have no cause l. 29. r. The wayes of God are condemned p. 163. l. 28. for lively r. live l. 44. for Comforts r. People p. 172. l. 47. r. of the Inheritance of the Saints p. 179. l. 20. for because r. besides p. 184.
have finished the work that thou gavest me to do The greatest work that ever could be done if you respect the importance of it The creating of a thousand Worlds would not bring in such a Revenue to Heaven as this one work of Redemption Or the difficulty of it the Son of God to be made Flesh Sin a Curse States most abhorrent from the Felicity of the Divine Nature Or his willingness to undertake it Lo I come to do thy Will He longed to be at it tho he had infinite complacency in the Bosom of the Father yet as soon as God had made an habitable World Prov. 8.30 31. There I was by him as one brought up with him and I was daily his delight rejoicing always before him Rejoicing in the habitable part of his Earth and my delights were with the Sons of Men. He longed for that time when he might leave the company of Angels and dwell among us and feasted himself with the thoughts of his own Grace And with so much faithfulness I not only finished the Work but glorified thee all he did was for his Father's Glory This could Christ plead as the ground of his Requests he hath paid for all that he asketh not only made satisfaction for Sin but given a price for Glory He cannot out-ask his own Merit his Blood speaketh if Christ should hold his peace Heb. 12.24 And to the Blood of sprinkling that speaketh better things than that of Abel ' s. As clamorous as Abel's Blood for Vengeance It doth not speak against us tho we have made him to serve with our Iniquities but speaks the more for us to pacify his Wrath to pardon us and to do us good 3. The Sublimity of his Office It is an Authoritative Act. God hath always refused such Mediation as is not authorized by himself When Moses interposed for the Children of Israel said God Exod. 32.10 Let me alone that my Wrath may wax bot against them Because he would reserve this honour for him who alone hath this Office under the Broad Seal of Heaven So it is very notable that Christ refused all Mediation to him in the days of his Flesh. As of his Apostles Mat. 15.23 His Disciples came and besought him saying Send her away for she crieth after us c. But Christ would shew that he was sollicitous enough for the welfare of Sinners he needed no Intercessors So his own Mother when she interposed for the Honour of the Wedding John 2.4 Woman saith he What have I to do with thee As if he had said Cannot I do it without your intermedling In these Answers Christ would shew that he would have Sinners come of themselves without any mediation of their Fellow-Creatures they being no authorized Mediators God alloweth no other Mediator of Redemption but Christ and Christ no other Mediator of Intercession but himself It is Sacriledg in the Papists to set up others none is worthy to appear before God but Christ and how unworthy soever we are Christ will have us to come to himself God hath set him up for this purpose and no Copartners are allowed As it was said to Vzziah 2 Chron. 26.18 It pertaineth not to thee to burn Incense but to the Priests the Sons of Aaron that are consecrated to burn Incense Incense could be offered by no other but a Priest and our Prayers by none but by Christ. Heb. 7.28 The Law maketh Men Priests which have Infirmity but the Word of the Oath which was since the Law maketh the Son who is consecrated for ever-more Christ is consecrated by an Oath to abide ever-more in the Office which Oath is renewed and confirmed upon his return to Heaven Psal. 110.4 The Lord hath sworn and will not repent Thou art a Priest for ever after the Order of Melchisedeck compared with Vers. 1. God will never repent of dispensing Grace in and through him to Sinners as long as Christ's Consecration lasteth none must meddle with his Office 4. The Articles of the Covenant or the Promise of being heard Therefore Christ speaketh with such Confidence John 11.42 I know that thou hearest me always and Psal. 2.8 Ask of me and I will give thee the Heathen for thine Inheritance c. There was a Covenant drawn up between God and Christ the Lord promised him as the Fruit of his Labours and Sufferings that he should obtain all manner of Grace for his People All these things shew us the Advantages of having such a Mediator and Intercessor Secondly The Nature of Christ's Intercession It is a part of his Priestly Office of which there were two Acts Oblation and Intercession Oblation was made once on the Altar of the Cross and Intercession is the continuation of his Sacrifice or the presenting it in Heaven It must be explained by Analogy to the Priests of the Law The Sacrifice was slain without the Camp and then the Priests were to enter with the Blood within the Vail into the Holy of Holies with sweet Incense and so to cause a Cloud to arise over the Mercy Seat But Christ being come an High Priest of good things to come by a greater and more perfect Tabernacle not made with hands that is to say not of this Building Neither by the Blood of Goats and Calves but by his own Blood he entred in once into the Holy Place having obtained eternal Redemption for us Heb. 9.11 12. Jesus Christ having offered up himself upon the Cross where he was both Priest and Sacrifice he is gone within the Vail Not into the Holy Places made with Hands which are the Figures of the True but into Heaven it self now to appear before the Presence of God for us Heb. 9.24 It is not a vocal but a real Intercession Christ is gone into Heaven and there presents his Person both in our Nature and his own together with his Merits lifting up Desires which are as a Cloud of Incense before the Mercy-Seat for our Comfort and Salvation Rev. 8.3 And another Angel came and stood at the Altar having a Golden Censer and there was given unto him much Incense that he should offer it with the Prayers of all Saints upon the Golden Altar which was before the Throne The High Priest entred not for himself but for the People having the Names of the Twelve Tribes upon his Breast and Shoulders So Christ is entred on the behalf of us all bearing the particular Memorial of every Saint graven upon his Heart The High Priest staid within the Sanctuary for a short time and so came out to bless the People Christ entred within the Vail at his Ascension and we must wait till his coming out to bless us which will be at the Day of Judgment All this while he hath his Residence in Heaven and then he will open to us and give us entrance So that Christ's Intercession is A constant representation of his Merit for the pardon of our Sins and for our Acceptance together with strong Desires
Faith with Power What encouragement hath a Minister to go to God for such not only when you send for him in times of sickness but always as the Apostle saith in every Address to God It is sweet to give an account of the thriving Lambs and to desire the Lord to perfect his Work And it argueth in the Minister Sincerity to take pleasure in their gracious Estate and to account it as it were his own Benefit that God hath any way blessed them with Grace which moveth him again to commend their Case to God Certainly if we have but any portion of the Unity of the Spirit or any share in the Communion of Saints or any respect to God's Glory thus it would be Again it concerneth Masters of Families Your Family is your Charge given you of God pray for them in the Bowels of Love You are to make an Errand to the Throne of Grace not only for your selves but your Children and Servants as the Centurion came to Christ for his Servant Mat. 8.6 If we did not want Hearts we could never want an occasion of recourse to God By virtue of our Relation we are to espouse the Interests of our Family and to plead with God on their behalf as we would on our own Job is an excellent Pattern Job 1.5 He rose early day by day and offered Burnt-Offerings for his Children in the time of their Feasting His great care was to keep his Children in the Favour of God he knew no hurt in their Feasting had heard none by information yet because Miscarriages are usual in the heat and license of Feasts the Family should not be without a daily Sacrifice For Job said it may be that my Sons have sinned and cursed God in their Hearts Up then betimes as Job did and milk out a Blessing for your Families not only in general as Men will put up cursory Prayers out of Custom and Use for their Families they pray God to bless their Families but bring them forth by Head and Pole and set them before the Lord as Job offered Sacrifices according to the number of his Children Or as Christ here I pray for these pointing to the Apostles Lord for these and every one of them The occasion of Job's Prayer is not manifest If you do but suspect that a Child hath such a Disease you will go to a Physician should we have less care of their Souls Christ says they live in an evil World vers 11. therefore he prays for them Again look on this Prayer of Christ not only as an Act of Love to his Charge and Familiars but as an Act of Prudence as to the Apostles who were to bring others to believe by their Word I pray for them I pray not for the World c. These that are designed for the great Work of the Gospel chiefly for them they had to do with Obstinate Jews and Idolatrous Gentiles and they had need take the Blessing of Christ's Prayers along with them Ministers and Dispensers of the Mysteries of Salvation above all Men need the help of your Prayers How affectionately doth Paul call for this every where 1 Thess. 5.25 Brethren pray for us It is a Duty you owe and it may be not only of great comfort to us but of great profit to your selves God would have all Orders and Estates in the Church to be obliged to one another you for our Instructions we for your Prayers The Head cannot say to the Foot I have no need of thee 1 Cor. 12.21 Our Calling is encumbred with the more Difficulties and that we may be acquainted with all sorts of Satan's Enterprizes our Persons may be exposed to more Temptations than Yours The many Things requisite to make our Ministry useful call for your Prayers Abilities the right use of them Fruit and success that we may be able Pastors faithful successful that we may have Abilities which are a common Gain whatever Gifts are bestowed on Ministers are for the Peoples profit that out of love of Ease or love of the World or Error we may not mislead you nor be disheartned for lack of success Instead of praying for Ministers many now pray against them the Calling is repined at as if it were some heavy Plague and Judgment sent upon the World But therefore you have need to pray the more 2 Thess. 3.2 That we may be delivered from unreasonable and wicked Men for all Men have not Faith Pray that the Lights of the Church be not eclipsed pray for our standing amidst the Assaults of Satan It is not enough to give us Love and Maintenance but we must have your Prayers So much for the Object of Christ's Prayer II. Now for the Limitation of that Object I pray not for the World but for them that thou hast given me Many Things may be inferred out of this Limitation 1. Universal Redemption is disproved for those for whom Christ prayed not for them he died not These two Offices of the Priesthood must not be severed Christ doth not only profess to pray for these but denieth to pray for the World His Intercession is of the same latitude with his Redemption they are Acts of the same Office and of the same Extent and Latitude All Men were not intended in his Passion and Intercession See Serm. on 2 Cor. 5.16 2. The Weakness of the World notwithstanding all their outward Props and Supports altho they be strong and have many on their side yet they have not Christ on their side He hath left the World out of his Prayers he will not so much as take their Names into his Lips Therefore Rom. 8.31 If God be for us who shall be against us What will that Party do that have God against them Against how many will you set Me said Antigonus You may shake your Spear and bid defiance against all the Powers of Darkness they have not Christ among them he will not speak one good word for them they may have Riches Honours Friends Countenance in the World but God will never take their part 3. The dangerous and sad Condition of Worldly Men. Oh it is a sad thing not to have a Name in Christ's Prayer There is a great number left out and if you will know who they are they are called the World It presseth us to come out of that State where we are in this danger Men that are now Worldly may be in the Roll of God's Election but it is no comfort to them I pray not for the World so it is expressed and as long as thou art Worldly thou canst take no Comfort in Christ's Intercession Certainly this should be an effectual Consideration with the People of God to cause them to keep themselves unspotted from the World Jam. 1.24 These have the benefit of Christ's Prayers A Christian should never be quiet till he be clearly out of that number which is excepted Christ hath a constant enmity and antipathy against Mammon there must be a
most when we are like him Heb. 12.14 Follow Peace with all Men and Holiness without which no Man can see God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Masculine Article referreth to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tho they have not Peace with Men whatever Entertainment they meet with in the World they are sure to have the Favour of God Peace with God That seeing God referreth to the Enjoyments of the other World the degrees of Vision are according to the degrees of Sanctification 1 John 3.2 We shall be like him for we shall see him as as he is but it holdeth good also in the present World A dusky Glass cannot represent the Image so distinctly we cannot have such a sight of God we cannot expect any Communion and Intimacy with him till we be holy It is said Psalm 5.4 Thou art not a God that hast pleasure in Wickedness neither shall Evil dwell with thee The Idols of the Heathen are stained with filthy Practices God is not such an one Likeness is the ground of Delight God loveth himself for his own Holiness and they are best loved and liked that are most holy for others God professeth he will have no Intimacy with them he will have nothing to do with Sinners nor be of their Fellowship and Communion and they shall have nothing to do with him Psalm 50.16 What hast thou to do to declare my Statutes or that thou shouldst take my Covenant in thy Mouth Nay God will not afford Sinners one good Look Habbak 1.13 Thou art of purer Eyes than to behold Iniquity and canst not look upon Evil. As the Prophet to profess his Detestation of that prophane Prince said 2 Kings 3.14 Were it not that I regard the Presence of Jehosaphat the King of Judah I would not look towards thee nor see thee God would not look towards a Congregation were it not for his People in it But what shall we do and who can say My Heart is clean and who is able to stand before this holy God I answer God hath provided a Remedy in the Gospel in the Gospel-sence he only is pure who is purged and washed from the Guilt of his Sins in the Blood of Christ. In a Child of God there are many Failings but God in Christ giveth him an Acquittance But this is not all there must be an habitual Disposition of Purity and a Man must enter into a true course of Sanctification if he would be accepted in God's Eyes 1 Cor. 6.11 Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are justified but ye are sanctified in the Name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God The Work of the Spirit and the Merit of Christ are inseparable There is a relative and a real Change not only a judicial Abolition of Sin but a real If you would come to God as your holy One you must be his holy Ones as David was called God's holy One Psal. 16.10 Somewhat answerable there must be to God's Nature before he can take pleasure in you You will find it 1. By an hatred of Sin Where God doth change a Soul he breedeth a Disposition in it in some sort like himself Those Sympathies and Antipathies that God hath the Soul hath Now God is an Holy God he cannot endure Sin so it is with an holy Heart What have I to do with Sinners saith God and what have I to do with Sin saith the Soul the displacency is keen and strong they have a Nature put into them like God's and therefore hate what he hateth It is said Psal. 97.10 Ye that love the Lord hate Evil In what measure we love God we hate what is contrary to God In Grace there is a Love to the chiefest Good and an Hatred of the chiefest Evil the one as well as the other is natural to the Saints Let us never talk of Love to God except there be a Zeal to reform what he hateth It 〈◊〉 true we have a mixed Nature there is the Divine Nature and the Carnal Nature a Believer is partaker of both Flesh and Spirit there will be Slips and Failings but the prevailing part of the Soul abhorreth Sin It is the Evil which we hate and tho a Child of God falleth into Sin yet he cannot rest in it A Fountain may be troubled but it will work it self clean again The Needle in the Compass may be joggled but it rests not till it turns to the Pole A neat Man may be dirtied but he cannot endure any Filthiness should lie on his Cloaths impure Men are in their own Element if they abstain from Sin their unholy Nature likes it they forbear it but do not abhor it as Phaltiel forsook Michal only for fear of David's Displeasure Sinful Affections continue in their full Force and Strength when the Act is suspended 2. By an Act of Duty and Conformity to God's Will and Nature Ephes. 4.24 That ye put on the New Man which is after God created in Righteousness and true Holiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is a counterfeit Holiness and true Holiness the true Holiness is such a Holiness as God's is answerable in Quality tho not in Equality Now what is God's Holiness such an Attribute by which he loveth himself above all things and all other things as they do more or less partake of his Nature So when we are holy in Truth we love God out of a Principle of the new Nature God is lovely not only for his Benefits but for his Essence as he is deligibilis naturâ it is eminently in him what is in us in a weaker degree So there will be a Delight in the Saints because of the Resemblance they bear to God Psal. 16.3 To the Saints that are in the Earth and to the Excellent in whom is all my Delight Certainly they have cause to question their Holiness to whom good Company is a Prison and a Burden they have not such Dispositions as God hath So they delight in Duties as they exhibit much of God And they delight in the Practice and growth of Holiness as it maketh them more like God Thus Christians should you strive to come up to the Divine Patern more and more You will think a Child uncapable of Learning when the longer he hath been at the Writing-School the more he swerveth from the Copy and certainly that Holiness that doth not grow up into a greater Likeness and Resemblance of God is to be suspected Thus must you look to come in an holy State 2. With holy and prepared Affections You should remember you have to do with the holy God Josh. 24.19 Ye cannot serve the Lord for he is an holy God Do you know what it is to worship him Rash entring upon the Worship of God is not without Sin and to come reaking from your Sins into God's Presence it is but as Cains's approach from Blood to Sacrifice Before Worship there must be a special purging When Joseph came before Pharaoh he
the Saints Christ hath begged it and the Prayers of Christ who is God's beloved Son cannot possibly return in vain there being such an absolute Conformity and Consent between the Will of God the Father and the Son John 11.42 I know that thou hearest me always Christ cannot be denied Audience and Acceptance in the Court of Heaven especially in a Request upon which his Heart is set His People are so wonderfully dear to him that he would not lose one of them and then Christ is so wonderfully dear to God that he must needs speed in all his Requests Therefore if Christ hath mediated for the Conservation of the Saints the Father will grant what he asketh Yea the Father himself loveth the Saints the thing is pleasing to him It is notable that when Christ had spoken of the Perseverance of the Saints he adds John 10.30 I and my Father are one as noting not only the Unity of Essence but the Consent of Will that was between them in this Work Well then look as Christ redeemeth us because the Father required it the Father will love us and preserve us because the Son asketh it If Christ bear any respect to the Father's Command or the Father to Christ's Prayers the Elect are sure to be saved Christ hath engaged God's Name to keep us What ●●n be objected against this They say that Christ prayed conditionally Keep them if they will But here is no Condition expressed Christ absolutely prayeth Keep them and such a Condition would make the Gift of God to depend upon Man's Will and so to persevere would rather be Man's Act than God's Gift the Determination being on Man's part Nay the main Thing which is to be kept is our Will and so the Condition would destroy the very Nature of the Request They say Christ prayeth only for the Apostles I Answer It cannot be restrained to the Apostles it is the common Priviledg of all the Saints those which thou hast given me Christ explaineth himself and extendeth it to Believers of all Ages Vers. 20. Neither pray I for these alone but for those which shall believe in me through their Word Christ's Prayer is every way as good as a Promise II. Let me handle the Doctrine it self The Doctrine of Perseverance is much impugned but the Earth is never the more unsetled because to giddy Brains it seemeth to run round Let me state and then confirm it First State it 1. Seeming Grace may be lost Mat. 25.29 From him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath compared with Luke 18.18 Whosoever hath not from him shall be taken away even that which he seemeth to have Blazing Comets and Meteors are soon spent and may fall from Heaven like Lightning while Stars keep their Orb and Station sandy Building will totter The Hypocrites shall be discovered before the Congregation Prov. 26.26 2. Initial or Preparative Grace may fail Heb. 6.4 5. They who were once enlightned and have tasted of the Heavenly Gift and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost and have tasted the good Word of God and the Powers of the World to come may fall away Such as Illumination external Reformation temporary Faith some good Beginnings Some die in the Pangs of the New Birth and are still-born Plenty of Blossoms doth not always foretel store of Fruit. 3. True Grace may suffer a shrewd decay but not an utter loss In Temptations it may be sorely shaken the Heel may be bruised as Christ's was but his Seed remaineth in him 1 John 3.9 As Peter denied Christ tho he did not fall from Grace Luke 22.32 I have prayed for thee that thy Faith fail not The Leaves may fade when the Root liveth Chrysostom saith concerning Christ's Prayer for Peter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He doth not say that he might not deny him but that his Faith might not fail and altogether vanish 4. Such Grace as serves to our well-being in Christ may be taken away Joy Peace Chearfulness A Man may be living tho he be not lively a Man may have a Being when his Well-being is lost he is a Man tho a Bankrupt So a Christian the Operations of Grace may be obstructed for a great while a fit of Swooning is not a state of Death there may be no Acts and yet the Seed may remain this may last For a long time David did not recover himself it was near a Year after his Sin 1 Sam. 12.14 The Child that is born of thee shall surely die compared with Psal. 51. Title A Psalm of David when Nathan the Prophet came unto him after he had gone in to Bathsheba 5. Grace indeed if left to us would be soon lost we shewed that in Innocency But it is our advantage that our Security lieth in God's Promises not our own Strength that we are not our own Keepers God would not trust this Jewel but in safe hands Perseverance is God's Gift not Man's Act he is ingaged in Christ to maintain it John 10.28 29. I give to them Eternal Life and they shall never perish neither shall any Man pluck them out of my hands My Father that gave them me is greater than I and no Man is able to pluck them out of my Father's Hands they neither shall nor can be taken out of God's Hands God and Christ is engaged in the keeping of them Christ by God's Command as Mediator God by Christ's Merit and therefore he that separateth us from God must tug with Jesus Christ himself and be too hard for him also or else he can never pluck them out of his Hands If they should question Christ's Power because of the Ignominy of the Cross the Father's Hands are also engaged for our greater Assurance none is able to pluck them out of my Father's Hands God never made a Creature that should be too hard for himself 6. We do not plead for any wild Assurance and certainty of Perseverance We do not say that he that neglects Means and grieves the Spirit do what he will yet he is sure he shall not miscarry that is against the Nature of God's Dispensation and the Nature of this Assurance and therefore but a vain Cavil 1. It is against the Nature of God's Dispensation for whom he maketh to persevere he maketh them persevere in the use of Means Hezekiah had assurance of Life for fifteen Years yet he takes a lump of Figs and applies it as a Plaister to the Boil Isa. 38.5 compared with Vers. 21. Or more clearly Acts 27.22 There shall be no loss of any Man's Life among you but only of the Ship But yet Vers. 31. Except the Ship-men abide in the Ship ye cannot be saved We are bound to get Food and Raiment if we would live It is the Devil's Divinity Thou art sure not to fall therefore neglect Means it was Satan's Cavil against God's Protection over Christ. Mat. 4.6 If thou be the Son of God cast thy self down for it is written
heed then of going forth in the strength of your own Resolutions The Devil doth not fear us but the Guard that is about us Peter was a sad Instance Tho all Men do deny thee yet will not I deny thee At first he out-braveth a whole Troop and afterwards falleth by the accusation of one Damsel A bold Resolution doth not carry out a Man so far as an humble Dependence a silly Wench discourageth this stout Champion Every small Temptation is sufficient to overturn a Man puffed up with the confidence of his own strength the weak Blast of a Damsel's Question What poor Creatures are we when God leaveth us We cannot be without these Providences Audeo dicere saith Austin utile esse superbis cadere in aliquod manifestum opertum peccatum ut salubrius sibi displiceant The Saints fall so often that they may stand the firmer Nay if you do not fall fouly you will meet with a great deal of Uncomfortableness and Weariness in the ways of God our Strength will soon tire Learn this the best of you you that seem to have most reason to stand Peter had been with Christ on the Mount Mat. 17.1 in the Garden Mat. 26.37 assured of his Glory armed against his Sufferings and yet now denieth him 2. Observe How loyal faithful and tender Christ is over his Charge He is loyal to God I have kept them in thy Name faithful to his Flock he omitted no point of the Duty of a good Shepherd he was tender of them Whilst I was with them in the World I kept them and now he surrendreth his Charge into God's hands Judas was lost not out of any impotency and carelesness in Christ he was not in his Commission but through his own malignity Christ is faithful for he giveth an account to God none of them is lost just as he will at the last day it is but a Type of what he will do then He will present all the Faithful to God Heb. 2.13 Behold I and the Children which God hath given me And he will disclaim Hypocrites as he doth Judas Vse 1. Let us learn how safe it is to be in Christ's hands and keeping Christ was a faithful Shepherd when he was upon the Earth and tho his corporal Presence be removed yet it is supplied by the Spirit he hath still a care of his Flock the Lambs those that are most tender he carrieth them in his Bosom he hath a particular care of every single Believer tho there be so many Thousands in the World John 10.3 I know my Sheep by Name John Anna Thomas however called and distinguished in the World He is careful to provide good large Pasture to supply your Defects His Conduct is gentle and tender as the little ones are able to bear and to guide you with Dispensations suitable to your Work and Temptations are proportioned to your Growth and Experience Paul was not buffeted till his Rapture After ye were illuminated ye endured a great Fight of Afflictions Heb. 10.32 The Castle is victualled before it is besieged He is constantly watchful over you taketh notice of Decays of Grace and spiritual Languishments to reclaim and reduce his People when gone astray Isa. 30.21 Thine Ears shall hear a Voice behind thee saying This is the Way walk in it when ye turn to the right-hand and when ye turn to the left You may be confident of his keeping if you will but chuse him for a Shepherd and put your Souls as a Pledg in his hands Psal. 23.1 The Lord is my Shepherd I shall not want Walk on in a Course of Obedience referring your selves to Christ's care Vse 2. We should learn of Christ to be faithful to our Charge We that are Ministers should keep those that are committed to us in God's Name that when we die or by Providence are called away from our People we may plead our Faithfulness Father I have kept them in thy Name If we give not warning to the Sinner His Blood will God require at our hands Ezek. 3.20 As under the Law if an Ox or Sheep were laid to pledg and it did miscarry the Party was to make it good So Heb. 13.17 They watch for your Souls as they that must give an Account that they may do it with Joy and not with Grief It is an heavy Charge and a great Trust the Account of lost Souls will be craved at your hands So also you that are called to a Family you have a Charge you are not only to provide for them corporally but spiritually that when you die you may commend them to God upon these Terms Whilst I was with them I kept them in thy Name 3. Observe God hath many ways of keeping mediate and immediate Immediate by his own Spirit this Christ beggeth for them mediate by Christ's corporal presence I have kept them by the Guides of the Church by Angels they are a part of our Guard Heb. 1.14 Are they not all ministring Spirits sent forth to minister to them that are Heirs of Salvation They have a great deal of Employment about God's Children Psal. 91.11 He shall give his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy Ways Against bodily Dangers the Angels watch over us God against spiritual Dangers So by Grace in the Heart Prov. 4.5 6. Get Wisdom and she shall keep thee These are the inward Means of Preservation Vse 1. Admire the Providence of God about such a Creature as Man is It is counted a matter of great State to have at our Heels a long Train of Followers these mighty Peers of Heaven are our Attendants How many Guards hath he set upon us His Spirit his Angels glorious Angels they behold God's Face and watch over our Feet his Ministers the outward Supplies of Providence and Grace in the Heart If our Protection were visible all the Princes in the World would come short of it a Guard full of State and Strength Even little Ones have their Angels stand by their Cradles Vse 2. Learn to wait upon God tho you want an outward Guard and Vail of Safety Christ's corporal Presence was removed and supplied by the Spirit and if God can make us amends for Christ's Company certainly for an outward Comfort and Blessing Do not limit God to one way of keeping he hangeth the Earth upon nothing how doth he keep the Earth A Feather will not stay in the Air. Man liveth not by Bread alone but by every Word that proceedeth out of the Mouth of God Mat. 4.4 Not only by the outward Supply but the Promise and the Sustentation of Providence God can bring Water out of the Rock as well as out of the Fountain When we have outward Supplies we are many times worst Our well-being doth not lie in these things but in God's care which may be expressed in several ways Christ may put that Question to us that he did to the Apostles Luke 22.35 And he said unto them VVhen I sent you
their Deeds were Evil. Man is in love with his own Misery when we should hate Sins we hate the Light that discovereth them an Ignorant People love a Sottish Ministry the Faithful Witnesses are the World's Torment Rev. 11.10 These two Prophets tormented them that dwelt on the Earth The World would fain lie down upon the Bed of Ease and sleep Light is troublesome to sore Eyes Ignorant Priests are the People's Idols the Blind lead the Blind and they both fall into the Ditch They do not only err in their Minds but err in their Hearts the one is sad the other worse It is Evil that we do not know it is doubly Evil that we desire not to know Job 21.14 Therefore they say unto God Depart from us for we desire not the knowledg of thy ways Spiritual Blindness is worse than Bodily When Elymas was striken blind he desired some-body to lead him by the Hand Acts 13.11 We count it our Happiness to have fit Guides but in Spiritual Blindness it is quite otherwise we cannot endure a faithful Guide The Prophets prophesy Lies and the People love to have it so Blind People are all for blind Guides Vse 1. Let it set God clear He loveth to have it so When he cometh to Judgment the Books shall be opened Rev. 20.12 We are apt to quarrel his Justice for leaving so great a part of the World in the dark Remember he is aforehand with Means and they love the state they are in God leaveth no Man without a sufficient Conviction and Witness of himself Vse 2. Let sottish Men know that God is not all Mercy and all Hony Usually our Desires transform God into that shape which we fancy A Libertine would have God all Mercy and all Patience because he desires him to be so Affections make Opinions Psal. 50.21 Thou thoughtest that I was altogether such an one as thy self But be not deceived to the blind World God will be severe but just Isa. 27.11 It is a People of no understanding therefore he that made them will not have mercy on them and he that formed them will shew them no favour Ignorance is fatal and deadly to the Heathens 2 Thess. 1.8 In flaming Fire taking Vengeance on them that know not God and that obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. We pity them and say Poor ignorant Creatures We hate a Drunkard but we pity an Ignorant Man But God is very angry with them because he knoweth the wickedness of their Hearts how many Means they have withstood and how much Light they have abused God doth not measure Sins by the foulness of the Act but by the unkindness and ingratitude of it The Blind and the Lame are equally an abomination to the Lord to want Knowledg is as bad as to want Obedience it will be no excuse Object Ay but they have good meanings and surely God will not deal in Justice and rigor with them we are ignorant but our Heart is good Answ. Prov. 19.21 Without Knowledg the Heart is not good Ignorance is so far from being the Mother of Devotion as the Papists say that it is the great hindrance of it Simple Credulity may be more awful and scrupulous as Men in the Night have many Fears but God loveth rational Service not blind Obedience 1 Chron. 28.9 And thou Solomon my Son know thou the God of thy Father and serve him with a perfect Heart and a willing Mind Worship without Knowledg is but a blind Guess and loose Aim as Christ reproveth the Samaritans for worshipping they knew not what John 4.22 Certainly we are not so sensible of the danger of Ignorance as we should be Men live sensually and die sottishly and then perish eternally they live by guess at best and some devout Aims and when they come to die they die guess in a doubtful uncertain way like Men that leap over a deep Gulph blindfold they know not where their Feet shall light 2. Observe That God is not only merciful but just in the reward of the Godly or glorifying the Elect. Christ is praying and arguing for Heavenly Glory and he giveth God the Title of Righteous Father You shall see all your Privileges are made to come from Righteousness Pardon of Sins which is one of the freest Acts of God and wherein he discovereth most of his Mercy 1 John 1.9 If we confess our Sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our Sins and cleanse us from all Vnrighteousness This is the Mystery of Divine Grace So also for Eternal Rewards 2 Thess. 1.6 7. Seeing it is a righteous thing with God to recompense Tribulation to them that trouble you You will think that it is righteous indeed that God should punish the Wicked but read on but to you who are troubled rest with us when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed c. But how is God's Righteousness and Justice interested in our Rewards 1. Partly it is engaged by Christ's Merit Tho to us it be mere Grace yet as to Christ it is just Christ's Satisfaction being equivalent to the violation of God's Majesty and therefore it is just to pardon us It is just for the Creditor to forgive the Debtor when the Surety hath paid So Christ's Blood it is not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Ransom but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Price It is just with God to glorify us Christ's Righteousness giveth us a Right This Reason you have Rom. 3.24 25 26. Being justified freely by his Grace through the Redemption that is in Jesus Christ whom God hath set forth to be a Propitiation through Faith in his Blood to declare his Righteousness for the remission of Sins that are past through the forbearance of God To declare I say at this time his Righteousness that he may be just and the Justifier of him that believeth in Jesus God being satisfied by Christ can be gracious to the Creature without disparagement to his Justice The Mediator interposeth his Satisfaction is accepted This was that the wise Men of all Times busied themselves in How God could do good to the Creature without disparagement to his Justice But all their Devices were frustrate Christ alone bringeth the Blood to the Mercy-Seat 2. God is fast bound by his own Promise James 1.12 Blessed is the Man that endureth Temptation for when he is tried he shall receive the Crown of Life which the Lord hath promised to them that love him And it is a part of Justice to make good his Word Promittendo se facit debitorem The Qualification being supposed we may challenge him upon it Psal. 119.49 Remember thy Word unto thy Servant upon which thou hast caused me to hope He biddeth us put him in remembrance he hath drawn us to these Hopes 2 Tim. 4.8 Henceforth there is laid up for me a Crown of Righteousness which the Lord the Righteous Judg shall give me at that day and not to me only but unto all them also that
his own Glory Page ib. What Glory Christ retained in his Humiliation Page 60 What Glory he wanted Page ib. Our Glory for substance the same that Christ's is Page 325 This is matter of Comfort to Believers and an Encouragement to Holiness Page 325 Glorify God what it is to glorify God Page 49 What it is to sanctify justify and glorify God Page 113 How are we to glorify God Page 12 49 52 How Christ glorified God Page 46 How God was glorified in Christ. Page ib. Why it should be our care to glorify God Page 55 Why we should glorify the Name of God Page 52 Glorify Christ what it is to glorify Christ. Page 115 How Christ was glorified by his Disciples Page 112 Objections against glorifying Christ answered Page 118 Consolations to them that glorify Christ. Page 118 To glorify Christ an Evidence of our Interest in Father Son and Spirit Page 112 The great Condition of the Covenant of Grace Page 113 Gratifies the Aim of God Page 114 Pledg of our Interest in his Intercession Page ibid. Glorification of Christ a Pledg of ours Page 14 63 A Pledg of his Satisfaction Page 14 A Ground of Hope to the Creature Page ib. It fits him to do his People good Page 63 God that there is a God proved Page 33 That God is but one Page 36 One God in 3 Persons the only true God Page 39 Gospel a great Blessing Page 32 The excellency of the Doctrine of the Gospel Page 67 The Motion of the Gospel is directed by the Providence of God Page 279 What of God it discovers to us Page 380 Grace seeming Grace may be lost Page 144 149 Initial or preparative Grace may fail Page 144 True Grace may suffer shrew'd decay Page ibid. The Grace that makes for our well-being in Christ may be taken away Page ibid. If left to our selves would be soon lost Page ibid. We are not to rest satisfied in any degrees of Grace Page 230 No Grace where there is not a sound Apprehension of Truth Page 237 The freeness of Grace in giving us Glory Page 349 Grief at worldly Losses a sign of a worldly Heart Page 208 H. HAppiness Man is at a loss for Happiness after the Fall Page 333 Our Happiness in God compleated by degrees Page 334 Hatred of any Man to be watched against Page 203 Hatred of Godliness the evil of the Sin Page 202 Those that profess Religion may hate one another for their Strictness in Religion Page 202 Hatred of Sin the property of the People of God Page 141 Hatred of the World to be expected by Christians Page 192 Instances of this in Scripture Page 197 Reasons of it Page 193 196 200 This Hatred palliated over with Pretences Page 198 199. That it ariseth from an Antipathy to Godliness proved Page 198 People of God most hated by the worst of Men. Page 198 The best of Men most hated of the World notwithstanding many Excellencies to allay their Malice Page 199 How the People of God should carry themselves under it Page 203 Christians not to be troubled at it Page 196 203 Not to be allayed by carnal meant Page 196 Head of the Church why Christ is Head of the Church as God-Man Page 301 How we should respect Christ as Head of the Church Page 309 Hearing we must take heed that we hear how we hear who we hear Page 239 The necessity of Hearing Page 298 Heart Frame of the Heart how it may be known Page 207 Heaven the Happiness of our being with Christ in Heaven Page 353 Heavenly-mindedness exhorted to Page 126 Heaviness vid. Sadness of Spirit Histories of the Word shew it to be from God Page 261 Holiness the signification of the word Page 137 Difference between the Holiness of God and of the Creature Page 137 In the Creature finite and derivative Page 138 The preciousness of it Page 292 Holiness to be prized Page 140 Deriding Holiness a great Sin Page 140 Holiness a good preparative to the Ministry and why Page 230 No coming to God in Prayer but in an holy State Page 140 What this holy State is Page 141 Holiness of God the various Significations of it Page 136 What it is Page 137 The Properties of it Page 137 Essential to God Page 137 His Glory Page 139 Sight of God's Holiness makes us prize Christ. Page 139 How we should draw nigh to God as an holy God vid. Sanctification Page 140 Holy Father when we pray to God we must look on him as a Holy Father Page 137 Reasons of it Page 138 139 Why Christ useth this Title in Prayer to God Page 136 Hope of Heaven the Certainty of it Page 350 The grounds of it Page 363 370 It raiseth a Believer above the World Page 205 It maintains Ioy. Page 189 Human Nature of Christ the Innocency of it Page 281 Reasons why Ch●ist's humane Nature must be innocent Page 288 Hypocrisy one of Judas's Sins Page 175 To be avoided Page 178 I. IDleness the Mischief of it Page 53 Jesus what the Word signifies vid. Saviour Page 42 How we should own Christ as Jesu● Page 43 Ignorance the danger of it Page 376 The sad Condition of ignorant People Page 90 Incarnation Christ was incarnate to promote Vnity among Christians Page 161 Intercession of Christ the Nature of it Page 103 Christ is the Intercessor Page 101 The advantage of Christ's being the Intercessor Page 101 The Advantage Priviledg and Fruits of Christ's Intercession Page 14 103 How we may know what Christ is interceeding for in Heaven Page 183 Interest of Christ in Believers Page 134 Interest of God in Believers Page 71 107 Evidences of God's Interest in us Page 109 Ground of Comfort Page 111 God's Interest in his People moveth him to Mercy Page 108 To be urged by Saints in Prayer Page 108 Christ pleads it as an Argument in Prayer Page 71 Interest of Believers in God and Christ. Page 159 Joy the great use of it in the spiritual Life Page 184 The Causes of Spiritual Joy Page 189 How it is maintained vid. Rejoycing Page 189 Some Observations concerning Spiritual Joy Page 185 It ariseth more from Hope than Possession Page 185 It is felt more in Adversity than Prosperity and why Page 185 The feeling of this Joy an uncertain thing Page 186 It mars the taste of carnal Pleasures Page 185 Joy of Believers why called Christ's Joy Page 182 Christ took care to leave his People joyful when he left the World Page 183 What a kind of Joy this was Page 183 His Heart was much set upon it Page 184 Reasons of it Page 184 Joyful Spirit an Honour to Religion Page 185 A Delight to God Page 185 K. KEeping the Word what it signifies Page 80 81 That it is the duty of God's People Page 81 Kept Believers kept in a State of Grace vid. Preservation What it is to be under Christ's keeping Page 171 Keeping of Christ extends to Body and Soul Page 169 172 Various
and why Page 249 How shall we know that Miracles were truely wrought Page 249 Not wrought at Man's will Page 249 Misery of Man by Nature Page 376 Mission of Christ vid. Sent. Mission of Ministers who are sent Page 279 By whom Page 279 To whom Page 279 For what end Page 280 Multitude no excuse to Wickedness Page 373 N. NAme of God what it signifies Page 67 143 379 None can discover the Name of God but Christ. Page 381 How Christ manifested God's Name to his People Page 66 God's Name made known to the Church by degrees Page 258 380 Why Christ would reveal God's Name to his People by degrees Page 381 It is the great Priviledg of the Gospel to know God by his right Name Page 380 New Birth takes Believers off from the World Page 250 O. OBedience establisheth our Ioy. Page 189 Whether Christ as Man was bound to Obedience to the Law of God his Maker Page 287 Positive Obedience vid. Positive Occasions of Sin to be avoided Page 216 Offices of Christ exercised in another manner in Heaven than here Page 15 The Sublimi●y of Christ's Office Page 102 Omissions whether we are more hardned by Sins of Omission or Commission Page 228 Oneness our Happiness lies in being one with God through Christ. Page 333 Opinions novel condemned Page 165 Opposition We had need be tender in opposing the godly Page 202 Ordination of Ministers the Elders Right Page 274 Whether Ordination by the Popish Clergy valid Page 278 Owning Christ it is praise worthy to own Christ when the World disowns him Page 372 This is a sign of God's Love to us Page 372 And of our Sincerity Page 373 P. PEnmen of Scriptures their Fidelity Page 258 People their right to chuse their Ministers Page 273 Advice to them with respect to their Ministers Page 277 283 Perdition Son of Perdition a Name given to Judas and to Antichrist Page 174 Carnal Practices will end in Perdition Page 175 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what it is Page 300 306 Persecution to be expected by God's People in this World Page 130 132 Wicked Men restrained from Persecution by conviction of Sin on their Hearts Page 316 Perseverance of Saints built on John 17.11 Page 143 The Point stated Page 144 The Grounds of it 1. The Father's Love and Power 2. The Son's Merit and Intercession 3. The Spirit 's Influence Page 146 Not a discontinued but constant Perseverance Page 145 This Doctrine not shaken by the Defections of Hypocrites Page 173 Doth not exclude Prayer Page 145 Still Believers are to be wary Page 145 And means of Grace not to be neglected Page 145 Exhortation to Perseverance Page 147 Should excite to Thankfulness Page 148 Yields Comfort to the People of God Page 149 When this Doctrine more especially yields Comfort to them Page 150 Person in the Trinity what it is Page 38 Person of Christ the Dignity of it Page 101 The dearness of it to the Father Page 102 Places in all Places there are Temptations Page 215 Pleasure of God's ways Page 186 Carnal Pleasure to be despised Page 186 Plots against the Church destroy the Authors of them Page 179 Reasons of it Page 179 Positive Obedience we must not only depart from Evil but do good Page 228 Reasons of it Page 229 Whether the Trial of a Christian lies in departing from Evil or doing Good Page 228 Poverty of Christ upon the Earth Page 205 Power of Christ over all Flesh what it is Page 16 Exercised for the Churches good Page 18 Power of the Word Page 251 How an Argument of the Truth of it to them that never felt it Page 252 Powers of the World usually set against Christ. Page 130 Practices carnal will end in Perdition Page 175 Praising and blessing God how they differ Page 49 139 Prayer must follow Preaching Page 2 The use of Words in Prayer Page 5 The only Guide in Suffering Page 8 Providence doth not hinder Prayer Page 11 An Encouragement in Prayer to back Requests with Promises Page 16 We are to pray for one another Page 104 Whether we may pray for wicked Men. Page 106 Vnto a Prayers of great force Page 162 When we pray to God we must look on him as an Holy Father vid. Holy Father No coming to God in Prayer but in an holy State Page 140 Prayer helps our Ioy. Page 190 Prayer of Christ why he prayed Page 4 Why he prayed aloud Page 5 The Object of it Page 94 294 295 Not the Apostles only Page 99 Why Christ prayed for them that should believe hereafter Page 294 Why Christ prayed for the Elect. Page 107 Why Christ prayed not for the reprobate World Page 101 Prayers of Christ and Merit of Christ of equal extent Page 295 How Christ prayed for his Persecutors Page 100 Prayers of Christ a Fountain of Consolation Page 183 Preaching some Preaching more apt to convert than others Page 84 Precepts of the Word shew it to be from God Page 260 Priestly Office of Christ the Parts of it Oblation and Intercession Page 103 338 The Love of God in Christ gives Confidence in both Parts Page 338 Prepare how Christ prepared Heaven for us by his Ascension Page 123 Presence corporal of Christ why withdrawn 1. To try his People 2. To make way for his spiritual Presence Page 126 127 Why Christ's Spiritual Presence was not vouchsafed till his Corporal Presence was withdrawn Page 127 Presence Spiritual of Christ to be look'd after by Christians and the advantage of it Page 128 Presence with Christ in Heaven a great part of our Happiness there Page 352 353 The Soul goes immediately to Christ's Presence after Death Page 352 And the Body at the Resurrection Page 353 Wherein our longing for it appears Page 356 Why we should long after it Page 357 Preservation means of it Page 172 What of God's Name is engaged in the Preservation of his People in Grace Page 150 None can preserve us but God Page 151 Why we are only preserved by God Page 151 God's Preservation should excite us to Dependance Confidence and Thankfullness Page 152 Preservation of Scriptures wonderful Page 253 Pride of wicked Men impatient of rebukes in the Lives of the godly Page 201 Priviledges outward not to be rested in Page 180 Profession Professors Worldliness of Professors brings Trouble on the Church Page 195 Profession not to be deferred till times are quiet Page 196 Not till the World is agreed Page 373 The excellency of our Profession above others Page 243 Proficiency of the Apostles in Christ's School Page 83 Promises of the Word shew it to be from God Page 260 May be pleaded Page 45 Shall be made good Page 250 Objections answered Page 250 Why temporal Blessings are in the Promise Page 251 What Respect and Reverence is due to the Promises Page 251 Prophecies of the Word shew it to be from God Page 261 Always fulfilled Page 250 Prophetical Office of Christ vid.
vid. Willingness Did not fall out by chance Page 180 Were appointed by the Father Page 7 Foretold by the Prophets Page 8 Always attended with some Glory Page 9 Sufferings of God's People short Page 8 God's People to prepare for them Page 194 vid Troubles When they come do not think strange at them Page 195 How to know when God is about to bring Trouble on the Church Page 164 Cautions in suffering for Christ. Page 117 Christ hath Experience of his Peoples Sufferings Page 134 T. TEaching of Christ the manner of it Page 69 Christ the great Teacher of the Church Page 74 Temptations fitted to every State Page 135 To every Condition Calling Action Place Page 214 215 Lust within gives advantage to Temptations without Page 129 260 Tender God is tender of his Truth and Saints Page 239 337 Threatnings of the Word always fulfilled Page 250 Objections answered Page 250 Titles of God in Scripture suited to Requests made to him Page 136 349 367 Toleration Arguments against it Page 236 Treason against Christ one of Judas's Sins Page 175 To be avoided Page 178 Trinity the Doctrine of the Trinity opened and proved Page 37 vid. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Person How we are to imitate the Trinity Page 168 309 Truth a great Treasure Page 236 Truth of the Scriptures Scriptures must be fulfilled Page 182 vid. Scriptures Divine Authority U. VIctory over evil to be preferred before Exemption from it Page 213 Vision of Christ in Heaven ocular and mental what Page 358 359 Why our Happiness lies in it Page 359 Vision the cause of all Fruition in Heaven Page 359 It shall be comfortable Page 361 Who are they that shall see Christ in Heaven Page 361 Union moral of Believers one with another what it is vid. Unity Page 106 303 Union mystical of Believers with Christ what it is Page 160 301 389 The whole Trinity is concerned in this Union Page 301 Whole Christ is united to a whole Believer Page 301 This Union is secret and mysterious but real Page 302 Illustrated by the Union of Head and Members Page 302 And by the Conjugal Union Page 390 All the Ordinances have an aspect on our Union with Christ. Page 332 How this Union is brought about and in what order Page 389 What the Act of Faith is whereby we are united to Christ. Page 389 The end of it Page 333 The advantages Believers have by it Page 305 Glory the Fruit of Union as well as Grace Page 326 The Honour and Happiness of those that are united to Christ. Page 304 305 The Resemblance between the Mystical Union and the Union of the Divine and Humane Nature in Christ. Page 308 The disagreement between these two Unions Page 308 The Resemblance between the Mystical Union and the Union of Father and Son in the Trinity Page 308 Why Christ prayeth for this Union Page 303 How we may know we are united to Christ. Page 305 391 Those who are united to Christ to look for greater things than they enjoy Page 326 This should teach us Dependance Page 331 What those Fruits are of it whereby the World is convinced of the Truth of Christianity vid. Conviction Page 311 320 Unity of Believers hath some resemblance of the Unity of the Divine Persons Page 167 What is contrary to it Page 165 To be prayed for Page 163 Believers to be earnest for it Page 165 How much Christ's Heart is set on the Unity of his Members Page 161 vid. Love of Brethren Why Christ so earnestly prays for it Page 162 Arguments to press it Page 166 It is possible to be attained Page 163 What an excellent Blessing it is Page 162 The need the Church hath of it Page 163 Directions to attain it Page 166 Directions to restore it Page 166 How God keepeth the Saints together Page 168 Unity between God and Christ. Page 307 Unworthiness what we should do when dejected with a sense of our Unworthiness Page 344 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Original and Signification of the Word vid. Person Page 38 W. WAiting ●n God a Duty tho we want outward Supplies Page 172 Walk Christians to walk wisely towards them that are without Page 203 Warning Sinners to take warning by Iudgments on others Page 180 Watching what a Believer should watch against Page 216 Watching and Prayer should go together Page 216 Welcome of Christ by the Father at his Ascension Page 123 Willingness of Christ to undertake the Work of Redemption Page 286 And to suffer Page 9 287 Word of God the necessity of God's giving us a Word Page 238 VVhat it is Page 240 To be reverenced Page 250 How given to Christ. Page 88 The proper means to work Faith Page 88 vid. Faith It will work without Miracles Page 89 The Spirit will not work without it Page 89 The Power of it to convert Souls Page 89 The Truth of it vid. Scripture Divine Authority It helps our Ioy. Page 190 Work every Man hath his Work Page 52 This Work is given to him by God Page 53 This Work must be finished Page 54 World why God permits his People to be in the World Page 131 The weakness of the World Page 105 The danger of living in the World Page 129 214 The Enemies we meet with in the World Page 130 Christ apprehensive of his Peoples danger in this World and why vid. Da●ger Page 133 VVhy we should grow weary of the World Page 135 How Christians are not of this World Page 204 VVhy Christians are not of this World Page 204 Characters of those that live as if they were of this World Page 206 How to know whether our Hearts are set on this World vid. Heart Page 206 207 How should a Christian know when the Wor●d incroacheth upon him Page 217 VVe can never enough be cautioned against the World Page 222 Worldly Conversation wherein seen Page 209 Worldly Men their dangerous Estate Page 106 Men of the World apt to defile the People of God Page 130 How the People of God differ from the Men of the World Page 191 Worldly Spirit to be avoided Page 224 Worldly things are frail Page 148 Worldliness expressed by Adultery and Idolatry and why Page 217 223 Arguments against it Page 223 Worldliness of Professors brings Troubles on the Church Page 195 Worship God to be worshipped in an holy manner Page 142 VVe should go away the more holy from Worship Page 142 A TABLE Of the Places of Scriptures explained in this PART       Pag. GEn. 3. 15. 197 19. 17. 216 Ex. 28. 12 29. 265 29. 4. 230 1 Sam. 2. 9. 171   25. 86 264 Job 1. 5. 105 4. 18. 138 31. 14. 56 Psalm 14. 1. 33 16. 3 4. 106 19. 7 8 9. 235 24. 7 8. 253   11. 122 25. 14. 372 62. 10. 209 93. ult 140 112. 96. 235 259 Proverb 8. 12. 91 13. 17. 281 14. 13. 187 18. 10. 152 29. 27. 197 30. 8 9. 214 Eccles. 2. 2. 187
mightily and effectually for it cometh not to us in word only but in power 1 Thess. 2.13 Ye received it not as the word of men but as it is in truth the word of God which effectually worketh also in you that believe And more particulary in Mortification for it is Faith that purifieth the heart Acts 15.9 Where the Christian Doctrine is really entertained and received by Faith it taketh men off from their old sins 1 Pet. 1.22 Seeing you have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit The obedience of the Truth is nothing else but Faith wrought in us by the Spirit upon the hearing of the Gospel this produceth in us that purity of heart and life which becometh Christians II. I will give you the reasons The Death of Christ may be considered as it worketh morally or as it worketh meritoriously As it worketh morally it hath a full and a sufficient force to draw us off from sin as it worketh meritoriously it purchaseth the Spirit for us As it worketh morally it layeth a strong ingagement upon us as it worketh meritoriously it giveth great incouragement to oppose and resist sin and set about the mortification of it So that the true way of subduing sin is by serious reflexion on the Death of Christ which we shall consider 1. As it is a strong ingagement 2. As it is a great incouragement 1. As it is a strong ingagement and there 1. It is a pattern to teach us how to deny the pleasures of the senses Pleasure is the great Sorceress that hath bewitched all the World and that which giveth strength to all temptations Jam. 1.14 Every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lust and inticed There is some sensitive carnal bait which first inviteth and then draweth us from our duty and all the Charms sin hath upon us are by the treacherous sensual appetite which is impatient to be crossed So when another Apostle speaketh of a revolt to the carnal life after some partial Reformation he giveth this account of it 2 Pet. 2.20 After they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ they are again intangled and overcome Before men be overcome by Temptation they are first inticed by the apprehension of some pleasure or profit which is to be had by their sins by which apprehension the danger of committing the sin is covered and hid as the Fishers hook is by the bait that is the Metaphor there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lapse again into the slavery of the former sins which they seemed to have escaped Therefore till we are dead to the sensitive lure and can be content to suffer in the flesh and to deny the satisfactions of the animal life we shall never avoid the slavery of sin nor know that our old man is crucified Now what is more powerful than the consideration of the Death and Example of Jesus Christ In his whole Life he was a Man of sorrows and so taught us to contemn the world and the pleasures of the flesh but especially at his Death when pain was poured in upon him by the Conduit of every Sense there he pleased not himself Rom. 15. 3. but conquered the love of life and all the natural contentments of life that he might please God and procure our Salvation Now we have not the Spirit of our Religion till we grow dead not only to the pleasures of sin but the natural pleasures of life yea life it self and can submit all to Gods glory 2. As it is an act of Love which should beget love in us to God again which love will make us tender of sinning There are many aggravations of sinning but the greatest of all is because we sin against so much Love as God hath shewed us in our Redemption by Christ. Sin is aggravated by the greatness of the Person against whom it is committed against the infinite Majesty of God as to strike an inferiour person is not so hainous a crime as to strike a Magistrate or Prince but this will not hold in all cases for foul indignities and grievous wrongs offered to meaner persons are a greater offence than the omission of a Ceremony to a Prince as if a man through ignorance of the customs of the Court should not be bare before his Chair of State Therefore take in the other Consideration of the infinite Goodness and Love of God towards us in Christ this doth exceedingly aggravate our sins They are acts of unkindness After such a deliverance as this is shall we again break thy commandments Ezra 9.13 14. after a deliverance out of Babylon out of Hell To sin against the infinite Goodness of a Creator by eating the forbidden Fruit we see what mischief it brought on Mankind conscious of this transgression the first Actors hid themselves from Gods presence But what is it to sin against the infinite Goodness of a Redeemer who came to recover us from this thraldom and bondage and to draw us to himself with the cord of love He chose rather to suffer the punishment due to our sins than to suffer sin still to reign in us whom he loved more dearly than his own life Gal. 2.20 Who loved me and gave himself for me Rev. 1.5 To him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood Now if after this manifestation of his Love we shall still continue in sin the hainousness of our offence is greatly increased 3. Christs Death is the best Glass wherein to view the deadly nature of sin It was so great and hainous an evil in the sight of God that nothing but the Blood of the Son of God could expiate it Rom. 8.3 For what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh Jesus Christ must come and suffer a shameful Death this painful shameful accursed Death of the Son of God sheweth Gods displeasure against sin and what it will cost us if we allow it and indulge it in our hearts and lives for if this be done in the green tree what shall be done in the dry 4. It sheweth us also what a great benefit Mortification is This among others was intended by him and moved him to bear our sins in his Body on the Tree 1 Pet. 2.24 Who his own self bare our sins in his body on the tree that we being dead to sin should live unto righteousness To remember a good turn done by a Friend and not to prize and value it as we ought is rather to forget than to remember his friendliness So here if we do not prize Christs benefits we undervalue his Death and a lessening of the benefits is a lessening the price Now one of the chief of them is to take away sin and to break the reign of it in the heart of his
the Light of Nature in this point we may see clearly how great a disorder it is to obey or fulfil these bodily lusts to the wrong of God and the Soul and that the true Honour and Dignity of a Man consists in the Victory which he hath over himself and that to pamper the flesh is not our honour but our disgrace and that these irregular desires should not be gratified but mortified 2. Christian Piety or the Tenor of our Religion requireth it of us The drift of this Religion is to recover men out of their Apostasie and to promote true genuine Holiness in the World to dispossess us of the Beast and that Man being restored to Man might be also brought back again to God or in short to draw us off from the animal life to life spiritual and eternal As appeareth 1. By the Precepts of it which mainly tend to inforce Self-denial Mortification Recess from the World that we may not miscarry in our Obedience to God by our bodily lusts Mat. 16.24 If any will come after me let him deny himself Col. 3.5 Mortifie therefore your members which are upon the earth fornication uncleanness inordinate affection evil concupiscence and covetousness which is idolatry The whole drift and business of this Religion is to drive out the Spirit of the World and to introduce a Divine and heavenly Spirit 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 which are freely given to us of God That part of the World which is mad and brutish is enslaved to lower things but the other part which hath submitted to the healing Institution of Christ should be wise and heavenly The Cure which Christ intended was of the great Disease of Mankind which was that the immortal Soul being deprest and tainted by the Objects of Sense doth wholly crook and writhe it self to carnal things and instead of Likness to God the Image of a Beast was impressed upon mans Nature and the Divine part enslaved and embondaged to the brutish 2. By its Promises 2 Pet. 1.4 Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises that by these you might be partakers of the divine nature having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust 2 Cor. 4.18 That man may seek his happiness in some higher and more transcending good than the beasts are capable of something that suits with his immortal Spirit In short to draw us off from things we see and inordinately love to a Glory and Blessedness wholly unseen and future 3. By the Grace provided for us namely the Spirit of Christ whose great design is to free man from a state of subjection to the flesh and by overcoming the lusts thereof to make him ready for all the Graces and Duties of the spiritual Life Rom. 8.5 They that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh and they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit He is first renewed by this Spirit Joh. 3.6 That which is born of the Spirit is Spirit and then acted and assisted by him Rom. 8.13 If ye through the Spirit mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live Gal. 5.25 If we live in the Spirit let us also walk in the Spirit 4. By being baptized into this Religion we are bound to this strict care for in our Baptism we did solemnly renounce the Devil the World and the Flesh as the Usurpers must be thrust out before the rightful Lord can take Possession Joshua 24.23 Put away the strange Gods which are among you and incline your heart unto the Lord God of Israel and we are dedicated to Father Son and Holy Ghost as our Creator Redeemer and Sanctifier as before We are to count our selves to be dead indeed unto sin and alive unto God vers 11. Now it is the greatest Hypocrisie that can be to be under this solemn Obligation to God and let sin reign in us Baptism is a Sign and Seal of Grace on Gods part and on ours a Bond of Duty on Gods part that he will cleanse and wash away sin Acts 22.16 Arise and be baptized and wash away thy sins On our part it obligeth us to do what in us lieth to destroy sin a Bond never to be forgotten by us 2 Pet. 1.9 He hath forgotten that he was purged from his old sins Vse 1. To humble us that we have so much forgotten our solemn Covenant so much cared for the Body and so little cared for the Soul that time and heart hath been so much taken up about those things which belong to the present life The mortal Body is minded at every turn and how much may the immortal but neglected Soul complain of hard usage We profess subjection to the Gospel and therefore should seek first the kingdom of God and the righteousness thereof and all these things shall be added to us Mat. 6.33 but we walk too much according to the course of the carnal careless World Eph. 2.2 3. Wherein in time past ye walked according to the course of this world according to the Prince of the power of the air the Spirit that ruleth in the children of disobedience Among whom also we all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind 2. Strengthen the Bonds and anew devote your selves to Obedience vers 13. Neither yield you your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin but yield your selves unto God as those that are alive from the dead and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God Bind your selves for time to come to make it your work not to indulge the flesh but save your Souls Heb. 10.39 For we are not of them that draw back to perdition but of them that believe to the saving of the soul. 3. Take great heed that sin reign not by bodily lusts 1. The Necessity of this These Lusts are represented as deceitful Eph. 4.22 That ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts And as violent and imperious Rom. 7.20 Now if I do that I would not it is no more I that do it but sin that dwelleth in me both together Jam. 1.14 Every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lust and inticed We are by subtilty blinded by the delusions of the Flesh and it is always endeavouring to get the Throne and hurry us to destruction and seeking to divert us from the Love of God the more we indulge them the more imperious they are the more caution and resolution therefore is necessary 2. The danger of not doing it 1. They do not only unfit us for God but for humane Society Jam. 4.1 From whence come wars and fightings among you come they not hence even of your lusts that war in your members They make you disquiet all others
Concerning the Object it respects not the former but the latter Clause their being once Sinners is not the matter of his Thanksgiving but that they had received and obeyed the Christian Faith However this must be said That it doth heighten the Mercy or illustrate the Benefit it is a great Mercy that having been once slaves of sin yet now at length they were recovered by Grace To be brought into a state of Light and Life by the Gospel were a great Benefit if a man had always been good and holy at least not considerably bad but when God will take us with all our faults and those of so great and hainous a Nature surely we have the more cause to give thanks Well then he doth not could not give thanks that once they had been the servants of sin God was not the Author of their servitude to sin but he was of their obedience to the Doctrine of Life his Mercy turned the former evil to good Or if you will take that into any part of the Thanksgiving it must be thus Since the condition of the servants of sin is so miserable God be thanked that you have escaped it 2. From whom he expects this Thankfulness I answer First It doth excite their Thanksgiving he exciteth them to give thanks for this blessed Change wrought in them he moveth them not to give thanks for Riches and secular Honours nor so much as consider whether they had or wanted these things but for the good estate of their Souls that they were partakers of so great a Benefit as from servants of Sin to become servants of Christ. Secondly It expresseth his own Thanksgiving on their behalf as congratulating and rejoycing with them in this mercy The Angels rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner Luke 15.10 So should we rejoyce in the good of others especially the Pastors of the Church 3 Joh. 4. I have no greater joy than to hear that my children walk in the truth Nothing that I more delight in in the World than to hear that those that are converted by me live after a Christian manner Doctrine That to be turned from the Service of Sin to the sincere Obedience of the Gospel is a Benefit that we cannot sufficiently be thankful for Let me represent it in the Circumstances of the Text. 1. Here is a Reflection upon their past state Ye were servants of sin This is necessary and useful First To heighten the sense of our Priviledges by Grace alas what were we when God first sought after us Slaves to Sin and Satan and Children of Wrath even as others Look as Jacob by remembring his poor condition doth raise his heart the more to admire Gods bounty to him Gen. 32.10 I am not worthy of the least of all thy mercies and of all the truth which thou hast shewed unto thy servant for with my staff I passed over this Jordan and now I am become two bands It would cure the Pride of many if they would remember their mean Originals and how like the Hop-stalk they mount up and grow out of the very Dunghil God solemnly injoyned his People when they injoyed the plenty of the Land to remember the obscure beginnings of their being a Nation and therefore when they offered the First-fruits they used this Confession Deut. 26.5 A Syrian ready to perish was my Father when he went down to Egypt and sojourned there with a few men and became a Nation great and mighty and populous Thus God taught them to acknowledge that their first Estate and Original was most wretched and miserable and so must we It holdeth more in moral things Eph. 2.1 2 3 4 5. And you hath he quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins Wherein in time past ye walked according to the course of this world according to the Prince of the power of the air the Spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience Among whom also we all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind and were by nature the children of wrath even as others But God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith he loved us Even when we were dead in sins hath quickened us together with Christ. 1 Tim. 1.13 Who was before a blasphemer and a persecutor and injurious But I obtained mercy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all to be mercied That God should take us with all our faults and bring us into a better condition how doth this heighten the Mercy Secondly To quicken us to more diligence in our present Estate He that hath been a diligent Servant to an hard and cruel Master from whom he could not expect any recompence worth his Toil surely should be diligent and faithful in the Service of a loving gentle and bountiful Master This is urged Rom. 6.19 As you have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity even so now yield your members servants to righteousness unto holiness And it is illustrated by several Scriptures 1 Cor. 15.9 10. I am the least of the Apostles and am not meet to be called an Apostle because I persecuted the Church of God But by the Grace of God I am what I am and his grace that was bestowed upon me was not in vain but I laboured more abundantly than they all And Acts 26.11 I punished them oft in every Synagogue and compelled them to blaspheme and being exceedingly mad against them I persecuted them even to strange Cities Thirdly To make the reality of the Change more evident There is a great Change wrought in those who are brought home to God it doth much hurt to Believers in judging of their own Case to forget what they once were whereas comparing these two what they are and what they were would sooner bring it to an issue and make the change more sensible and evident The Scriptures often direct us to this method Col. 1.21 And you that were sometimes alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works yet now hath he reconciled Eph. 2.13 But now in Christ Jesus ye who sometimes were far off are made nigh by the blood of Christ. And Eph. 5.8 Ye were sometimes darkness but now are ye light in the Lord. Our gradual progress in Holiness is more insensible and therefore we may overlook the mercy because we see not such eminent effects as we found at first But all that belong to God may see a Change and say as the blind man Joh. 9.25 This one thing I know that whereas I was blind I now see they may see plainly they are not the same men they were before But when men forget the Estate they were once in and the great change the Spirit wrought in them and feel not such alterations continually they live in doubtfulness and darkness As our forgetting our poverty and affliction maketh us undervalue a more plentiful condition and those comforts which we would account
ibid. Deceitfulness of sin wherein it consisteth 136 Devil always watchful to destroy us 98 Difference between carnal and regenerate 41 Doctrine of the Gospel imprinted on the heart in conversion 119 The fruit and benefit of it 120 Dominion of sin As no sin in general so no particular sin should have dominion over us 79 Actual and habitual what 80 81 More gross or more secret 79 Who are they that are more openly under the Dominion of sin Vide Predominancy and Reign of sin 79 Duty it is of great concernment to us to know what is our Duty 115 Dying to sin and living to God How we are said to dye to sin and to be alive to God through Iesus Christ 57 Motives to dye to sin and live to God 59 E. EAsie why the work of Religion is easie to a renewed person 146 End and means joyned together 108 The End is better than the means 151 The enjoyment of God our great End ibid. The End and issue of things to be often thought of 142 Eternity of Torments of Hell the Iustice of God in them 141 158 F. FAith what it is 5 The difference between Faith and Presumption ibid. How it preserves from sin 97 Falling into sin Gods people may sometimes fall into scandalous sins 78 Falls of Believers into sin punished by the withdrawing of the Spirit 37 Fear of God how it preserves from sin 97 Flesh takes all occasions to indulge it self 3 Nor to be indulged and gratified 99 Filthiness of sin 180 Folly and filth of sin causeth shame Vide Shame 138 Free Grace to live in sin a false inference from the Doctrine of Gods Free Grace Vide Living in Sin 2 Three Doctrines of Free Grace apt to be abused to licentiousness 104 Such Doctrines of Free Grace vindicated 106 Whence abuse of the Doctrines of Free Grace proceeds 2 How we should fortifie our selves against these abuses 7 109 Freedom from Righteousness what it signifies Vide Liberty 130 The servants of sin carry it as if they were free from Righteousness 131 Freedom from sin The nature of it 36 The kin●s of it 131 The degree which we attain to in this life 37 The value of the benefit 38 Who are they that are freed from sin 42 The visible Professor to 〈◊〉 after Freedom from sin 40 What we should do to be freed from sin 41 How we should show that we are freed from sin 134 How it is a consequent of our dying with Christ 40 We are assured of it by Christs undertaking 87 Converted persons should be as free from sin as they were before from righteousness 132 How far this should be ibid. Reasons of it 1 the equity 2 the necessity 3 the conveniency of it 132 133 Fruit those that have their Fruit to Holiness the advantage of it 144 c. G. GIft of God eternal-life 160 What a kind of Gift this is ibid. Gospel looks not back to what Believers were before Conversion but forward to what they should be 31 Government of God the life of it consists in rewards and punishments 153 Grace the opposition it meets with 90 We are to honour it 7 Is followed with Grace and Glory 45 Life of Grace Vide Life spiritual Free Grace Vide Free H. HAted sin to be hated 135 Holiness the Image of God in the Soul 147 Esteemed by God 148 It breeds peace of Conscience 145 And clears up and confirms our title to the heavenly Inheritance ibid. Access to God and communion with him the fruit of Holiness ibid. Honour of Gods service 126 147 c. Hope of eternal life some want it and why 154 The solly of the Hopes of wicked men 159 I. IMage of God in the Soul what it is 147 Defaced by sin 38 Infirmities incident to the best 78 Jus Postliminii in the Civil Law what it signifies 113 Justification the nature and branches of it 36 Constitutive and executive 37 K. KNowledge a help to mortification 31 L. LAw the use of it 4 How Believers are under the Law 107 Law written in the heart what it is 120 The fruits and benefits of it ibid. Liberty the kinds of it 131 The Liberty we have by Grace 107 Service of God the greatest Liberty 108 Liberty sinful what 107 Wicked men affect a Liberty to sin 3 Liberty to sin no Liberty 107 Christ never came to establish it ibid. They that labour for carnal Liberty are the servants of sin 131 The true notion of Liberty 107 Life of Christ after his Resurrection how to be improved 53 Life eternal that there is such a thing proved 153 What it is 150 Compared with Life natural ibid. Compared with the Life of Grace 151 Connexion between it and the Life of Grace 45 Those that have their fruit to Holiness are capacitated for it 153 The gift of God Vide Gift 160 Purchased by Christ ibid. Christs Resurrection the cause and pattern of it 52 The happiness of it 151 No fear of loving it 152 Why it is our final reward ibid. Life spiritual the excellency of this Life 59 The Resurrection of Christ the cause pattern and pledge of it 17 18 51 The connexion between Life spiritual and eternal Vide 45 Newness of Life Living to God Vide Dying to sin and living to God Living in sin a false inference deduced from the Doctrine of Free Grace Vide Free Grace 2 That it is an unjust inference 4 An absurd inference 5 A blasphemous inference 6 The corrupt heart of man apt to draw such an inference 2 The Devil hath a great hand in such an inference 4 Likeness where there is a Likeness to Christs Death there will be a Likeness to his Resurrection 26 Lord's Supper what our work is at it 154 How we shew forth Christs Death in it 10 The influence of it on mortification 92 Love of God those that serve God shall be assured of his Love 144 Love to God makes us tender of offending him 97 Lusts bodily why we should take heed they do not reign in us 66 M. MAster the great business that belongs to our duty is choice of Masters 111 Whom we ought to chuse for our Master Vide Choice 115 God and Sin different Masters 57 68 112 All men have God or Sin their Master 112 No man can serve both ibid. God a great and good a Master 132 Mercies spiritual We are chiefly to thank God for spiritual Mercies and why 122 Above all spiritual Mercies for the conversion of our selves and others 123 Middle state there is no middle state but all either good or bad 112 Objections answered ibid. Mortal Body why the Apostle useth this expression of sin reigning in our mortal Body Vide Body 63 Mortification of sin what it is 55 Habitual and actual what 27 Knowledge a help to mortifie sin 31 We must be dead to carnal pleasures if we would mortifie sin 32 The influence the Lords Supper hath upon Mortification 92 The necessity of the Spirit
as we list without Law and Rule He came to restore us to obedience to bring us back again in heart and life to God Luke 1.75 He hath delivered us from the hands of our enemies that we might serve him in holiness and righteousness all the days of our lives To this end tended his Doctrine I came not to destroy the law but to fulfil it Matth. 5.17 His example He came to do what God had commanded and to teach us to do the same Matth. 3.15 For thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness and Heb. 58.9 Tho he were a Son yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered And being made perfect he became the Author of eternal salvation to them that obey him 2. Christ dispenseth by vertue of his merit regeneration or the spirit of holiness that all new creatures might voluntarily keep this law tho not in absolute perfection yet by sincere obedience This Grace is dispensed to put us into a capacity of loving pleasing and obeying God this is that he promiseth in the new covenant Ezek. 36.27 And I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes and ye shall keep my judgments and do them so Jer. 31.33 I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts He doth not say I will prepare them another law as if the old law of God were to be abandoned and abolished and some other precepts substituted in their Room no but to make them conformable to it in heart and life the new man is created after God for this end and purpose Eph. 4.24 fitted to obey the law so that the great Blessing of the Gospel is Grace to keep the law 3. None enter into the Gospel State but those that intirely and readily give up themselves to do the will of God and therefore none can have benefit by the sin-offering and satifaction of Christ but those that consent to return to the duty of the law and live in obedience to God Surely God never pardoneth any while they are in Rebellion and live under the full power and dominion of sin no they must consent to forsake and return to the Allegiance due to their proper Lord. This is evident for the way of entring into the new covenant is by Faith and Repentance and Repentance is nothing else but a sincere purpose of new obedience or living according to the will and law of God 'T is defined to be a breaking off of sin Dan. 4.27 and therefore the Scripture runs in this strain Isa. 55.7 Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return to me saith the Lord and I will abundantly pardon and Isa. 1.16 Wash you make you clean and then tho your sins were as scarlet they shall be as white as snow The least that can be gathered from these places is That a serious vow and thorough resolution of new obedience is necessary to begin our interest in the Grace of the new covenant 4. The more we fulfill our covenant vow and resolution by obeying the law our right is the more clear and evident and more confirmed to us our participation of the blessings of the Gospel is more full and our comfort more strong Psal. 119.165 Great peace have they that love thy law and nothing shall offend them and Gal. 6.16 as many as walk according to this rule peace and mercy be upon them God loveth us the more the more we obey his law 'T is holiness maketh us more amiable in his eyes and the Objects of his delight God loveth us as sanctified rather than pardoned we love him as pardoning and forgiving so great a debt to us but he delights in holiness or the impress of his own image upon us Prov. 11.20 The upright in the way are his delight When the spirit hath renewed us according to the Image of God we are made objects of his complacency now we know Gods love by the effects and therefore the more we act and draw forth this grace the more God rewardeth our obedience with the sense of his love and the comforts of his Spirit The sum of all Religion is to love God and to be beloved of him to love him and obey him is our work and to be beloved of him is our reward and happiness Now the one followeth the other John 14.22 23. Lord how is it that thou wilt manifest thy self to us and not unto the world Jesus answered and said unto him if a man love me he will keep my words and my Father will love him and we will come unto him and make our abode with him As we increase in Holiness and Obedience we increase in the Favour of God 1. VSE is Information it informeth us of several important truths 1. That the law is a law of perfect purity and holiness for he speaketh here of the righteousness of the law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so David Psal. 119.140 Thy law is very pure therefore thy servant loveth it and Psal. 19.8 The commandment of the Lord is pure inlightening the eyes It must needs be so if we consider the Author of it God himself and every thing that hath passed his hand hath his Character and Impress upon it 't is a law not only fit for us to receive but for God to give 't is the copy of his holiness It is all one with the image of God which man had in innocency now the image of God consisted in righteousness and true holiness Adams Principle of Obedience was also his law and rule he had that written upon his heart which was afterwards written upon tables of stone and therefore if a man would cleanse his heart and way he must study the Word of God Psal. 119.9 By what means may a young man cleanse his w●y by taking heed thereunto according to thy word 'T is not guide his way but cleanse his way for even the youngest are defiled Mans heart naturally is a sink of sin and there is no way to make his heart clean and his way clean but by taking Gods counsel in his Word A young man that is in the heat and strength of his lusts may learn there how to be purified and cleansed 2. That this law standeth in force We are freed from the condemning but not from the directing power thereof but it always remaineth as a rule of our new obedience Surely 't is in force now for there is no liberty given to men to live in sin God will not spare his people when they transgress it by scandalous or hainous sin Prov. 1.31 Therefore they shall eat of the fruit of their own way and be filled with their own devices Tho they be the dearly beloved of his soul the eternal punishment shall not be inflicted upon them yet they shall smart for the breaches of his law On the other side they find much incouragement comfort and peace when they set
The same is true of words also they declare the Life and Vigor of our spirits for there is a quick intercourse betwen the Tongue and the Heart 1 John 4.5 They are of the world and speak of the world and the world heareth them mens speeches are as their temper is Prov. 10.20 The tongue of the just is as choice silver but the heart of the wicked is little worth When the heart is stored with knowledg and biassed by spiritual affections they will inrich others with their holy savoury profitable discourse but a drowsie unsanctified heart in man bewrayeth it self by his speeches and communications with others 3. By actions or what we seek after If all our business be to gratifie the flesh Luk. 12.21 or sowing to the flesh Gal. 5.8 it argues a fleshly mind On the other side they that have a spiritual mind make it their business to grow in grace Phil. 3.13 This one thing I do forgetting the things that are behind I press forward towards the mark of the prize of the high calling in Christ Jesus They labour for spiritual and heavenly things John 17.27 Seek the things that are above Col. 3.1 They mind the things of the spirit 2. Comparitively so the mark must be interpreted The simple Consideration is not so convictive as the comparative 1. Partly because all minding the flesh is not sinful but an over-minding the Flesh the body hath its necessities and they must be cared for yea take the flesh for sensitive Appetite to please it with lawful satisfactions is no sin for it is a Faculty put into us by God and in due subordination to Religion may be pleased to please it by things forbidden is certainly a sin and to prefer it before the pleasing of God is a great sin indeed for it is a Character of them who are in a state of damnation that they are lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God 2 Tim. 3.4 Therefore tho we must observe our Thoughts Words and Actions Yet it must be thus interpreted not to condemn every act but that we may know in what proportion the vigor of mind is manifested and carried out to either of these Objects by Thoughts Words or Actions If our thoughts of the world shut out all thoughts of God Psal. 12.4 God is not in all their thoughts If our thinking of spiritual things be too rare unfrequent and unpleasing to us we are after the flesh so for words if we are heartless in our talk of heavenly things and we are in our element when speaking of carnal things and when a serious word is interposed for God we frown upon the motion so for actions compare mens care for the world with their care for their souls if they more earnestly and industriously seek to please the flesh than to save their souls it is a sign the flesh and its interests are predominant in them all things are done superficially and by the by in Religion not as becomes those that work from and for life with any diligence and Fervency There is no proportion between endeavours for the world and their preparations for eternal life all is earnest on one side but either nothing is done or in a very slight manner on the other side their thoughts and love and life and strength are wholly occupied and taken up about the things of the flesh 2. Partly Because we must distinguish between the sin of flesh-pleasing and the state of flesh pleasing for a man is to judg of his spiritual condition not by single acts but his state or the habitual frame of his heart Who is there among Gods own Children who doth not mind the flesh and too much indulge the flesh but they who make it their business to please the flesh are over careful about it Rom. 13.14 Who make provision for the Flesh to fulfil the lusts thereof And so indulge the minding of the flesh as not to mind the things of the spirit so that vain pleasures do exceed their delight in God and kill it yet more and more and bring a slavery upon themselves which they cannot help Tit. 3.3 Serving divers lusts and pleasures and being captivated by the fleshly part they have contracted a strangeness and enmity to God and his ways Rom. 8.7 They that have no relish for the joys of faith and the pleasures of Holiness and do habitually prefer the natural good of the body before the moral spiritual and eternal good both of body and soul these are in a state of carnality II. The Observations 1. This minding of the flesh must be interpreted not with respect to our former estate for alas all of us in times past pleased the flesh and walked according to the course of this world and had in time past our conversation in the lusts of the Flesh fulfilling the will of the Flesh and of the mind Eph. 2.3 It was God that loosed our shackles Tit. 3.3 We our selves were sometimes foolish disobedient deceived serving divers lusts and pleasures c. but after the kindness and love of God appeared towards mankind c. If we yet please the flesh we are not the servants of Christ but if we break off this servitude God will not judg us according to what we have been but what we are 2. To know what we are We must consider what Principle liveth in us and groweth and increaseth and on the other side what decreaseth the interest of the Flesh or the interest of the spirit for these two are contrary and the one destroyeth the other the love of the world and the flesh estrangeth us from God 1 John 2.15 Love not the world nor the things of the world if any man love the world the love of the father is not in him On the other side minding the things of the spirit deadneth our Affections to the world and the baits of the flesh The Conversation in Heaven is opposed to the minding of earthly things Phil. 3.19 20. Whose God is their belly whose glory is in their shame who mind earthly things but our conversation is in Heaven So much of affection as we give to the one we take from the other Col. 3.2 Set your affections on things above and not on things of the earth Now we are to consider if we grow more brutish forgetful of God unapt for spiritual things the flesh gaineth But if the spiritual inclination doth more and more discover it self with life and power in our Thoughts Words and Actions the flesh is in the wane and we shall be reckoned among those that walk not after the flesh but after the spirit we have every day a higher estimation of God and Christ and Grace and Heaven and thereby we grow more dead to other things 3. Some things more immediately tend to the pleasing of the flesh others more remotely Immediately as bodily Pleasures and therefore our inclinations to them are called fleshly lusts as distinguished from worldly lusts Tit. 2.12 or
know what is the hope of his calling and the riches of the glory of the inheritance of the Saints in light and 2 Pet. 1.9 He that lacketh these things is blind and cannot see afar off Nor of our duty for tho some moralities be evident to corrupt nature Rom. 2.14 Yet for a full resignation Obedience and Love to God Nature owneth little of it and depraved Reason is blind or sleepy so that we may have no clear deep sense of our duty impressed upon our hearts so as that conscience which is applicative reason should warn us of sin or mind us of our duty upon all necessary occasions 2. The commanding power is weakned For our sences are so masterly inordinate and eagerly set upon the Objects that we yield our selves to the conduct of them how unreasonable soever the acts are Tit. 3.3 For we our selves were sometimes foolish and disobedient serving divers lusts and pleasures living in malice and envy hateful and hating one another We give way to that which is evil and oppose that which is good even against the urgings of Conscience The law of our members warreth against the law of our minds Rom 6.22 And 't is a trouble to the flesh to be restrained from what it desireth as an headstrong Horse is loath to be curbed 2. Because as the leading part of the soul cannot hinder sin so it doth promote it and the more Wit and Wisdom we have if it be carnal the more is our enmity against God as appeareth by those men in a carnal estate who have most of natural Acquisitions the Devils cause is varnished by them and they prostitute all their sufficiencies to the interest of the flesh and to cast off the Government of God how many Wit themselves into Hell But it is common to all as appeareth by the two principal effects of the carnal minding Arguing and Contriving by these two the Malignity of the flesh doth most bewray its self 1. By the arguings of the flesh What carnal Reasons have men for every sin and against every duty which sheweth the corruption of Nature hath not not only taken hold of the Appetite and Senses but hath over-spread the Mind and Reason let any Temptation come to inordinate Pleasure they will palliate it and honest it with some excuse that the bait is soon swallowed or to unlawful gain by it they pretend they shall be inabled to do good to the Church of God if to honour and applause they will say Religion shall have the advantage of it so if the Temptation be against duty they will say that they will recompence it another time 2. By contriving Rom. 13.14 and make no more provision for the flesh to fulfil the lusts thereof Wherein do men usually spend their Time but in studying to please the flesh or to fulfil their fleshly desires all their Wit is wholly imployed to this end 1. VSE is Caution Not to stroke the carnal minding with a gentle censure as if it were no great matter it is enmity to God and if you indulge it you live in a state of Rebellion against him 't is an evil first as a wrong done to God whose we are and whom we should serve because 't is an usurping of the Government of our selves against Gods right as if we were at our own disposal as if we might do with our selves and faculties as we list without giving an account to an higher Lord now to rob God of his Authority over his Creature is no small evil Psal. 12.4 Who have said with our tongue we will prevail our lips are our own who is Lord over us To challenge any thing as our own is to affect to be as God Secondly 't is a wrong to our selves for so we set up our sences and appetite above our Reason and make the Beast ride the Man for the lower faculties rule when the mind is debauched to serve the flesh and to cater for it and contrive about it when it should govern our senses in order to our true happiness and felicity Jude 10. In what they know naturally in those things as brute beasts they corrupt themselves That is against the light of nature they ingulph themselves in all manner of sensuality Thirdly 't is a contempt of that glorious happiness which God hath provided for us Heb. 3.2 When Soul and Heaven and God and all Things are despised for our carnal ends how can we look upon it as a light sin Is it nothing to cast off God and Christ and despise our own souls and all the happiness of the world to come which God hath encouraged us to expect as if a little worldly transitory pleasure of sin were much better Fourthly 'T is the worse because it is natural your very natures being destitute of original Righteousness incline you to please the flesh before God so that this opposition against God being natural 't is first the more lasting for natural Antipathies are not easily broken and cured as that between the Wolf and the Lamb the Raven and the Dove and the spirit that dwelleth in us lusteth to envy Jam. 4.5 and Gen. 6.5 Every imagination of the thought of his heart is only evil continually We find it early we find it to be constant after Grace received the understanding is not so clear and watchful as it should be but a dark imperfect guide to us our will not so powerful as it ought to be the Wisdom of the flesh is kneaded into our natures that we cannot get rid of it and there is too great a rebellion in the Appetite and Sences and in the best a great averseness to their duty our reason still too often stoopeth to our sensuallity 1. 'T is the less to be pityed Accidental evil is matter of compassion but natural of indignation we pity a Dog poisoned but hate a Toad that is poisonous if it were only a slip of our natures or a frailty it were another thing but 't is the rooted disposition of our hearts we can better dispense with a fit of Anger than with cankered Malice a blow and away may be forgiven but an abiding enmity provoketh us to take rerevenge Thus 't is necessary to know the evil that we may seek after and admire the cure 2. VSE is To press us to come out of this estate of carnality Will you live in enmity against God 1. Can you make good your part against him 1 Cor. 10.22 Will you provoke the Lord to jealousie are you stronger than he Secondly He hath potestatem vitae necis Jam. 4.12 There is one law giver who is able to save and to destroy Thirdly God is an enemy to those that are enemies to him Psal. 5.5 He hateth all workers of iniquity And Psal. 7.11 12. He is angry with the wicked every day if he turn not he will whet his sword he will bend his bow and will make it ready Gods Justice if it doth for a while spare the
Belief of the threatnings of God from whence ariseth a sense of our sinful and miserable condition so far 't is good and useful Partly from an ill cause the Devil who delighteth to vex us with unreasonable terrors 1 Sam. 16.14 The spirit of the Lord departed from Saul and an evil spirit from the Lord vexed him The Devil both tempteth and troubleth as the Huntsman hideth himself till the poor Beast be gotten into the toile then he appeareth with shouts and cryes Partly from the corruption of mans heart which either turneth this work to an utter aversation from God or some perfunctory and unwilling way of serving him some know the right use of the Covenant others not and therefore we must consider not only how 't is wrought by the spirit but how 't is entertained by man through our corruption our conviction of sin and misery by the spirit turneth into Bondage and servitude 2. The spirit of bondage is better than a profane spirit Some cast off all thoughts of God and the World to come and are not so serious and mindful of religion as to be much troubled with any fears about their eternal condition it were happy for them if they were come so far as a spirit of Bondage they that are under it have a conscience of their duty but such as perplexeth them and lasheth and stingeth them with the dread and horror of that God whom they serve Now this is better than the prophane spirit that wholly forgets God Psa. 10.4 God is not in all their thoughts whether he be pleased or displeased honoured or dishonoured this may tend to good the gradus ad rem gradus in re Yea it may in some degree be consistent with sincerity for though to have no love to God is inconsistent with a state of grace or to have less love to God than sin yet to have more fear than love is consistent with some weak degree of grace especially if the case be so that love is less felt in act than fear and therefore though men are conscious to much backwardness yet keep up a seriousness though to their feeling 't is more fear than love which moveth them yet we dare not pronounce them graceless for there may be a love to God and a complacency in his ways though it be oppressed by fear that the spirit of adoption is not so much discovered for the time 3. That 't is an ill frame of spirit to be cherished or rested in For while men are under the sole and predominant influence of it they are never converted to God fear doth begin the work of conversion but love maketh it sincere the spirit by fear doth awaken men to make them see their condition terrifying them by the belief of Gods threatning and the sense of his indignation that they may flee from wrath to come Matth. 3.7 Or cry out What shall I do to be saved Acts 2.37 But yet tho they have a sensible work they have not a saving work Some by these fears are but troubled and restrained a little and so settle again in their sensual course but to their great loss for God may never give them like advantages again Others betake themselves to a kind of religiousness and forsake the practice of those grosser sins which breed their fears and so resting here continue in a state of hypocrisie and self-deceiving religiousness 1. USE is Information and Instruction to teach us how to carry it as to the spirit of Bondage First 't is not to be slighted partly from the matter which breedeth the fear and bondage which is the law of God the supreme rule and reason of our duty by which all debates of conscience are to be decided partly from the Author this sense of sin and misery is stirred up in us and made more active by the Operation of the Spirit of God partly from the faculty wherein 't is seated the conscience of a reasonable creature the most lively and sensible power of mans soul which cannot be pacified but upon solid grounds and reasons partly from the effect the fear of eternal death the greatest misery that can befall us for surely 't is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the Living God Heb. 10.31 To smother and stifle checks of conscience doth increase our misery not remove it and produceth hardness of heart and contempt of God therefore when our souls are at this pass that we see we are in bondage to sin and know not how to help it in bondage to wrath and know not how to quench these fears which are awakened in us by the spirit surely we should look after solid satisfaction and peace of soul setled on us upon Gospel Terms Run to the blood of sprinkling Heb. 10.20 2. Yet 't is not a thing to be chosen prayed for or rested in Partly because 't is a judiciary Impression a spark of Hell kindled in the conscience a tender conscience we may and must pray for but not a stormy conscience when we ask legal terrors we know not what we ask a belief of the threatnings belong to our duty as well as a belief of the promises but we must not so reflect upon terrors as to exclude the comfort and hope of the Gospel when under a spirit of Bondage we are in a most servile condition far from all solid comfort courage and boldness but is it not an help to conversion Answer Let God take his own way we are not to look after the deepness of the wound but the soundness of the cure not terrible representations of sin and wrath but such an anxiousness as will make us serious and solicitous partly because the Law-Covenant is an antiquated dispensation the law of nature bindeth not as a Covenant for the promise of life ceased upon the incapacity of the subjects when under a natural impossibility of keeping it the threatning and penalty lieth upon us indeed till we flee to another court and covenant The Jewish Covenant was abolished when Christ repealed the Law of Moses that Covenant dealt with us as servants the Gospel dealeth with us as sons in a more ingenuous way and inviting us to God upon nobler motives and partly from the nature of that fear that doth accompany it it driveth us from God not to God Gen. 3.5 Adam hid himself among the bushes and he gives us this reason because he was afraid and still we all fly from a condemning God but to a pardoning God we are incouraged to come nigh Psal. 103.4 There is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared In the wicked the fear of Gods Wrath once begun it increaseth daily till it come to the desperate fear of the damned and the fault is not in the law or in the spirit but in man who runneth from his own happiness and maketh an ill use of Gods Warnings 2. USE is to put us upon tryal and self-reflection All that attend upon Ordinances receive some spirit
It sheweth that there is an excellent state of happiness far beyond what we do now injoy provided for the people of God This is seen Partly because all things tend to it as to their great end and state of perfection there is a tendency in the inanimate creatures And Partly because the glory is so great that there must be a dissolution of the present world and a pure estate of things before we can have our happiness We admire the splendor of the present world are taken with earthly things too apt to place our happiness in them but this world must be purged and refined by fire before it can be capable to suit with that blessed estate of things which God hath appointed for his people God denieth not the splendor of the world as too good for his people but as too bad and base to be their Portion the delights of wicked men shall be burnt up before their eyes when he bestoweth their true happiness upon them There would not be else an harmony in all the parts of the World to come if there were not new Heavens and a new Earth This polluted state is not consistent with that happiness therefore when the Saints are perfected the world is restored 2. To quicken earnest expectation All things are carried to their end The little Seeds will work through the dry clods that it may come into Stalk and Flower The whole universe is directed and inclined to a more happy estate so should we look after our most perfect state the creatures by inclination wait for it and shall not we who are to have the chief part therein 3. To perswade the necessity of patience during our sufferings in the mean time We live in a groaning world and such as shall be first destroyed and then restored As the frame of the sublunary world being now in disorder and at length to be dissolved groaneth after a restauration So tho we be harrassed with afflictions and must at length die and this animated body be turned into a rotten carkase yet at length shall be raised up in Glory The points are Three 1. That the glorious priviledges of Gods children are manifested at the last day 2. That the state of the creatures is renewed when Gods children come to be manifested in their glory 3. That this estate of things ought earnestly to be desired and expected by us For the first point That the glorious priviledges of Gods children are manifested at the last day It supposeth that their estate and happiness is hidden for the present but then manifested Here we must enquire 1. How they are hidden 2. From whom 3. Why they are hidden 2. How they are manifested then and so we shall the better understand how the word is used in opposition to the present estate 1. They are hidden as to their persons 2. Their life is hidden 3. As to their priviledges and glorious estate First hidden as to their persons Now 't is little known who are Gods Children Christ himself was not known in the world 1 John 3.1 The world knoweth us not because it knew him not Much less are his People known For he did more to distinguish himself than they possibly can do But it shall be in time manifested who are Gods Children Mal. 3.18 Then shall he return and discern between the righteous and the wicked between him that serveth God and him that serveth him not Some pretend to be his children and servants others really are so 'T is not exactly known in the Winter when the Roots lie in the Earth we cannot tell what will appear in the Spring but when the Sun shineth in its strength and warmth the Bosom of the Earth things hidden then discover themselves As Moses told the Rebels in Num. 10. To morrow the Lord will shew who are his so in the Morning of the Resurrection the natural and only begotten Son is known Christ will appear in all his Royalty and Glory as the great God and Saviour of the World Titus 2.13 So all the Children of God are known They now lie hid among multitudes and swarms of sinful men but then Christ shall gather all nations and he shall separate the one from the other as a shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats Matth. 25.32 There shall be an eminent and sensible distinction of the one from the other beyond all power of mistakeing 2. Their life is hidden Col. 3.3 Our life is hidden with Christ in God Hidden not only in point of security as maintained by an invisible power but in point of obscurity there is a vail upon it how so Partly because the spiritual life is hidden under the vail of the natural life 't is a life within a life the spiritual life is nothing else but the natural life sublimated and overruled to higher and nobler ends Gal. 2.20 I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God They live in the flesh but they do not live after the flesh The Children of God eat and drink and sleep and marry and give in marriage as others do for when they are converted they do not divest themselves of the interests and concernments of flesh and blood but all these things are governed by grace and carried on to eternal ends The grace now or vital principle that ruleth this life is not seen tho the effects appear Partly Because of the vail of afflictions outward meanness and abasement Heb. 11.37 38. The world was not worthy of them yet they wandred about in sheep-skins and goat-skins and the dens and caves of the earth who would think that so much worth should lie hid under a base outside would any judge that these lived in the highest favour of God and constant communion with him who had so little of his protection and common bounty That they should have so near a relation to God and yet be so miserably poor and destitute That those that want Bread should be heirs of a kingdom Jam. 2.5 That they that feel the hand of God upon them so heavy and smart sometimes should have so much of his heart Partly under the vail of reproaches and calumnies 1 Pet. 4.6 They are judged according to men in the flesh yet live to God in the spirit They are represented in the world as a company of dissemblers and hypocrites and yet in the mean while are the sincere servants and children of God 2 Cor. 6.8 As deceivers and yet true The world counteth them deceivers but God counteth them faithful By the reproach of the world as Husbandmen by soil and dung God maketh his heritage the more fruitful those that have a mind to hate will take up every prejudice against the people of God and will not easily be dispossessed of it And Partly because there is another vail upon good Christians and that is the vail of infirmities by which they
men Man hath brought a burden on the Creation and the encrease of wicked men sheweth the ruine of any people or countrey Prov. 11.10 11. When it goeth well with the righteous the city rejoiceth and when the wicked perish there is shouting By the blessing of the upright the city is exalted but it is overthrown by the mouth of the wicked The meaning of these two Proverbs is That the godly bring on a blessing on the Land where they live and the wicked a curse The godly bring on a blessing by their prayers and holy example Gods Providence and respect thereunto but the wicked a curse by their abuse of the creatures The corrupt world think otherwise That all their dishonour their judgments come from suffering the godly to live amongst them 'T is not for the Kings profit to suffer them to live Hest. 3.8 3. That we must not ascribe the alterations and changes of the creature to chance or fortune but to Gods Providence punishing mans sin Some do not see the hand of God as ignorant stupid and careless persons Psal. 28.5 They regard not the work of the Lord nor the operation of his hands And some care not to see Isa. 26.11 When thy hand is lifted up they will not see They put all Judgments upon the ordinary course of second causes either a chance 1 Sam. 16 9. or attribute it to some natural thing Joh. 12.29 They said it thundred when God spake from Heaven to own Christ. Some see but are in part blinded with malice and prejudice which is to be seen by their making perverse interpretations of Providence 2 Sam. 16.8 Toe Lord hath returned upon thee all the blood of the house of Saul 4. You see a reason why a righteous man should be merciful to his beast Prov. 12.10 A righteous man regardeth the life of his beast but the tender mercies of the wicked are cruel There is burden enough already upon the creature under which he groaneth he would bring on no more than needeth he will not use them unmercifully nor wear them out with too great and continual labours but giveth them that food rest and refection which is necessary In the destruction of Niniveh God had respect to the beasts Jonah 4.11 There was much cattel in that city 5. The wonderful dulness and dead-heartedness of man in case of sin and misery so that the creatures are fain to supply our room few are sensible of this burden we should all groan but do not Surely we ought to be excited to groan for sin and misery and long for the happiness of the Saints so v. 23. And not only they but we our selves also which are the first fruits of the spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our bodies 6. The great need there is to draw off our hearts from the inordinate love of the creature and to lay up treasure in Heaven What can we expect from a groaning creature which will soon come to an end but that only we wholly trust sense and judg according to present appearance Otherwise we would say with the Apostle We know and look further than the compass of this world to that place where all is firm and stable but we seldom improve these thoughts 7. How unsuitable sensual rejoycing is unto the state which we are now in 't is a groaning world and here we seek all our pleasures and contentments 't is a charge against Sensualists Jam. 5.5 Ye have lived in pleasure upon earth The place of our exile the place defiled with mans sin the place subjected to a curse for mans sake Moderate contentment is allowed us during our pilgrimage as appears both by the dispensation of Gods Providence and Covenant but our full joy is reserved for hereaf●er his Providence alloweth many natural comforts and his Covenant many perpetual blessings SERMON XXX ROM VIII 23 And not only they but our selves also who have the first fruits of the spirit groan even we ourselves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption the redemption of our bodies IN these Words the Apostle pursueth his main scope which is to direct believers patiently to wait for their final happiness He doth it by comparing the disposition of the children of God with the inclination of the creatures spoken of in the former verses and not only they c. There is a Comparison 1. Between Persons and Persons 2. Between Actions and Actions 1. Between Persons and Persons The whole creation and those that have the first fruits of the spirit The one is a feigned the other a real Person Therefore this groaning and expectation is attributed to the children of God with greater propriety of speech The creatures are said to groan and wait upon supposition if they had sense and reason they would groan and wait we by certain knowledg and true desire the creatures groan as they are assisted and directed by God to a better state we by voluntary inclination the creatures groan by others as they excite our thoughts to consider their vanity and vicissitudes the Saints by themselves and in themselves others cannot perform it for them they expect by Gods direction and groan by our meditation but we properly and without a figure 2. Actions and Actions There are two ascribed to the creature waiting v. 19 groaning v. 22. They groan and we groan they wait and we wait the groaning is amplified by the mannner and the waiting by the Object 1. The groaning is amplified by the manner It may be rendred among our selves the whole Church of God groaneth as well as the whole Creation or rather in our selves ex imo corde these groans came from the bottom of the heart 2. The waiting is amplified by the object or matter which they wait for For the adoption the redemption of our bodies The last expression explaineth the former our full Adoption and Redemption which shall be accomplished at the general Resurrection Doct. That those that have received the first fruits of the spirit do groan and wait for a better estate than they now enjoy I shall speak of this Point 1. By way of Explication 2. By way of Confirmation For Explication 1. The description of the Persons We that have the first fruits of the spirit The expression alludeth to the customs of the law where the offering of the first fruits sanctified the whole heap Rom. 11.16 For if the first fruits be holy the lump also is holy Thence 't is applied to any such beginnings as are a pledg of more to ensue as here the first fruits of the spirit are the pledges and beginnings of eternal life What are they The graces and comforts of the spirit First the graces salvation is begun in our new birth Titus 3.5 But according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost And sanctifying grace is called an immortal and incorruptible seed 1 Pet.
peace with God but his going off from the world and must believe not only to the pardon of sins but also to Eternal life 1 Tim. 1.16 For this cause I obtained mercy that in me first Jesus Christ might shew forth all long-suffering for a pattern to them that should afterwards believe on him to everlasting life There is the final and ultimate object of faith which must be first thought of for all things are influenced by the last end when we are invited to Christ we are invited by this motive That sinners shall not only be pardoned but glorified Therefore a true and well grounded hope of Eternal life is a more weighty point than we usually think of and a great part of Religion lyeth in drawing off the heart from things visible and temporal to those that are invisible and Eternal The great effects of faith which are love to God and victory over the world are more easily produced when faith hath the assistance of hope or this lively expectation of the world to come Therefore we must not only consider the death of Christ as it hath procured for us the pardon of sin or the promise of pardon But as he dyed for us that we might live for ever with him 1 Thes. 5.9 that so the soul may more directly and expresly be carried to God and Heaven 4. It informeth us That none can be saved without hope of salvation A Christian as soon as he is made a Christian hath not the good things promised by Christ but as soon as he is made a Christian he expecteth them As an heir is rich in hope though he hath little in possession Take any notion of applying grace as soon as we are justified we are made heirs according to the hope of Eternal life Tit. 3.7 as soon as we are converted and regenerated we are begotten to a lively hope 1 Pet. 1.3 and as soon as we are united to Christ Col. 1.27 Christ in you the hope of glory And without hope how can a man act as a Christian since the whole business of the world is done by hope certainly the whole spiritual life is quickned by this grace Titus 2.12 13. For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared unto all men teaching us that denying all ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously godly in the present world looking for the blessed hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ. And Phil. 3.20 21. for our conversation is in Heaven from whence we look for the Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body But then here ariseth a great doubt how far every man is bound to hope for salvation For those that have no assurance of their own sincerity and cannot unquestionably make out their propriety and interest how can they hope for salvation Answer To solve this doubt we must consider a little the several states of men as they stand concerned in everlasting life some have but a bare possibility others have a probability a third are gotten so far as a conditional certainty others have an actual certainty or firm perswasion of their own right and interest 1. To some the hope of Heaven is but a bare possibility as to the careless Christian who is yet intangled in his lusts but God continueth to them the offer of salvation by Christ they may be saved if they will accept this offer 't is brought home to their doors and left to their choice 'T is impossible indeed in the state in which they are but their hearts may be changed by the Lords grace Mark 10.27 With men 't is impossible but not with God for with God all things are possible He can make the filthy heart to become clean and holy the sensual heart to become spiritual and heavenly There are many bars in the way but grace can break through and remove them This possibility checketh scruples and aggravateth their evil choice for they forsake their own mercies Jonah 2.8 by their vain course of life they deprive themselves of happiness which might be theirs 't is their own by offer for God did not exclude them but not their own by choice for they excluded themselves judge themselves unworthy of eternal life Acts 13.46 This possibility is an incouragement to use the means Acts 8.22 Pray if perhaps or if it be possible the thought of thine heart may be forgiven thee 2. Others have a probability or a probable hope of Eternal life as when men begin to be serious or in some measure to mind the things of God but are conscious to some notorious defect in their duty or have not such a soundness of heart as may warrant their claim to everlasting blessedness as we read of almost Christians Acts 20.28 and not far from the kingdom of Heaven Mark 10.24 and such are all those which have only the grace of the second or third ground they receive the word with joy but know not what tryals may do they have good sentiments of Religion but they are much choaked and obstructed by voluptuous living or the cares of the world Luke 8.14 yea some such thing may befall weak believers They dare not quit their hopes of Heaven for all the world but cannot actually lay claim to it and say 't is theirs Now probabilities must incourage us till we get a greater certainty for we must not despise the day of small things and 't is better to be a seeker than a wanderer 3. A conditional certainty which is more than possible or probable That is when we adhere to Gods covenant and set our selves in good earnest to perform the conditions required in the promises of the Gospel expecting this way the blessings offered as for instance the hope is described by Paul Acts 24.15 16. And have hope towards God which they themselves also allow that there shall be a resurrection of the dead both of the just and the unjust and herein do I exercise my self to have always a conscience void of offence towards God and towards men there is such a dependance upon the promise as breedeth an hope and this hope puts upon strict and exact walking such a conditional certainty is described in Rom. 2.7 Who by patient continuance in well doing seek for glory honour immortality and eternal life I am sure to find salvation and Eternal life if I self-denyingly and patiently continue this way and by the grace of God I am resolved so to continue Now there is much of hope in this partly because this is the hope which is the immediate effect of regeneration The hope that is the fruit of experience and belongeth to the seasoned and tryed Christian who hath approved himself hearsay is another thing Rom. 5.4 and partly because this suiteth with Gods covenant or the conditional offer of Eternal life according to the terms of the Gospel where the
●s above others for that we cannot know till we love him but his common love and mercy to sinners and that was manifested in Christs being sent as a propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but for the sins of the whole world 1 John 2.2 This is that which is propounded to us to recover and reconcile our alienated and estranged affections to God 2 Cor. 5.19 God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself This grace God offereth to us as well as to others namely that God for Christs sake will pardon our sins if we will but forbear further hostility and enter into his peace None are bound to believe that God especially loveth them but those that are specially beloved by him for none are bound to believe a falshood and a falshood it is to us till we have the saving effects and benefits and therefore it is not the special but the general love of God which draweth in our hearts to him yea his Saints after some testimonies received of Gods special love make this to be the great engaging motive Gal. 2.20 I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me 2. There is a special love when this grace is applied to us Eph. 2.4 5. But God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith he loved us when we were dead in trespasses and sins He did not begin to love us when we were converted that is of a more ancient and eternal rise but then he did begin to apply his love to us and this no ordinary but great love when God was angry with us and pronounced death on us in the sentence of his law then he quickned us and reconciled us to himself when his law represented him as an enemy and in the course of his Providence he appeared as an enemy and the apprehensions of our guilty fears bespeak him an enemy then did God for Christs sake bestow his converting grace upon us Now 't is a great advantage to draw nigh to God as a reconciled Father and actually in covenant with us surely this is and will be the object of our everlasting love and joy Rom. 5.18 And a notable prop of confidence in prayer could we once believe that he dearly loveth us and is actually reconciled to us and taketh us for his children and delighteth in our prosperity Oh how chearfully should we come into his presence John 16.27 The Father himself loveth you because you have loved me and believed that I came out from God We have then not only his own intercession but the Fathers especial love as the ground of our audience and acceptance Now this particular interest dependeth on something wrought in our souls by the holy Spirit our Lord mentioneth two things their faith in Christ and love to God or a thankful acceptance of him as our Lord and Saviour love to God or a thankful obedience to him John 14.22 23. We cannot perceive our special interest in the love of God but by the evidences of our sincerity when we see Gods love tokens in our hearts faith and love wrought in us by his spirit then we may know that he loveth us by this special love the question is Doth God love me Hath he given his Spirit How shall I know that Answer By the Effects Do you believe in Jesus Christ How shall I know my faith is sincere and the faith of Gods Elect Doth it work by love Gal. 5.6 How shall I know that I love God The acts of sincere love are seeking after God and delighting in him if you cannot find the latter the former is a comfortable evidence Prov. 8.17 I love them that love me and they that seek me early shall find me The desiderium unionis the desirous seeking love if it be serious and earnest it is sincere tho you find not such delightful apprehensions of his grace to you clear this once and when you come to pray you may know that God loveth you with a special love the dearest friend we have in the world doth not love us the thousand part so much as he doth nay as Valdesso saith the highest Angel doth not love God so much as he loveth the lowest Saint God loveth like himself becoming the greatness and infiniteness of his own Being and with this perswasion pray to him 2. Gods love is not a cold and uneffectual love That consists only in raw wishes but an operative active love that issueth forth to accomplish what he intendeth to us tho by the most costly means and at the dearest rates God is good and doth good Psal. 119.68 He hath a love to us and will do good to us our love many times goeth no further than good wishes and good words be warmed be cloathed but give not those things which are needful to the body Jam. 2.26 Our Lord rested not in kind wishes but giveth a full demonstration of his love if Christ be needful for the Saints they shall have him God spared not his own Son 3. 'T is a great love such as may raise our wonder and astonishment and so may enlarge our expectations and capacities for the reception of other things Eph. 3.18 19. That ye may with all saints comprehend what is the heighth and breadth the length and depth and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledg that ye may be filled with all the fulness of God There is such an infiniteness and immensity in this love of God in Christ as raiseth our desires and hopes to expect all other things from him which belong to our happiness if God will do this what will he not do for those whom he loveth he that hath given a talent will not he give a peny We confidently go to one with a request who hath done some great thing for us already What greater thing could there be than his giving his Son to die for a sinful world John 13. 13. Greater love hath no man than that he lay down his life for his friends We were not friends in state but only friends in his purpose nay we were actual enemies but reconciled and brought into friendship by his death No man can express greater love to his dearest friends than to adventure to die for them This did Christ for us 4. 'T was a love expressed to us when our case was not only difficult but desperate and remediless as to any other agent Isa. 56.16 And he saw that there was no man and wondred that there was no intercessor therefore his own arm wrought salvation for us Psal. 40.8 The redemption of the soul is precious and ceaseth for ever Like perplexities often occurring in the Churches case 2 Chron. 22.12 O our God wilt thou not judg them for we have no might against this great company that cometh against us neither know we what to do but our eyes are unto thee And Esth. 3.14 When the writing was signed and sent abroad
None other please God Page 70 Spirit of Renovation what Page 162 Precedes Adoption Page 169 Reprieve forfeited by us Page 3 Religion what Page 36 Of carnal men what Page 107 Every man will have some Page 107 What its end Page 109 Reaping as we sow Page 95 Resignation of our selves to God nature knows not Page 65 Resisting is in part conquering Page 370 Resist not the spirit a Sanctifier Page 150 'T is dangerous Page 150 Rewards and punishments necessary Page 21 143 Lawful to look to them Page 142 143 Radication of Grace Page 82 Reason enslaved in flesh-pleasers Page 117 Rejoycing sensually very unsuitable to our state Page 204 Repentance what Page 34 36 Necessary to begin our interest in New-Covenant Page 36 Reverence and filial fear Page 165 Rigors external and Popish not acceptable Page 121 Restraining Grace Page 122 Resurrection whence Page 92 Effected by the Spirit of holiness now dwelling in Believers Page 93 Is work of the whole blessed Trinity Page 94 Of the spirit and Christ Page 95 Blessed Resurrection to holy ones Page 95 Onely of man Page 201 Resurrection of Christ influenceth our Iustification Page 346 How Page 347 Rights and Prerogatives of children of God Page 206 Right we have is limited of trust and accountable Page 101 196 Lest by the fall yet witked men have a civil Right Page 196 Rule of Believers obedience Page 73 S SAcrament of Lords Supper what Page 32 Spirit of Adoption suits it well Page 167 Hope suits it Page 235 Safety is to keep our selves from our selves Page 49 Is in our Iustification Page 237 Sacrifices for sin and their effects Page 31 Sanctification imperfect matter of wailing Page 1 Is obedience to the better principle in a subject is denial of following the worst principle Page 1 6 How wrought and increased Page 6 Effect intended by the death of Christ Page 34 35 Accompanieth Iustification Page 35 Comfort grows with it Page 150 Satans hand in our afflictions to draw us from God Page 365 Satans design against God and man in his tempting us and how defeated Page 29 He burrieth some into sin Page 40 Is executioner Page 97 Rules where spirit of God doth not dwell Page 98 Satisfaction to God Iudge Page 342 Seal of the spirit what and why given Page 42 96 Sanction of a Law what Page 12 Scripture witness is the spirits witness Page 172 Self-love blindeth us Page 253 Senses must be kept under the government of Reason Page 116 Shame of Believers turned into Glory Page 185 Sincerity for a time in particular things Page 260 Yet man hypocrite Page 286 Sin indwelling breeds fear of condemnation Page 1 Every new sin makes our claim doubtful Page 8 205 Ever hurts us Page 103 Lives tho dying in believers Page 119 124 125 All kinds of Sin in Believers Page 126 127 Each Sin hath several ways of acting Page 127 128 Is Mortal if not mortified Page 128 What Sin consistent with life Page 234 Sin condemned what Page 31 It s double power destroyed Page 32 Sin is a disesteem of God Page 144 108 Seen aright onely by the light of the spirit Page 133 Think of it as 't is greatest evil Page 144 All that came in by Sin shall be destroy'd Page 201 Is enemy to all creatures Page 213 State of man fourfold Page 205 Soul propends to its old friend and mate the body Page 97 Slaves are they who cannot peruse true happiness Page 204 Slavish fear what Page 63 153 Service what Page 154 When prevails Page 158 Far from Conversion Page 160 Sons of God Page 150 How we are Page ib. Subsistences three in the Divine Nature Page 64 Subjection to God inseperable to the creature Page 102 108 Spirit what Page 6 In every Christian Page 74 80 82 Prevalent Page 77 82 And how known Page 7 Its object Page 7 Given by Christ Page 9 17 What Page 14 Somewhat of the Spirit given to Heathens Page 17 18 More to Iews Page ib. Most to us in hearing the Gospel Page 18 All Believers have it but not in equal degrees Page 19 Evidence of having it Page 20 Spirit of Bondage and Adoption Page 25 Acteth grace in Believers Page 40 Things of the Spirit Page 47 To be minded more Page 52 53 To be chosen and valued pursued and sought in Gods way Page 54 Above other things and with Prayer Page 53 Spiritual mindedness what Page 59 Spirit Of Adoption what Page 61 Spirit Not to be resisted but obeyed universally constantly Page 78 79 What to have the Spirit Page 81 Without it we can do nothing Page 83 Is such evidence of true Christians Page 83 84 Its qualities Page 84 Effects Page 85 Never given in anger Page 85 Procure the Spirits presence Page 85 Get more of it and how Page 86 What it is Page 93 Is an eternal principle of happiness Page 90 How he dwells in Christians Page 93 94 Cause of our Resurrection Page 95 96 98 139 Mindeth us of our duty Page 100 Co-operates in Mortification Page 152 153 And how Page 132 133 135 136 Guides the godly Page 146 Sweetly and effectually Page 151 Supports Page 245 T TAste of things shews what men are Page 56 118 Temptations suited by Satan to hearts Page 116 Matter of groaning Page 217 Terrors of conscience restrain from sin Page 122 Foretaste of Hell Page 184 Thoughts discover what we are Page 43 45 56 Are of three kinds Page 55 Good of God to be cherished Page 159 Deep and ponderous about eternal things Page 185 Are known seen by God Page 257 Threats sure Page 111 Verified in Christs death Page 112 Lawfully used now against sinners Page 112 Of use to Adam innocent Page 112 Temporal things bewitch such as compare them not with eternal Page 182 How these should be compared Page 182 183 Trinity engaged distinctly in the work of our Salvation Page 14 Glorified in it Page 35 Unfolded Page 94 Temple of holy Spirit eternally shall glorified Bodies and Souls be Page 184 Tenderness of Spirit least we omit good or commit ill Fruit of love and spirit of Adoption Page 165 Tender hearts of Gods children most sensible of afflictions and sorrows Page 218 More burdened by sin Page 218 Testimony of Scripture is Testimony of the Spirit Page 172 Discovers what is done in us by grace Page ib. 173 With conscience which proceeds with reason Page ib. And both concur to the same Testimony Page 173 What to be done to get it Page 174 Titles tho greatest yet less than this Title Children of God Page 169 Torments for the bad after this life Page 22 Tryals in highest degrees to be respected by us Page 359 These discover our graces and what Page 360 361 Tribulations what Page 351 All conquered by our fervent love of Christ Page 370 And its appendages foreseen and felt to differ Page 371 Troubles of Christians many and great Page 372 And why Page 353 Truths tho small must be
and discomposed In this life the Saints are tossed up and down but there is a quiet resting place prepared for them where the Soul reposeth her self with all Spiritual delights after her labour and Travail Here is our Tent there our House our House is where our goods are In Heaven we enjoy the Treasures which were laid up there before Rev. 14.13 Luk. 12.33 A Treasure in the Heavens that fadeth not There is all our comfort 'T is a Capacious House Joh. 14.2 In my Fathers House are many Mansions that will hold all the Children of God who at last shall be gathered together There is abundance of Room in Heaven 'T is not carnally to be conceived as if Heaven were to be divided into so many cells But to note that many shall be admitted into that Blessed rest through the Love of God and the merits of Christ. Oh! Let us oftner think of this Blessed House Here we have but a Tent the Body is often afflicted And after that dissolved torn and taken down But then an House that we shall never change where we shall live sweetly and securely without trouble of enemies 2dly This House is described 1. By the efficient cause expressed negatively and positively 1. Negatively the false cause is removed an House not made with hands Not built by man of Terrestrial and Feculent Matter not contrived with mans art and care or skill things made by man are not comparable to things made by God For as the workman is so is the work Man being a finite Creature limited and confined his work cannot be absolute as God's is the Holy places made by Bezaleel and Aboliah had their Glory but they were nothing comparable to the Holy places not made with hands Heb. 9.24 Those were figures These are true Whatever God doth it is done in a more Glorious manner he discovereth his Magnificence in the work 2dly The true cause is assigned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Building of God So 't is called Rom. 5.2 We rejoice in hope of the Glory of God God raised this House out of the greatest wisdom and highest love An House to shew the Riches and Glory and Honour of him that made it So where Heaven is compared to a City 't is said Heb. 11.10 He looked for a City which had Foundations whose builder and maker is God He is the Builder or Architect that doth frame and devise it according to model and he is the workman that did set it together man hath no hand in this at all God contrived it and prepared it 'T is so far above the Art and Power of man that only God could make it God is not only the principal but sole efficient of it 2dly By the adjunct 't is an eternal House All other Houses moulder to dust cernimus exemplis oppida posse mori all other buildings are infirm and moveable obnoxious to change decay and ruine experience doth sufficiently prove this by the ruine of so many Castles Palaces Cities and Kingdoms which have flourished in great Splendour Power and Strength yet now lye in the dust and do not appear But this City hath Foundations Heb. 11.10 Nothing can be firm that is not firmly fixed upon an unmoveable Ground But this hath Foundations the unchangeable Law of God and the everlasting merits of Christ. 3dly The place where 't is situated In the Heavens The place where God doth manifest himself in a more glorious manner than here upon earth which is a Common Inn for Sons and Bastards a Receptacle for Sinners and Saints yea for man and beast where God sheweth his bounty to all his Creatures A valley of tears where is the place of our Tryal and exercise But this is the place of our recompence there God will manifest himself in the greatest latitude that the Creature is capable of we shall have a place agreeable to our state and a state agreeable to the place The paviment is very Glorious The Starry Heaven we cannot look upon it without wonder and astonishment Adam's happiness was in an Earthly Paradise but ours is in Heaven Eph. 1.3 We have such a Glorious place and Glorious company That happy Region of the Blessed which is properly called the Heavenly Jerusalem doth as much excell all other Countries in height amplitude and beauty as the Inhabitants excel the Inhabitants of other Countries in wisdom nobleness and grace For sublimity The Stars seem to be like so many spangles for the distance 'T is above all Mountains Elements Sun Moon and Stars So far is it distant from the place of vicissitudes and changes And then for its Breadth as well as height some Stars have a body bigger than vast Countries yea than the whole Earth Then what is the capacity of Heaven it self For Beauty This world that is a stable for beasts the place of our exile the valley of tears hath a great deal of Beauty What hath God bestowed then upon Heaven Oh! When we shall meet with all the Holy ones of God then how shall we rejoice And the Innumerable Company of Angels that shall all join in Consort There is no pride or envy to divide us or make us Contemn one another but Love and Charity reigneth that the good of every one is the good of all and the good of all the good of every one There is one Body one Heart one Soul and one God that is all in all Whence is it that one Citizen loveth another rather than a stranger one Brother loveth another rather than another man that the head loveth the feet of his own Body rather than the Eyes of another Namely that Citizens dwell in one Common City or they are one Common House and are of the same stock members live by conjunction of the same life What conjunction then what love between the Blessed that have one God one Country one Palace one Life How sweet will this friendship be where there is no weakness to pervert or corrupt it After we have gotten through a short life here in the world this will be our portion Assoon as we do but step into this House we bid our everlasting farewel unto all sin and sorrow and step into it we do assoon as we dye in a moment in the twinckling of an Eye But above all what Joy is in the sight of God! 1 Joh. 3 2. We shall be like him for we shall see him as he is Oh then let us get a Title to it and be able with clearness to make out our qualification by two witnesses Conscience and the Spirit Rom. 8.16 the Spirit it self beareth witness with our Spirit that we are the Children of God As in the mouth of two witnesses every thing is established God never giveth Heaven but he giveth earnest 2 Cor. 1.22 Who hath also sealed us and given us the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts God never giveth Heaven to any but first he prepareth and fitteth them for it Col. 1.12 Giving thanks
will never be day The possibility removeth prejudices aggravateth their evil choice Jonah 2.8 They that observe lying Vanities forsake their own mercies they are called their own because they might have been theirs By following vain Courses they deprive themselves of happiness which might have been theirs 'T is their own by offer God did not seclude and put them away but they did seclude and put away themselves Judge themselves unworthy of Eternal Life Acts 13.46 And 't is an incouragement when their Consciences are touched with any remorse Salvation is yet possible When there is but a slender possibility yet use the means Acts 8.22 Repent and pray c. If perhaps or if it be possible 2. To others there is a probability or a probable hope of Eternal Life This is more than possible as when men begin to be serious or in some measure to mind the things of God but are Conscious to some notorious defect in their duty or have not such a soundness of Heart as may warrant their claim to Everlasting Blessedness almost a Christian not far from the Kingdom of God As those that have the Grace of the Second or Third ground they receive the Word with joy but know not what tryals may do they have good sentiments of Religion but they are choaked or obstructed by voluptuous living or the cares of this world Now some such things may befall weak believers they dare not quit their hopes of Heaven for all the world though not actually to claim it or say it is theirs Now probabilities must incourage us till we get a greater certainty for we must not despise the day of small things This state must not be despised Christ will not despise smoaking flax 3dly A Conditional certainty which is more than probable or possible That is when we set our selves in good earnest to perform the Conditions required in the promises of the Gospel And upon the hopes offered to us deny our selves Sacrifice our Interests heartily exercise our selves to Godliness Such a certainty is described Rom. 2.7 Rev. 2.10 I am sure to find Salvation and Eternal Life if I continue in this way and by the grace of God I am resolved to continue Much of the Life of Christianity lyeth in this kind of certainty I do not doubt of the rewards of Godliness ex parte Dei No I know that the rewards of Godliness are sure and stedfast by his promise To doubt of that would detract from the Truth Goodness and Power of God But ex parte nostri my own qualification is not so positive and clear that I can determine my own right but I have support and some comfort in this way This Conditional hope and certainty is absolutely necessary to all acts of grace 4thly There is an actual certainty or an assured sense of our qualification and so of our Interest which admits of a latitude it may be not only full or not full firm or not firm but interrupted or continued The full hope removeth all doubts and fears and that which is not full hath some doubts accompanying it but the certainty prevaileth and is more than the doubtings We should Sail to Heaven with full Sails and get as much sense of the love of God and hope of eternal life as possibly we can an abundant entrance We should clear up our Right and Title and be able to say We know And I am persuaded Rom. 8.38 We should come and take possession of the Blessings of the Covenant and say all this is mine by the promise of the faithful God We use to say I know where I am but I know not where I shall be A Believer who hath assured his estate before God knoweth where he shall be as truly as he knoweth where he is He knoweth by Faith that he shall live with God for ever and what he will do for him to all Eternity in the performance of his Holy Covenant 3dly What reasons there are why we should attend upon this Work 1. Because 't is for our greater comfort not only to be safe but to know that we are safe Some have Salvation belonging to them but they know it not As the Child liveth before he knoweth that he liveth As Jacob said of Bethel Gen. 28.16 God was in this place and I knew it not So it may be said of many Christians Christ is in them and they know it not are not aware of it Oh how happy they if they knew their own happiness What delight would the hope of glory raise in their hearts How full of tears and despairs was Hagar when yet there was a Well nigh her Gen. 21.16 How pensive were the two Disciples going to Emmaus when yet Christ walked with them but they knew him not Luke 24.15 16 17. How bitterly did Mary weep at the Sepulchre when yet Jesus stood by her John 20.14 15. So many poor disconsolate Christians apprehend that Christ is at a distance when as yet they will not or cannot see him Therefore though our condition should be safe 't is not so comfortable till we get assurance 2. This certain confidence of our actual right and future possession cannot be had without diligence Such a Jewel will never drop into the mouth of the lazy negligent Soul 2 Pet. 1.10 2 Pet. 3.14 Heb. 6.11 If we would have not a groundless but a rational hope not a rash and probable but a firm and certain hope not a certain only but a full hope and this to continue without interruption We must buckle to it serve God in good earnest It will never be gotten and kept with sloath it may be gotten and kept with diligence As you neglect your duty so far the sense and comfortable assurance of your qualification may abate Gods best Children are sometimes remiss whereupon follow clouds and desertions to their great discomfort God in wisdom withdraweth comfort to quicken them to their Duty Well then 't will not come with a cold wish or a slight prayer or an hasty sigh or a faint and lazy pursuit Grace needeth to be much exercised than shall bring peace Exercised in Duties John 14.21 23. Exercised in Afflictions Those lazy pretenders that never made a business of it and yet hope to go to Heaven as well as the strictest they do but deceive themselves with an hope that will at length leave them ashamed Foolish presumption costs a man nothing like a Mushroom that groweth up in a night or as Jonahs Gourd Behold thou didst not labour for it The less men exercise themselves unto Godliness the more confident for exercise would discover their unsoundness A peace that groweth upon us we know not how and is better kept by negligence than diligence is not right 3. We should attend upon this work with all diligence because though we get it not we shall not labour in vain the very endeavour will keep us awful and serious and it may be we shall get Heaven whilst we are
Tears and Snares Blessed be God that there are any hopes mingled with our Tears therefore they groan and desire earnestly Fevv and evil are the days of the years of my Pilgrimage said holy Jacob Gen. 47.7 Our days are evil and 't is well they are but few That in this Shipwrack of mans felicity we can see banks and shores and a landing place where we may be safe Here all our days are Sorrow and our Travel grief but there is our repose There are many things to wean a Christian from the present life Manifold temptations from Satan grievous Persecutions from the world and sharp afflictions from God himself All these may be ranked under the head of miseries 1. Manifold temptations from Satan who seeketh all advantages either to dissuade us from serving God or distract us in it 1 Pet. 5.8 9. All these things are accomplished in our Brethren which are in the flesh They are all acquainted with a busy Tempter who seeketh to insnare their Souls and this is one of a Christians burthens that in this world which is Satans walk and Circuit they meet with so many snares laid for them 2. Bitter and grievous Persecutions which sometimes make them weary of their lives hard Task masters that trouble them 2 Thes. 1.6 7. To you that are troubled rest with us but before the rest cometh they groan and long 3. Sharp afflictions from God himself God is jealous of our hearts because we are not watchful over them we are apt to take up with an earthly happiness and to root here and look no farther whil'st we have all our comforts about us our hearts say 't is best being here but God awakeneth us our of our drouzy fits Arise depart hence this is not your rest Micah 2.10 We are so pleased with our entertainment by the way that we forget home God is fain to imbitter our worldly portion that we may think of a remove to some better place and state where all Tears shall be wiped from our eyes We would sleep here and rest here if we did not sometimes meet with thorns in our Bed 2dly The next Reason of our groaning is our having had a tast of better things Rom. 8.23 We that have within our selves the first fruits of the Spirit groan within our selves waiting for the Adoption the Redemption of our Bodies A Christian here is unsatisfied he waiteth for a better and surer state of Bliss and Immortality The first fruits shew us what the Harvest will be and the tast what the Feast will prove 1. This Vnion and Communion with Christ is not perfect We are one Spirit by being joyned to the Lord but yet many things hinder this Union from being full we have but a glimpse of Christ as he sheweth himself through the lattis But there we shall see him with open Face Here sometimes he affords sometimes he withdraws his presence But there ever with the Lord and the Lord with us Here we get a little from him in an Ordinance and that little is as much as we can hold but there he is all in all and we are filled up with the fulness of God Christ in us now is the hope of glory but Christ in us then is the fruition of glory Col. 1.27 Here we enjoy him in part and by Faith there we shall enjoy him to the full This mighty Sea is pent up and floweth now by so narrow a Channel that it cannot diffuse its self but his interest is not crouded up there is full room for Christ in the Soul 2. Our Holiness is not perfect and therefore we groan and long for more There is much corruption left the new nature is called the Seed of God 1 John 1.9 and the immortal Seed 1 Pet. 1.23 look as a little Seed will work through the dry clods that it may grow up unto its perfect estate so doth this Seed of God work towards its final perfection A Christian is not satisfied with such imperfect degrees of conformity to God and slender tasts of his love he must have more Grace tendeth to the place whence it cometh as a spark of Fire tendeth to the Element of fire and they groan and long for the time of perfection 3. His comforts are not perfect The Joys of the Spirit are unspeakable things but at his right hand there is fulness pleasures for evermore Psal. 16.11 These the Soul longeth for therefore tho they are thankful for a refreshing by the way yet they groan as longing to be at home the Spirit now is a Well springing up but it wasteth its self in an Ocean of Glory John 4 14. Look what difference there is between the Springs head and the out-fall of a River into the Sea so between our comforts now and hereafter 3dly The excellency of this estate requireth it that we should groan after and earnestly desire it If it be not worth your desires it is little worth When happiness is provided for you will not you send a groan after it 'T is great ingratitude and folly That when Christ hath procured a state of Blessedness for us at a very dear rate we should value it no more He procured it by a life of labour and sorrow and the pangs of a bitter cursed Death and when all is done we little regard it Surely if we choose this for our happiness we shall be longing and looking for it No man would flie from his own happiness Where a mans Portion is there not only his mind will be but his heart will be Mat. 6.21 If you prize it you will sigh and groan after it our chief good is that we can least want you will be waiting as at Heaven Gates expecting when God will let you in Surely something else satisfieth you are contented to be here always if you do not send your desires thither before you can get thither The Apostle saith I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ which is much more better Phil. 1.23 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If you count it better to be there than elsewhere your Souls will begroaning to be there and longing to be there For we are always longing for that which is better chiefly best of all There is the best estate the best work the best company all is better But if you do not think it so though it be best in itself yet if not best to you you will not long for it but if you count it best is it so difficult to bring you earnestly to desire it 4thly The three Theological Graces imply it Faith Hope and Love Therefore we must seek and earnestly desire it These Graces 1 Cor. 13.13 Faith Hope and Charity 1 Thes. 5.8 1. Faith They that believe that there is another sort of life infinitely more desirable than that which we now enjoy will find their affections stirred towards it for sound persuasion sheweth its self in answerable affections Heb. 11.13 If we did believe that when this
thee naked as in the day wherein thou wast born 'T is not meant that God would take away their apparel but deprive them of his Spiritual favours leave them as he found them at their first birth and then how miserable were they Well then in its self 't is shameful and maketh us odious and abominable to God To flye from him to shun his presence as Adam when he sinned found himself naked and ran away from God to the Bushes Gen. 3.7 So all naturally lye before God as deformed sinners have naked and loathsome Souls though the Body should be clad with gorgeous Robes 2dly We being naked our great business is to get a Garment wherewith to cover our nakedness that our shame may not appear Rev. 2.17 18. Thou art poor and blind and miserable and naked I Counsel thee to buy of me white Raiment that thou mayest be Clothed Our business is to be traffiquing with Christ about Garments of Salvation how to get our sins covered with such a covering as will hide them from the sight of God This is our business if we would not have God dreadful but amiable Adam when he found himself naked was looking out for a covering But he could find out nothing but a few fig leaves till the Lord made him Coats of Skins possibly of those beasts which were offered in sacrifice for the news of the seed of the woman or the first tydings of the Messiah who should come to redeem the world was then imediately made known to him and Sacrifice appointed to signify and prefigure it 3dly There are no Garments of Salvation to be had but from Christ alone no way else found out to cover our nakedness Therefore we are said to put on Christ Gal. 3.27 Rom. 13.11 Put on the Lord Jesus So that then we are not found naked but Clothed with Christ who alone can cover our loathsome nakedness and render us acceptable to God As Hester had Garments out of the Kings Ward-robe so the Church hath granted unto her by the Kings gift and allowance fine Linnen which is the Righteousness of the Saints Rev. 19.8 Whatever the Instruments be yet Christ saith I will give thee change of Raiment Zech. 2.4 Alas our own Righteousness is as filthy rags and will never cover our nakedness our best Robes need to be washed in the Lambs Blood or there is no appearing before God with any comfort and confidence 3dly Why none but they can groan and desire earnestly to be Cloathed upon with the House which is from Heaven 1. None but they are in a state or have a right to enjoy it the change of an earthly estate into an Heavenly one requireth first as a necessary foregoing Condition that we should be in this world Clothed with Christs Righteousness and regenerated and sanctified by his Spirit and Glorifie God by new obedience For Corruption cannot inherit incorruption and none but new Creatures shall inherit the new Jerusalem And good works are the way to the Crown c. Well then none but they are got ready and so are in a Conditon desirously to expect this Glory The Soul being Conscious to its self of having this true qualification doth more comfortably expect and desire and groan for immortality 'T is but a small part of lost mankind who shall injoy this Blessedness for the flock to whom the Father will give the Kingdom is but a little flock And these are such as are Justified and Sanctified They that are destitute of Righteousness cannot look God in the Face much less desire his presence Surely a man must be born again before he can enter into the Kingdom of God Joh 3.3 5. 2dly None have a right temper of heart to incline them to it but those that are Cloathed A man is ashamed to be seen in his nakedness especially before his Superiors but being Clothed cometh forth with confidence So here guilt and sin breed a shyness of God but pardon and sanctification give an Holy boldness Joh. 2.28 And now little Children abide in him that when he shall appear we may have confidence and not be ashamed before him at his coming So 1 Joh 4.17 That we may have boldness at the day of Judgment because as he is so are we in the world Be justified be Sanctified and walk as Christ walked and why should you be afraid to appear in his presence Whereas others are ashamed to be seen by him Shame is properly a fear of a rebuke a reproof from the Judge of the world is the greatest rebuke of all Now what maketh the Saints so bold and allayeth their fear and shame since they are Conscious to themselves of many infirmities Answ. Their nakedness is covered they have white raiment cast upon them that all their defects and infirmities are hidden More particularly 1. That which is the matter and cause of fear and shame is removed That which makes a man afraid is guilt and sin which sometimes is represented under the notion of filthiness and sometimes of nakedness Now this filthiness is washed away by the Blood of Christ This nakedness is covered by the Righteousness of Christ. They have put on Christ and are invested with his Righteousness Rom. 8.1 2dly The ground of our boldness is laid so that we may have a comfortable expectation of Everlasting Blessedness 1. The Justified and Sanctified are at peace with God Rom. 5.1 Being Justified by Faith we have peace with God through our Lord-Jesus Christ. And for Sanctification Gal. 6.16 And as man as walk according to this Rule peace be on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God Our great business is to be found of God at peace in a state of amity at the last day 2 Pet. 3.14 Since ye look for such things be the diligent that may be found of him in peace and without spot and blame The great end of all diligence is to be found of him in peace and there is no way to be so but to be without spot and blame without spot relateth to the Soul without blame to the Conversation The great business then wherein a Christian is to be exercised is in the getting off our ●inful spots and in putting off our filthy Garments that we may be Clothed with change of Raiment Certainly much sweet peace and quietness is found in their Spirits who make it their serious work to have the guilt of sin washed away by the application of the Blood of Jesus and their filthy natures changed by the power of his Spirit On the Contrary others lye under much unquietness and bitter anxiety who are still under the burden of unpardoned guilt and unrenewed nature These are not at peace with God 2dly They have a Conscience witnessing of their sincerity though they have many failings And the Testimony of Conscience giveth great boldness and confidence 2 Cor. 1.12 1 Joh. 3.21 1 Joh. 3.19 Hereby we know that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts
before him Conscience is privy to their constant uniform self denying obedience and this Testimony is of greatest stead to them at the last Isa. 38.3 Remember Lord how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect Heart He dareth appeal in a dying hour for his sincerity and care to please him A good or a bad Conscience is the beginning of Heaven or Hell The checks of an accusing Conscience are the first bitings of the worm that never dyeth And the approbation of a sincere Conscience a preface of the Joy of the Blessed 3dly They know it shall go well with them in that day There are two causes of fear and shame knowing for certain that it shall go ill with us or not knowing it shall go well with us Now they that are under any of these Conditions cannot groan cannot desire a change of state Did you ever know a guilty malefactor long for the Judges appearance and send to him to hasten his coming Indeed those who are confident it shall go well with them they desire the Assizes and are weary of lying in prison and long to be delivered Now those that are absolved from guilt and have sin weakned in their Hearts they know it shall go well with them in the other world Partly by the promise of God who hath assured the Justified and the Sanctified of an Heavenly Inheritance That 's the drift of the whole Gospel For to this end Christ dyed that he might first reconcile them to God and then present them holy and unblameable and irreproveable in his sight Col. 1.21 First sanctifie and cleanse them from the stain and guilt of sin and then present them to himself Clothe them with the fine Linnen which is the Righteousness of the saints Eph. 5.26 27. The Justified and Sanctified may draw near to God in Heavenly Glory Partly by the earnest of the Spirit in their Hearts Eph. 1.13 14. 2 Cor. 1.21 22. Sealing up to them their own Interest to the promise or their right to the Heavenly Inheritance and that in due time they shall possess it Use Is to press us to get ready and to be Clothed that we may with comfort expect and long for the day of our translation The first motive is in the word found 'T is often used with respect to the day of Judgment Found naked And in 2 Pet. 3.14 Matth. 24 46. Blessed is that Servant whom when his Lord cometh he shall find so doing 't is a Blessed thing for a servant to be found at his work So Phil. 3.9 That I may be found in him not having my own Righteousness which alludeth to the day of our general or particular doom Now this word implieth three things 1. That there will be an exact search and scrutiny after every one of us Wrath maketh inquisition for sinners and every man will be found out naked or Clothed There is no hiding in the throng of mankind In a particular Judgement God said he would search Jerusalem with Candles Zeph. 1.12 Drag sinners out of their lurking holes Much more in the general Judgment we shall be found 2dly The word found intimateth a surprize God may break in upon us sooner than we are aware of as usually he cometh to the greatest part of mankind unthought of unexpected 2 Pet. 3.10 The day of the Lord will come as a Thief in the night They do not look for such a day or not prepare for it but are found by it 3dly We remain in the state wherein we are found They that are found naked at their Death shall remain naked to all Eternity There is no change of Condition in the other world as Death leaveth us Judgment findeth us Luke 2.14 On earth peace Now you may be reconciled to God you may agree with your Adversary quickly while you are yet in the way But in the other world Men are in Termino in their final Condition Well then gather up this first motive escape the knowledge of God you cannot You will be found to be what you are Naked or Clothed And you may be sought after and found sooner then you are aware And when Christ hath found you in an unprepared Condition what will you do How will your naked trembling Soul dread to depart out of the Body into an unknown world Secondly My next motive shall be from the words Naked and Clothed Other qualifications than Christs renewing and reconciling grace will not serve the turn 'T is sin which rendreth us odious to God 'T is sin that keepeth us out of Heaven 't is sin that makes us uncomfortable in our selves and hinders our own Joy and peace The Condition of one that is yet in his sins is represented by nakedness upon a Twofold Reason Because it rendreth us loathsome to God and ashamed of our selves Well then will you be naked remain in your natural deformity how then can you appear before the bar of your Judge or look God in the face with any confidence Joseph washed himself and changed his garments when he was to appear before Pharaoh And is there not a greater reverence due to God Oh! Therefore since you are blind and miserable and naked get Clothing That is get the spots of sin washed off by the frequent application of the Blood of Christ your polluted natures changed by the Spirit of Christ. This is the Clothing which must render you acceptable to God and will make you comfortable in your selves so that you will not shun his presence but desire it 'T is said of the Spouse Psal. 45.14 15. Her Clothing is of wrought Gold she shall be brought unto the King in raiment of needle work and then with gladness and rejoicing shall she be brought into the Kings Palace The more we get rid of sin and are beautified with holiness the more amiable and lovely in his Eyes And because of likeness and suitableness the more we delight to come to him yea the more we shall long to be admitted not only to present Communion but to constant habitation with him and when we are brought into the presence of God 't will be a welcome day to us at the death of every particular Saint or at the day of our Lords second coming when we shall have no imperfection spot or wrinckle or want of any thing which may perfect our Glory Then we shall put on immortality and incorruption and this Body of flesh shall be like to Christs Glorious Body and then there will be great rejoicing Oh then see that you be Clothed What must we do That we may not be found naked but Clothed 1. We must humbly seek Reconciliation with God by Christ when the Prodigal came humbled himself to his Father presently Luke 15.22 Bring ●orth the best Robe put it on him Then his nakedness is covered with the Robe of Christs Righteousness and the poor penitent believer is received into Gods Family and injoys all the Priviledges thereof and
their integrity and safety have miscarryed for ever yea that have had a great name in the Church Matth. 7.22 Many will say unto me in that day Lord Lord we have prophesied in thy name and in thy name have cast out Devils And in thy name done wonderful things Yet Christ saith I know you not in the next verse And Luke 13.25 26. When once the master of the House is risen up and hath shut to the door and ye begin to stand without and to knock at the door saying Lord Lord open to us and he shall say unto you I know you not whence ye are Then shall ye begin to say we have eaten and drunk in thy presence and thou hast taught us in our streets So Prov. 14.12 There is a way that seemeth right unto a man but the end thereof are the ways of Death The Foolish Virgins Matth. 25. Made full account to enter into the Nuptial Chamber but were shut out Many now in Hell little thought of coming thither those not only of the bruitish multitude but of great note that have lived in the light of the Gospel and heard the difference between the wicked and the Godly 2. There is no true confidence but what groweth out of a constant uniform self denying obedience Matth. 7.21 Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven But he that doth the will of my Father which is in Heaven And 1 John 3.18 My little Children let us not love in word neither in tongue but in deed and in truth And Rom. 8.5 6 7. SERMON XII 2 Cor. 5.9 Wherefore we labour that whether present or absent we may be accepted of the Lord. THis verse containeth a practical Inference out of the whole foregoing discourse That which was before spoken may be reduced to these three heads 1. A certain knowledge and confidence of a Blessed estate We know and we are always confident 2. An earnest desire expressed by groans and vehement longings after it 3. A willingness and holy boldness to venture upon Death its self upon this Hope Now these do infer one another Because we know we desire because we desire this happy estate we are willing rather c. So they all infer this effect mentioned in the Text. We labour because we know we labour because we desire we labour because we are willing rather yea this effect feedeth and maintaineth all the former dispositions in life and vigour and also evidenceth the sincerity of them Surely we know we desire we are willing rather if in life in Death we study to approve our selves to God wherefore we labour that whether present or absent c. This verse containeth a Christians scope and a Christians work 1. His scope to be accepted with God 2. His work we labour that whether present or absent 1. His Scope The scope of the Christian life is to approve our selves to God while we are present in the Body to do things pleasing in his sight Col. 1.10 That ye might walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing And 1 Thes. 4.1 As we have learned how to walk and how to please God so abound therein more and more when absent or gone out of the Body that we may be found in a state of well pleasedness and acceptation 2 Pet. 3.14 Be found of him in peace Heb. 11.5 He had this Testimony that he pleased God Our great inquiry is whether our state be pleasing or displeasing to him and our great aim is that it may be pleasing 2. A Christians work we labour that whether present or absent There take notice of two things 1. Their Earnest and assiduous diligence In the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we are ambitious of this Honour the Word is used in two other Scriptures Rom. 15.20 Striving to preach the Gospel where Christ was not named And 1 Thes. 4.11 Study to be quiet Affect this honour or pursue after it as men do after preferment honours and dignities in the World So that this word is three ways rendred labour strive study Ambition mightily prevaileth with sensual men and maketh them restless and unwearyed in their pursuits till they get at top This is the holy and laudable ambition of a Christian to stand right in the favour of God and be accepted with him at the last 2. The Several states in which this design must be carryed on whether present or absent Whether we be at home and continue in this Earthly Body of ours or whether we be gone out of the Body the Happiness of this World and the next lyeth in our acceptance with God Living and dying a Christian must see that he be in a state of well pleasing Rom. 14.7 8. Our hearts are pretty well at ease while we are in the body if we may know that we are accepted of God However that must be our Scope Now it must be the design of our obedience and hereafter it will be the grounds of our reward 'T will be our Solace in our Pilgrimage and it will be our happiness when we die and go out of the body if Christ will own us at the last Doct. The great ambition design and endeavour of a true Christian is that living and dying he may be such as God may like and well approve of 1. I shall give you the Emphasis of this point as it lyeth in the Text. 2. Some reasons of the point 1. Let me illustrate this point as it lyeth in this Scripture Mark this must be our great design and Scope we must not only do things which are Deograta acceptable to God for the matter but this must be our fixed end and Scope which we must propound to our selves Christianity and true Godliness is set forth in Scripture by three things Sometimes by the Internal Principle of it the Spirit of God or the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 or the seed of God abiding in us 1 John 3.9 Sometimes by the intention of the true end which is the pleasing of God and the fruition of God with Christ and his Blessed ones for ever in Heaven when the heart is set upon that Mat. 6.20 21. But lay up for your selves treasures in heaven where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt and where thieves do not break through nor steal For where your treasure is there will your heart be also And 2. Cor. 4.18 While we look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal Sometimes by the reception of the true rule when that is ingrafted in our hearts and so impressed upon our hearts that it cannot be defaced Heb. 8.10 I will put my Laws into their mind and write them in their Hearts and Psa. 37.31 The Law of God is in my Heart I now am to speak of the Second which is the true aim scope and tendency of the life of
godliness or of those who profess faith in Christ namely that we may be so approved of God that we may injoy him for ever among his Blessed ones I shall prove it by three arguments that this must be our constant scope taken from the many advantages which redound to us thereby 1. We cannot be sincere unless this be our great aim and Scope that we may approve our selves to God One main difference between the sincere and the Hypocrite is in the end and scope The one seeketh the approbation of men and the other the approbation of God the one is fleshly wisdom the other Godly simplicity and sincerity 2 Cor. 1.12 The one acts to be seen of men the other maketh God his Witness Approver and Judg. So elsewhere the Spiritual life is negatively a not living to our selves and positively a living to God and both carryed on by the power and Influence of an holy and sincere love to God 2 Cor. 5.14 15. For the Love of Christ constraineth us because we thus judge that if one dyed for all then were all dead And that he dyed for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him which dyed for them and rose again Love acteth most purely for God whilst it designeth him as the end of all things our study to please desire to injoy him keepeth us upright The more fixed our end is and the more we renew the intention of it and daily prosecute it the more sincere we are If we keep the right mark in our eye it maketh us level right but he that mistaketh his end is out of the way in the first step he taketh and all his acts are but acts of sin errour and folly how splendid soever the matter or manner of the action may represent it to vulgar appearance suppose praying or preaching out of envy or alms for vain glory Phil. 1.15 Some preach Christ out of envy and strife and some of good will They may preach to others who are but hollow hearted men themselves And a mans most excellent gifts and the duties of Gods own Worship may be prostituted to so base an end as to hide and feed our lusts So Christ speaketh of the Hypocrites giving alms to be seen of men Matth. 6.1 And praying to be seen of men 5 th verse These things are incident to the corrupt heart of man even sometimes when 't is in part renewed by ends and motives will be interposing themselves but good Christians had need to resist the very first motions of these things for where they are once rooted in the Heart and prevail our duties are not a Worship of God but a service of sin and we our selves will be found at length but unsincere and rotten hearted Hyprocrites a Christian should content himself with Gods approbation and needs no other Theatre than his own Conscience nor other Spectator than our Father who seeth in secret Matth. 6.4 6. Besides the sweet Testimony of the Conscience following upon such actions And in time this shall be laid open and found to our praise and honour 'T is God and Glory the upright heart aimeth at and bendeth his study heart and life to seek 2. It maketh us Serious and watchful and to keep Close to our duty Finis est mensura mediorum The Aptitude and fitness of means is judged of by the end Let a man fix upon a right end and Scope and he will soon understand his way and will address himself to such means as are fitted to that end and make straight towards it without any circuits and wandrings What is the reason that men fill up their lives with things that are Impertinent to their great end and sometimes altogether inconsistent with it Because they have not fixed their Scope or do not regard their end A man that hath resolvedly determined that this is his end to be accepted of God and to enjoy God he valueth Gods favour as his happiness the being reconciled to him and his great care the pleasing of him his utmost industrious Imployment of his life is nothing else but a seeking to please honour and injoy God And so by this means First Impertinencies Secondly Inconsistencies are prevented and cut off 1. Do but Consider how many Impertinencies are cut off if I be true to my end and great scope for instance when I remember that my business is to be accepted of God at the last and am resolved to seek after that and mind that can I spend my time in ease and idleness or carnal vanities and recreations Eccl. 2.2 What doth it What good and profit cometh of this What respect hath it to my great end When I am gaming and sporting away my precious time or it may be but trifling it away in impertinent chatting and vain censures is this the way to Heaven Shall I get thither sooner by toying or praying by sowing to the Flesh or the Spirit by studying the Word of God and meditating therein day and night or by reading Romances filthy Plays and obscene and scurrilous writings by cards and dice or by holy conference and praising God Alas if men would but sum up the imployment of every day they might write at the bottom of the account here is nothing but vanity a great deal of time spent and a pudder made and little or nothing done to our great end Christians what do you Or what have you done Jer. 8.6 That question is to be answered not only by reflecting upon your rule but by reflecting upon your end 2. It will not only cut off impertinencies but a far greater mischief and that is inconsistencies with our great end Gen. 39.9 How can I do this wickedness and sin against God Men do not only forget their end and happiness but run quite from it by doing actions directly contrary vanities are impertinent to our great end but direct sins are inconsistent Would men dishonour God and disobey his Laws and grieve his Spirit if they did remember seriously that their misery and Happiness did depend upon Gods pleasure or displeasure Surely then they would avoid Gods wrath and displeasure and sin which is the cause of it as the greatest misery and evil that can befall them and seek after his favour as their great happiness 3. It would solace and comfort us under the difficulties of obedience the hardships and inconveniencies of our Pilgrimage and that mean and afflicted State of Life wherein perhaps God will imploy us and exercise us for his Glory 1. It would sweeten the difficulties of obedience for the end doth sweeten the means 'T is troublesome to the flesh to limit and confine our desires and actions within the compass of a strict rule but it satisfieth a resolved heart to remember that either we must please the Flesh or please the Lord. If now it be troublesome to us hereafter it will be comfortable Wicked men have comfort now when they want it not and
their angry brow are as graves and furrows yet some have escaped the wrath of kings and worldly potentates as Elijah escaped the vengeance of Jez●●el 1 Kings 19.2 3. The Gods do so to me and more also if I make not thy life as the life of one of them to morrow by this time And when he heard that he arose and fled to Beersheba for his life But there is no escaping Gods wrath Rev. 6.16 No avoiding his sight or escaping the stroke of his Justice Psa. 134.7 4. If it particularly concern every one of us a Clap of Thunder in our own Zenith doth more affright us than when 't is at a distance This did once belong to all and it doth still belong to the Impenitent and therefore we should take the more care that we be not of that number and while we are in the state of tryal we cannot be over confident I am sure 't is a sinful confidence that is joyned with the neglect of the means to shun it The dreadful consequence of that day to the wicked 't is in its self a matter of terror to all and to slight this terrour is to turn the Grace of God into Wantoness And it cometh either from unbelief or from a dull stupid senseless Spirit And if it produceth not caution and watchfulness and serious and diligent preparation 't is not a fruit of the assurance of the Love of God but of the security of the flesh I confess 't is a case of Conscience how to make the day of Judgment matter of joy and confidence and matter of terror and caution sometimes we are bidden to reflect upon it with joy and confidence so as we may love his appearing 2 Tim. 4.8 To lift up our heads because our Redemption draweth nigh Luke 17.28 To rejoice because we shall be partakers of the Blessedness promised 1 Pet. 4.14 At other times matter of fear and terrour These are not contrary The one is to prevent slight thoughts which are very familiar with us The other future perplexities and dejection of Spirit The strictness of our account the dreadful consequence to those that shall be found faulty should not discourage us in the way of duty eternal wrath should not be feared farther than to stir us up to renew our flight to Christ and to quicken us in his service who hath delivered us from wrath to come 2. The persons fearing Paul and his Colleagues together with all the parties who are to be judged That the unspeakable terrour of the Lord is a rational just and equitable ground of fear we have seen already But the doubt is how this could be so to Paul and his Colleagues especially if we consider it mainly as we ought with respect to the execution of punishment or the Wrath of God that shall abide on the impenitent I answer 1. To be only moved with terrour is slavish The wicked may out of fear of Hell be frighted into a little religiousness But Paul was moved by other principles Hope and Love as well as fear see the 14. verse The Love of Christ constraineth us But this among the rest is allowable 't is one of the Spirits motives to quicken us to fly to Christ and to take sanctuary at his grace Heb. 6.18 To ingage us to thankfulness for our deliverance 1 Thes. 1.10 Yea to stir us up to more holy diligence and sollicitude in pleasing God Heb. 13.28 29. The Eternal Wrath of God among other things doth rowse us up to serve him with Godly fear 2. Though Paul and his Colleagues had the Love of God shed abroad in their hearts and were assured of his favour and their everlasting Salvation yet knowing the terrour of the Lord They had a deeper reverence of his Majesty and so afraid to displease him or to be unfaithful in their charge and trust And could not endure that any others should do so Reverence of God as one able to destroy us and cast Body and Soul into Hell Fire is always necessary The fear of reverence remaineth in Heaven in the glorified Saints and Angels and Christ presseth us to this fear Luke 12.3 4. 3. We must distinguish between a perplexing distrustful fear and an aweful preventive-eschewing fear A distracting tormenting fear of Hell or the Wrath of God would weaken our delight in God and therefore the Love of God casts out this fear 1 Joh. 4.18 But now the aweful fear fleeing from wrath to come this doth not destroy peace of Conscience or joy in the Holy-Ghost but gard it rather This only quickeneth us to use those means by which we may avoid so great an evil Instances we have in Scripture Job that was sure that his Redeemer lived Job 19. Yet destruction from the Lord was a Terrour to him Chap. 31. That is he thought himself obliged to use all those means by which he might shun so great an evil So Paul We know that if our earthly House of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an House not made with Hands Eternal in the Heavens Yet knowing the Terrour of the Lord. 4. There are great reasons why this Terrour should have an influence upon us while we dwell in flesh 1. Because 't was once our due Eph. 3.2 And though we are delivered from it by Gods grace yet still 't is a fearful state which we cannot sufficiently shun and avoid 2dly We still deserve it after grace hath made a change in our Condition There is no Condemnation to them that are in Christ Rom. 8.1 Yet many things are condemnable We now and then do those things for which the Wrath of God cometh upon the Children of disobedience we deserve that God should say to us depart ye cursed 3 dly 'T is certainly a great and extream difficulty to get free from so great an evil 1 Pet. 4.18 We cannot get to the harbour but by encountring many a terrible storm and God is fain to discipline us that we may not be condemned with the World 1 Cor. 11.32 I know I shall be saved but 't is a difficult thing to save me 3. The means how this fear cometh to be raised in us knowing This implyeth three things 1. A clear and explicite apprehension 2. A firm assent 3. Serious consideration 1. A distinct knowledge of this Article of Christs coming to Judgment 1 Thes. 5.2 You your selves know perfectly that the day of the Lord so cometh as a Thief in the night 'T is good not only to know things but to know them perfectly for though a man may be saved by an implicite faith as he knoweth things in their common principle yet explicite faith and plenitude of knowledge or seeing round about the compass of any truth conduceth much to the practical improvement of it Instance in the Creation of the World To know the general truth may make me safe but a distinct explication thereof maketh us more admire the Wisdom Goodness and Power of God So for
innocent contentedness and humble submission if Rich by liberality and publick usefulness when well I will glorify God by my health being hard at work for him when sick by meekness and patience if a a Magistrate by my zeal and activity if a Minister by diligence and faithfulness if a Tradesman by my righteous and conscionable dealing So that from Christ to the meanest Christian from the King to the meanest Skullion all should be at work for God for every man is sent into the world for some cause and born for some end or other to act that part upon the stage of the world which the great Master of the Scenes appointeth 4. All our sufficiencies gifts and abilities were given us for this end Every man hath some gift more or less as well as some relation as Matth. 25. Every man received his Talent and he that had but one Talent was to give an account of it Now all these must be improved for God As the Husbandman when he scattereth his Seed on the Earth looketh for a crop and increase So when God scattered his gifts 't was not to disposses himself but that they might be used for his glory Every gift and grace received is not barely donum a gift but Talentum a Talent We are Stewards and not owners not to act for our selves but to honour our Master Therefore what honour and glory hath God by our gifts and graces God hath dominium we have but dispensationem 'T is ours for use but not ours for injoyment as a Factor intrusted with his Masters goods at length it will be seen how we have improved them 5. The end much varieth the nature of the action It maketh an act to be of another kind an indifferent action by the end may become a duty a meal is an act of Worship Alms a Sacrifice Heb. 13.18 Trading for God an act of Religion as well as Prayer On the other side a duty by the end may become a sin as Prayer is howling Hos. 7.14 when it hath only a natural or a carnal end Fasting the bending of a Bulrush Isa. 58.5 Obedience Murther Hosea 1.4 Jehu did not the Lords work sincerely but for his own base ends and interests he was Anointed at Gods command to execute Judgment on Ahabs house 2 Kings 9.6 7. And was Temporally rewarded for it 2 Kings 10.30 his Children to the fourth Generation should sit on the Throne of Israel yet I will avenge the blood of Jezreel upon the house of Jehu Why Because he did it only to get a Kingdom to himself and though he executed Gods Quarrel on Ahab and his House yet he clave to the Idolatry of Jeroboam for securing his interest So Reformation may be a covetous design Non pietate everterunt idola sed avaritia Indeed an act for the matter ●inful is not altered by the end for I must not do evil that good may come thereof nor use the Devil to serve God But how vile is it then to make God serve with our Iniquities and use his Worship as a stale to our own ends SERMON XXII 2 Cor. 5.13 For whether we be besides our selves it is to God or whether we be sober it is for your cause USE is to press you to make this your great aim to Glorify God You must take care not only negatively that God be not dishonoured but positively that he be honoured and glorified by you and that in all states and Conditions and also in all businesses and imployments Some have wholly deviated from their great end and are not yet come to themselves and live unprofitably in the World and do nothing but Eat and Drink and Play and Sleep they live to themselves and to their own ease and carnal delights Alas what are these men good for To what end have they reason and Conscience Some things if they be not good for one thing yet are good for another But a man if he doth not know God and love God and delight in God and seek the Glory of God is like the wood of the Vine Ezek. 15.2 3 4. Good for nothing Not so much as to make a pin whereon to hang any thing Good for nothing but to be cast into the fire and to reflect upon the Glory of his justice to be fuel for the Lords indignation 2dly Another sort are those who are convinced they should live to God and do now and then look after him but are not so overcome by grace as that this should be the over-ruling principle in their hearts The last end is principium universalissimum it should have an universal influence upon us and be minded and regarded in all our desires purposes actions injoyments relations Gods Glory should be at the utmost end of every business nothing is good that is not directed to the last end 'T is done to the flesh and not to God 'T is impertinent to our great scope First in all our desires if we desire increase and estate 't is to honour God with it Jam. 4.3 Agur measureth every estate by ends of Religion Pro. 30.8 9. Nay Spiritual things must be desired in order to Gods Glory Eph. 1.6 We must not please our selves meerly in the Consideration of our own Happiness and personal benefit but as Gods Glory is promoted by it 2dly Our purposes dependance is the proper notion of a crea●ed being Man hath God for principium finem 'T is no more lawful for a man to abstain from respecting or seeking his end than it is possible not to depend on his principle The Creature is from another and for another Man is for Gods Glory and for no other end As he is from Gods Power and no other cause And therefore in whatever we deliberately purpose and resolve upon the Glory of God must have the casting voice 2 Cor. 1.17 The things that I purpose do I purpose according to the fl●sh That is am I swayed by carnal motives A Christian should not lightly and rashly resolve upon any course but consider how it may conduce to the Glory of God 3dly Our actions civil sacred all the pots in Jerusalem must have Gods impress Holiness to the Lord as well as the utensiles of the Temple Zach. 14.21 In a Kings House there are many officers but all to serve the King So in a Christians there are many duties of several kinds but all must have an aspect upon and a tendency to the Glory of God I must mind it in the closet mind it in the shop mind it in the family 4thly For injoyments I must value them more or less as they conduce to the Glory of God In every thing I must ask what doth it Eccl. 2.2 How doth it contribute to m● great end The delight in an estate is not in the possession but use for that hath a nearer connection with the Glory of God The delight in an ordinance as it giveth out more of God or inableth me more to honour him The delight
rest Evil is best stop'd in the beginning If when first we begun to grow careless we had taken heed it would never have come to that sad issue it doth afterwards an heavy body running downwards gathers strength by running and still moveth faster Look then to your first breaking off from God and remitting your watch and Spiritual fervour 'T is easier to crush the the egg than kill the serpent He that keepeth a house in constant repair prevents the fall and ruin of it When first the evil heart beginneth to draw us off from God and to be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin then we must Heb. 3.12 13. humble our Souls betime that we may stick close to Christ. 2. By way of recovery where there hath been a decay Take the advice of the Holy-Ghost Rev. 2.5 Remember from whence thou art faln and repent and do thy first works 1. A serious consideration of our condition in those words remember from whence thou art faln Recollect and sadly consider what a difference there is between thee and thy self thy self living and acting in the sense and power of the love of God and thy self now under the power of some worldly and fleshly lust Consider what an advantage thou hadst against Temptations of the Devil the World and the Flesh when love was in strengh and how much the case is altered with thee now how feeble and impotant in the resistance of any sin Say as Job Job 29.2 3. Oh that it were as in the months past In the day when God preserved me when his candle shined upon my head Or as the Church Hosea 2.7 It was better with me then than now In our returning we should have such thoughts as these I was wont to spend some time every day with God 't was a delight to me to think of him or speak of him or to him now I have no heart to pray or meditate 'T was the joy of my Soul to wait upon his Ordinances the returns of the Sabbath were well-come unto me But now what a weariness is it Time was when my heart did rise up in arms against sin when a vain thought was a grief to my Soul why is it thus with me now Is sin grown less odious or God less lovely 2. The next advice is repent That is humble your selves before God for your defection 'T is not enough to feel your selves faln many are convinced of their faln and lapsed estate but do not humble and judge themselves for it in Gods presence bewailing their case smiting on the thigh praying for pardon 'T is a great sin to grow weary of God Isa. 43.22 Thou hast not called upon me O Jacob Thou hast been weary of me Oh Israel And Mich. 6.3 Oh my people what have I done unto thee And wherein have I wearied thee Testify against me His honour is concerned in it therefore you must the more feelingly bewail it 3. Do thy first works We must not spend the time in idle complaints Many are sensible that do not repent Many repent i. e. seem to bewail their case but languish in idle complaints for want of love but do not recover this loss by serious endeavours You must not rest till you recover your former seriousness and mindfulness of God 'T is one of the deceits of our hearts to complain of negligence and not redress it The Nazarite who had broken his vow he was to begin all again Numbers 6.12 So you that have broken with God you must do what you did at first conversion let your work be sin-abhorring every day and ingaging your heart anew to God And make no reservation but so give up your selves to the Lord that his interests may prevail in your hearts again above all sinful and vile inclinations or whatever hath been the cause of the withdrawing your hearts from God and the decay of your love to him SERMON XXVI 2 Cor. 5.14 For the love of Christ constraineth us because we thus Iudge that if one dyed for all then were all dead WE come now to the fifth case of Conscience about loving God with all the heart a thing often required in Scripture the original place is Deut. 6.5 And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and all thy Soul and all thy might 'T is repeated by our Lord Matth. 22.37 Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy Soul and all thy mind But in Mark 10.30 And Luke 10.27 With all thy heart and all thy Soul and all thy mind and all thy strength This sentence was famous 't was one of the four Paragraphs which the Jews were wont to write upon their Phylacteries and fastened to their door posts and read in their houses twice a day Mark here is variety of words sometimes three words are used and sometimes four some go about accurately to distinguish them by the heart interpreting the will by the Soul the appetite and affections by the mind the understanding and by might bodily strength All put together with that intensive particle all imply great love to God Now a doubt ariseth hereupon how this is reconcilable with the defects of Gods Children and the weaknesses of the present state Yea it seemeth to confine our affections that there will be love left for no other things For if God have all the heart and all the Soul and all the mind and all the strength what is there left for Husband Wife Children Christian Friends and other Relations Without which respect humane society cannot be upheld and preserved The doubt may be referred to two heads 1. The irreconcilableness of the rule with present defects 2. The confinement intimated is destructive of our respect to our natural comforts and relations 1. Concerning the first how it is reconcileable with those many partibilities and defects of Gods Children I answer First By distinguishing this sentence may be considered as an exaction of the Law Or as a rule of the Gospel 1. As an exaction of the Law And so it serveth to shew us what duty the perfect Law of God requireth compleat love without the least defect All the heart all the Soul and all the might a grain wanting maketh the whole unacceptable As one condition not observed forfeiteth the whole lease though all the rest be kept That this reference is not to be altogether slighted appeareth by the occasion A Lawyer asked him a Question tempting him saying Master which is the great Commandment of the Law Matth. 22.35 Now Christs aim was to beat down his confidence by proposing the rigour of the Law Luke 10.28 This do and thou shalt live The best course to convince self-justiciaries such as this Lawyer was thereby to rebate their confidence and to shew the necessity of a better righteousness And so 't is of use this way for a double end First To convince us of the necessity of looking after the grace of the Redeemer Secondly To
commit such things are worthy of death The dread of a God angry for sin is natural to us and the ground of all our trouble Man is afraid of death and some misery after death which is likely to come upon him Heb. 2.14 And till the forgiveness of sin be procured for us this bondage sticketh close to us and we know not how to get oft it God is an holy God and cannot endure iniquity and by his Law will not suffer the guilty to go free The Justice of the Supream Governour of all the World requireth that sin should be punished all mankind have a general presumption that death is penal these fears make pardon a very inviting motive to them These fears may be a while stifled in men but they easily return and can no way be appeased but by pardon and reconciliation with God carried on in such a way as they may be exempted from these fears Therefore God was in Christ reconciling the World to himself not Imputing their trespasses to them 3. Pardon of sins is very necessary to the end of reconciliation which is living in a course of holy amity and state of friendship with God till we live with him for ever in Heavenly glory Here I am to prove three things 1. That the end of reconciliation is walking in a course of holiness 2. That this holiness is carried on in a state of love and friendship between God and us 3. That pardon is the fittest way to breed this holiness and increase it 1. That the end of reconciliation is walking in a course of holiness for Christ died not to reconcile God to our sins but that reconciling our persons we might quit our sins and walk as those that are at good accord with him Amos 3.3 Can two walk together except they be agreed And 1 John 1.7 If we walk in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with an other Now pardon of sin hath a mighty influence upon holy walking Justification and Sanctification are distinct priviledges but they always go together and the one doth exceedingly suit with the other These two priviledges pardon and holiness the one freeth us from the guilt the other from the stain of sin The one concerneth Gods interest our subjection to him the other our own comfort The one is the end the other thè means pardon is the means to Holiness and Holiness is the end of pardon our general pardon is to put us into a state of acceptable obedience our particular pardon to incourage us in it and quicken us and excite us anew The conditional and offered pardon is the means to work regeneration and regeneration Qualifieth for actual pardon Titus 3.7 That being justified by his grace we should be made heirs according to the hope of eternal life And Heb. 8.10 11 12. For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days saith the Lord I will put my Laws into their mind and write them in their hearts and I will be to them a God and they shall be to me a people and they shall not teach every man his neighbour and every man his Brother saying know the Lord for all shall know me from the least to the greatest For I will be merciful to their unrighteousness and their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more And Acts 26.18 To open their eyes and to turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Sathan unto God that they may receive forgiveness of sins and an inheritance among them which are sanctified by Faith And then actual pardon quickeneth us by love to carry on that holiness of heart and life which God requireth For this mercy is the powerful motive to perswade us to obedience Because he hath loved us and washed us from our sins in his blood Therefore we must love him and serve him all our days Luke 1.74 75. That we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our life 2 Cor. 5.14 15. For the love of Christ constraineth us because we thus judge that if one died for all then were all dead that they which live should not henceforth live to themselves but to him that died for them Titus 2.11 12. For the grace of God that bringeth Salvation hath appeared unto all men teaching us that denying all ungodliness and worldly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present World Rom. 12.1 I beseech you Brethren by the mercies of God that ye present your Bodies a living Sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable Service His pardoning mercy and justification by Christ is the great enforcing Argument Those who are fetched up even from the Gates of Hell and delivered from under the sentence of the Law and called into the state of Gods Children should thankfully accept the benefit acknowledge the benefactour live in love to God and holiness hate that sin they have repented of and which hath been pardoned to them and still hold on their course in a way of obedience till their full recovery in the everlasting estate 2. That this holiness is carryed on in a state of love and friendship between God and us Love beareth rule in the Spiritual life and pardon is the great ground of love Luke 7.47 She loved much because much was forgiven her The great business of religion is to love God above all and a man that is uncertain whether there be any such thing as pardon how can he love God above himself and all other things Self love is very hardly cured for what is nearer to us than our selves Therefore self-love is very deeply rooted in us especially love of life that it must be some very strong and powerful thing which can subdue it now nothing will do it but the love of God Propound the terrors of the Lord that will not do it men will not be frightned out of self love It must be a powerful love that must divert us from it as one Nail driveth out another so doth one love drive our another Now what can be more powerful than the love of God T is as strong as death many Waters cannot quench it Cant. 8.7 This prevaileth over our natural inclination so that we shall not only forsake the sins and vanities which we now love but also life its self Rev. 12.11 They loved not their lives unto the death This prevaileth over our natural inclination so that we can lay all things at Gods feet and suffer all things and endure all things for Gods sake yea even life its self for his Glory 3. Pardoning mercy in Christ is the great argument which breedeth and feedeth this love How can I love a God which I think will damn me and may probably do it Our turning to God must be by love and our living to God and for God
signifies Page 221 An act of Grace and Favour in God Page 221 A great Priviledge and Blessedness to the Creature Page 222 The manner how it is brought about and applyed to us Page 223 v. Pardon of sin Innocency of Christ as Mediator Page 251 It hath a double use for satisfaction and for example Page 251 Friendship between God and man in a State of Innocency v. Friendship Interest of God in us Page 134 Joys of the Blessed Everlasting Page 105 Judge Qualifications of a Judge Page 82 God the Judge in matters of Redemption not Christ and why Page 87 88 Christ the Judge of the World at the last day Page 82 88 Qualifications of Christ for this Office Kingdom Iustice Power Authority Page 83 84 85 The Impartiality of the Judge Page 91 In what Nature Christ shall be Judge of the World Page 85 88 Judging the World an act of Christ's Mediatory Office Page 88 How Christ is Judge as God and as Mediator Page ib. Why Christ is to be Judge in the humane Nature Page Ib. Why the Power of Judging belongs to Christ. Page Ib. Why Christ is Judge of the World rather than the Father and Spirit Page 87 Christ being Judge is a Terror to the wicked Page 88 89 What is there in Christ's being Judge of the World that is a Terror to the wicked Page 89 Christ being Judge is a comfort to the Godly Page 90 To whom this comfort belongs Page Ib. What is the comfort they have Page Ib. Judgment Day appearing before Judgment Seat what it signifies Page 92 The necessity of a Day of Judgment Page 79 The certainty of it Page ib. The ends of it Page 92 97 103 Arguments to prove it Page 79 80 81. All must be Judged Page 81 91 103 Reasons of it Page 91 92 The Rule of Judgment Page 99 We shall be Judged not according to single acts but our Conversation Page 101 The future Judgment shall be according to mens works Page 97 Why works are produc'd at the Day of Iudgment Page Ib. All sins shall be brought to Judgment Page 92 How sins shall be brought to Judgment Page Ib. What sins shall be then open Page 93 94 A Judgment Day Sinners shall be accused 1 By the Angels 2 By the Devils 3 By the Word of God 4 By the Ministers of the Gospel 5 By Conscience 6 By their own Confession 7 By one another 8 By the Godly 9 By the Circumstances of their evil actions Page 93 94 95. Different Recompenses at the Day of Judgment Page 104 Execution of Sentence v. Execution The Ministry of the Angels at the Day of Judgment Page 91 How this Doctrine is to be improved Page 108 The last Judgment the most solemn of all Judgments Page 83 Future Judgment is impartial Page 110 The Terror of the day of Judgment Page ib. Future Judgment makes pardon of sin necessary Page 231 Justice of Christ. Page 84 Justice of God the kinds of it Page 98 Declared in the day of Iudgment Page ib. Justification twofold of a sinner and of a believer Page 100 K. KNowing Christ after the flesh in the days of his flesh what it was Page 196 Knowing Christ after the flesh since his Ascension what it is Page 197 Knowing Christ after the Flesh will be of no use to us as to the Salvation of our Souls Page 199 They that only know Christ after the flesh cannot truly challenge the name of Christians Page 199 L. Law as a Rule is as strict as ever Page 164 But not as a Covenant Page ib. The violation of the Law makes a Pardon necessary Page 231 The Impossibility of keeping the Law shews the necessity of a Redeemer Page 163 And should make us thankful for our deliverance by Christ. Page 164 Life Animal what it is Page 60 Life of the Body frail and Transitory Page 2 Life Eternal the happy condition of the Godly in Heaven called Life Page 104 Wherein it consists Page 105 The excellency of it Page 35 One of the principal Objects of Faith Page 14 The belief of it pressed Page 14 Little believed in the World v. Faith Page 15 Life Natural to be contemned Page 36 Life Spiritual that there is a Spiritual Life proved 189 What it is Page 60 189 In it all is to be referred not to our selves but to God Page 24 183 The Resemblance between it and the Life Natural 190 The difference between them 192 Signs of Spiritual Life Page 190 192 How it is conveyed and continued to us Page 26 190 The respect it hath to Christ's Resurrection v. Resurrection of Christ. Page 189 Life Spiritual matter of Faith Page 191 To be valued and esteemed by us Page 192 We are to go to Christ for it Page ib. Living denotes not one single action but the course of our conversation Page 185 Living to God Why we should live to God Page 138 139 186 A man cannot Live to himself and to God too Page 184 Motives to live to God Page 187 Directions not to live to our selves but to God Page 188 Living to our selves and not to God the danger of it Page 187 v. Living to God Love of Christ taken actively and passively Page 143 How the Love of Christ appeared in his dying Page 173 Love of God of benevolence and complacency what Page 143 Whence it comes to have such a force on us Page 147 How it is applyed to us Page 148 The consequent benefits of it Page ib. Persuasion of God's Love to us comfortable but not absolutely necessary Page 152 God's general Love in sending a Saviour to mankind should excite Love Page 153 Love to God what it is Page 143 159 Love to God considered as an exaction of the Law or rule of the Gospel Page 163 God in Christ the object of his Love and why Page 144 Whether God be to be loved for his beneficial goodness or Essential and Moral perfections Page 149 God is chiefly to be Loved for his essential and Moral perfections and why Page 150 Our loving God for his benefits is not wholly to be condemned and why Page 149 Mercies of daily Providence render God amiable Page 153 The defects of this Love Page 150 The Effects of it 145 155 159 Love to God the greater principle that draweth us off from self to God Page 185 The influence it hath on our duties and actions Page 145 What shall we do to know that we Love God Page 165 Why it is our duty to make this tryal Page 166 Obedience the great evidence of Love to God Page 166 How to get this Love to God Page 167 No man by Nature can bring his heart to Love God and why Page 167 Pardoning mercy breedeth and feedeth Love to God Page 230. Motives to Love God Page 168 Degrees of Love to God how to be measured Page 154 Comparison the best way to discover Love Page ib. God to be Loved above all things Page ib. What it is to Love
God with all the heart Page 163 How it is consistent with a Christian's defects Page 163 How far we are obliged to Love God with all the heart Page 164 How it is consistent with Love to Relations c. Page 165 Decay of Love incident to the people of God Page 156 What is not a Decay of Love Page 157 What it is Page 159 The greatness of the evil of it Page 158 The causes of it Page 160 The commonness of it Page 158 Many are surprized with it that are little sensible of it Page 158 How to prevent it Page 161 How to recover our Decayed Love Page 162 M MAdness Christianity accounted Madness by the men of the World Page 123 Reasons of it Page 124 What in Christianity is accounted Madness Page ib. The way of the wicked is properly Madness Page 125 Demonstrations of it Page 126 Mediator Christ a fit Mediator Page 220 What Christ was to do as Mediator Page 88 Men God dealeth with men by men and the reasons of it Page 238 Ministers are God's Ambassadors Page 240 Their duty as such Page 241 How to be received and entertained by us Page ib. The value and authority of their Office Page ib. Credit and respect to be given to their Message Page 241 242 They must treat with people with Love and sweetness and Meckness and Patience Page 242 Christ Spirit Ministry must not be separated Page 239 v. Men. Mortality swallowed up of Life in the other World Page 35 Mortifying sin how to improve the Death of Christ to the Mortifying of sin Page 182 N NEw Creature The necessity of the New Creation Page 204 What it is to be New Creatures Page 201 202 Why likeness to God is called the New Creature Page 203 God the Author of the New Creature Page 207 God the Author of the New Creature as reconciled in Christ. Page 213 How the New Creature flows from our Vnion with Christ Page 203 Why the New C●eature cannot be satisfied with the World Page 51 Evidences of being New Creatures v. Renovation Page 206 New Heart what it is Page 206 Non-Imputation of sin v. Imputation O OBedience the difficulties of obedience how sweetned Page 73 Obedience the great Evidence of Love Page 166 The properties of that Obedience that flows from Love Page 166 Marks of sincere Obedience Page 102 Odium abominationis inimicitiae explained Page 246 P Pain of sense in Hell twofold Page 105 Pauls Testimony of his sincerity Page 118 All Ministers and Christians may have the like Testimony of their Sincerity Page 119 How he commends himself to the Corinthians Page 118 Pardon of Sin the necessity of having Sin pardoned Page 231 The great difficulty of having Sin pardoned when once committed Page 230 God's readiness to pardon Sin Page 232 God pardons Sin not as the party offended only but as the Supream Iudge Page 227 The Excellency of this Priviledge Page 232 The good depending on pardon of Sin in this life and in the next Page 222 223 Pardon of Sin the proper Priviledge of the New Covenant Page 231 It 's a branch of our Reconciliation with God Page 225 Reasons to prove it so Page 227 They that are reconciled to God had need still to beg pardon of Sin Page 225 What those that are reconciled ask in asking a pardon Page 226 The design of pardon of Sin laid in God's Eternal Decree Page 223 It was purchased by Christ when he paid a Ransom for us Page ib. Pardon of Sin is chiefly eyed in the Death of Christ. Page 230 We are actually pardoned when we believe and repent v. Faith and Repentance Page 224 We are sensibly pardoned when God gives Peace and Ioy in believing Page 225 We are fully and compleatly pardoned at the Day of Iudgment Page ib. Pardoning Mercy breedeth and feedeth Love to God Page 230 Pardon of Sin an inviting Motive to Holiness Page 228 229 Perfection to be striven for Page 164 Persuasion Ministers to persuade men Page 115 What this Persuasion implies Page 114 People to persuade themselves Page 115 Pleasing God what makes us active in it Page 75 Why we should labour to please God Page 76 Pleasing God more to be regarded than pleasing of Men. Page 77 Pleasing of Men how far condemned Page ib. Pleasures of this Life to be used sparingly Page 70 Power of Man to convert himself the Absurdities that follow it Page 210 It is only in the Power of God to convert the sinner v. Conversion Not only the Power to will but to work when converted is of God Page 210 Preaching of the word necessary and the Reasons of it Page 237 The congruity and decency of this Dispensation Page 237 Presence with Christ in Heaven better than remaining in the Body Page 69 Our Happiness in another World lyes in presence with the Lord. Page 63 Reasons of it Page 64 To be desired by the Saints Page 68 Why the Saints desire it Page 54 Profession of the name of Christ without conformity to his Laws not valuable Page 197 Providence mercies of daily Providence declare much of the goodness of God Page 153 Punishment of sinners in Hell everlasting Page 106 Everlasting Punishment consistent with Gods Iustice. Page ib. Punishment of sense or Loss which is the greater Page 64 Q. QUalification of those that shall have a blessed Estate in Heaven Page 10 R. REcompence different Recompences at the day of Iudgment Page 114 Reconciliation What it is to Reconcile Page 215 The nature of this Reconciliation Page 217 The Revelation of the way of Reconciliation is a great blessing Page 235 How Reconciliation in Scripture is ascribed to God the Father to Christ and to believers themselves Page 216 How far Christ is concerned in it opened Page 219 God in the work of Reconciliation will keep up the honour of his Iustice Holiness and Truth Page 219 The Reconciliation is mutual between God and man and man and God Page 215.217 Why the Scriptures generally insist on our being Reconciled to God Page 215 The necessity of being Reconciled to God Page 244 VVhy God is said to Reconcile the world indefinitely to himself Page 214 Gods condescension in this matter Page 248 The greatness of the Mercy and Grace of God in our Reconciliation Page 220 The value of the Priviledges Page 249 The great dishonour we do to God in refusing it Page 249 The Priviledges and blessings that depend upon and accompany it Page 218 249 By Reconciliation our State is as good or better than it was in Innocency Page 217 Pardon of Sin a branch of our Reconciliation v. Pardon Page 225 God the Author of the New Creature as Reconciled to us in Christ. Page 213 The End of our Reconciliation is walking in a course of Holiness Page 229 Every thing in it implies Holiness Page 219 What is to be done on man's part that he may be Reconciled to God Page 243 Our Right to this Priviledge is begun as soon as
Judge but to save yet sometimes beamed out his Majesty as in the miracle of the great draught of Fishes Luk. 5.3 but especially when his Enemies fell backward with a look or word from his Mouth John 18.6 His whipping the Buyers and Sellers out of the Temple Math. 21.12 And at his Transfiguration his Disciples were afraid Mat. 17.6 If his Voice was so terrible in the dayes of his flesh what will it be then He came at first in the form of a Servant Phil. 2.6 7. Now he cometh as Lord and Heir of all things Heb. 1.2 Then he came in the Similitude of sinful Flesh Rom. 8.3 Now without sin Heb. 9.28 Then he had a fore-runner John the Baptist The voice of one crying in the Wilderness Mat. 3.3 Now the Arch-Angel 1 Thes. 4.16 Then he had twelve Companions poor Fisher-men now with Saints and Angels his holy ten thousands Jude 7. Then he raised some few to Life now All shall hear the voice of the Son of God and live John 5.28 Then he came riding upon an Ass now he shall come in the Clouds of Heaven and the Judge shall sit in the Throne of Majesty summoning the World to appear before him As this will be comfortable to the Godly so terrible to the unprepared 3. Because of his work when he cometh which is to Judge the World and to make a strict enquiry into the wayes of men Revel 20.12 And I saw the dead small and great stand before God and the books were opened and another book was opened which is the book of Life and the dead were judged out of the things that were written in the books according to their works All actions are set in order Psa. 50.21 with such impartiality and strictness that we should all tremble at the thought of it Surely if we did believe these things we would prepare our selves accordingly Acts 17.31 He hath appointed a day wherein he will Judge the world in righteousness God governeth the world now in Righteousness but the Justice of God hath not its full scope and measure God useth patience to the wicked and doth not give the godly their full reward God is arbitrary in his Gifts but not in his Judgments all are under a Rule either the law of Works or the Gospel-law Jam. 2.12 13. So speak and so do as those that are to be judged by the law of liberty 4. After Judgment Sentence is pass'd never to be reversed again Here there is a possibility of retrieving it by Repentance for here 't is Sententia legis but there 't is Sententia Judicis there is no appeal from this Sentence here sentence may be repealed Ezek. 18.12 If the wicked shall turn from his sins that he hath committed and keep my Statutes and do that which is lawful and right he shall surely live he shall not die Therefore we have need to provide for this day 5. Prepared or unprepared we must all go forth to meet the Bridegroom Therefore we had need to consider with our selves whether we are in case to meet him or no. Others think we make too much ado about it but this is the great thing that should take up our care and thoughts whether we are upon a sure bottom for Eternity Luk. 10.42 This is the one thing necessary Alas that we should make no greater matter of it and set our selves about it with no more care and seriousness Psa. 27.4 'T is necessity and our own necessity and a necessity for so great an end not to live honourably and comfortably in the world but for ever with God In reason necessary things should be preferred before superfluous that which cannot be spared should be first regarded USE 1. Is to quicken you to rouse up your selves And 2. To trim your Lamps Gods messengers in all Ages have raised the cry Enoch long ago Jude 14 15. Behold the Lord cometh with ten thousands of his Saints He speaks of it as a thing in being and actually in view so do we call upon men If we had a deeper sense and more lively apprehensions of that day surely we would more bestir our selves 1. To rouse up our selves Shake off sloath and security 2 Tim. 1.6 Stir up the gift that is in thee Isa. 64.7 There is none that stirreth up himself to take hold of thee There is need of awakening our selves yet more and more Conscience is too sleepy the Will too remiss the Affections are dead and earthly and are not so active and powerful upon our Hearts as they were wont to be Oh do not rest in a lukewarm drowsie Profession but seriously bestir your selves 2. Trim up your Lamps That is let your Practice and Profession of Godliness be more lively and powerful and Grace kept in constant exercise Having your loins girt and your lamps burning Luk. 12.35 Oh 't is a blessed thing to be found so doing You will never do so 1. While you content your selves with a little Religiousness by the By and do not make Godliness your main work and business Work out your Salvation with fear and trembling 2. While you content your selves with doubtful questionable Grace and do not put it out of all doubt 1 Pet. 1.10 11. Give all diligence to make your calling and election sure that so an abundant entrance may be ministred unto you 3. You will never do so while you content your selves with a little general Religion without looking into every part and point of Duty 1 Pet. 1.15 Be ye holy in all manner of Conversation Wherein you are to exercise your Obedience to God Acts 26.7 8. Vnto which promise our twelve Tribes instantly serving God night and day hope to come 4. You will never do so 'till your minds be taken off from the present World and more deeply fixed upon the World to come Matth. 6.21 'Till that be your treasure Col. 3.1 Set your affections upon things above Our Affections often cool being scattered too much upon present things we have little or no thoughts of our spiritual Journey 1 Pet. 1.13 Gird up the loins of your minds be sober and hope to the end for the Grace that is to be brought to you at the revelation of Jesus Christ 'T is meant of the Affections 'T is the lively expectation of blessedness to come that keepeth us in life and exercise Secondly We now come to the consideration of it as to the foolish Virgins they all arose and trimmed their Lamps The foolish Virgins made a fair flourish on their part it noteth their vain Confidence as if they were as ready to meet the Bridegroom as the wise though the event sheweth the contrary So that on their part it doth not note so much their serious Preparation as their foolish Presumption Doct. 2. Many think they have Grace enough to meet Christ at his coming when the event sheweth no such matter Or Many have great Confidence of the goodness of their Condition that will be found foolish Virgins
at last As in the Text the foolish Virgins and in the 7th of Matth. The foolish Builder There are four Reasons of this 1. Self-love Which blindeth a man in Judging of his State and actions Pro. 16.2 All the wayes of a man are right in his own eyes 'T is natural to a man to have a good conceit of his own wayes so Pro. 30.12 There is a Generation of men pure in their own eyes yet not washed from their filthiness A man will favour himself be a Parasite to himself A self-suspecting Heart is very rare John 13.23 24. and 2 Sam. 12.7 2. An Overly sense of their Duty and belief of the World to come Temporaries have but a taste of heavenly Doctrine Heb. 6.4 a light tincture the act of their Faith is not so intense and serious as to set them a work with all life and diligence or to enable them to Judge impartially whether they are able to bear the coming of Christ yea or no. Presumption is the Child of Ignorance and Incogitancy they do not consider of the strictness of the Gospel-law or the Impartiality of the last dayes Account there is but a notional sleight superficial uneffectual apprehension of these things An Ignorant person is fool-hardy he doth not weigh the danger 'T is not the greatness of our Confidence but the acuteness of our Sense 3. Want of searching or taking the course whereby we may be undeceived Jer. 8.6 No man repented of his wickedness saying What have I done Yea when searched and their natural face shewed them Jam. 1.23 24 they will not search and try their wayes A Temporary is seldom discovered to himself 'till it be too late but you may find him by these notes usually he is sloathful he is not a laborious Christian sound exercise maketh us feel our Condition he is not self-searching he doth not look into himself he smothereth those misgivings of Heart which he hath and will not consider the Case or return upon himself If they do not search they cannot know themselves if they should search they do not like themselves they chuse the latter 4. Building upon false Evidences or upon sandy foundations A formal Professor may go very far towards Salvation Temporaries may have awakening Grace much trouble about their Condition as Ahab and Judas So many are full of doubts and stinging fears and make their case known would fain be eased of their smart They may have enlightning Grace Heb. 6.7 more than many true Christians have Rom. 2.18 have an approbation of the things that are excellent being instructed out of the Law 2 Tim. 3.5 having a form of Godliness Grammatically and Logically have a clearer understanding of the sence of words the contexture and dependance of Truths be able to defend any sacred Verity and express their minds about it yea some sense of Christ and Heaven and Glory yea they may have affecting grace be wonderfully taken with the glad tydings of the Gospel may have some taste of the Grapes of the good Land may desire to die the death of the Righteous Numb 23.10 desire the bread of life Joh. 6.34 they may delight in holy things Isa. 58.2 as Herod heard the Word which John preached gladly and Mark 6.20 the stony ground heard the Word with joy But they have not renewing Grace heart-transforming Grace sin-mortifying Grace nor world-conquering Grace yet something like these they may have something like transforming grace a Change wrought in them though not such as puts Grace in Sovereignty and Dominion As to Sin-mortifying grace there are some Conflicts with sin and they may sacrifice some of their weaker Lusts yet the Flesh is not crucifyed As to World conquering grace they may profess long hold out against a Persecution 1 Cor. 13.1 If I should give my body to be burnt and have not Charity it profiteth not Compare Acts 19.33 with 2 Tim. 2.10 and 2 Tim. 4.14 Yea they may keep some Profession till death have a good esteem among the People of God and yet the Heart never be throughly subdued to God 1 VSE Oh then let us not be high-minded but fear Rom. 11.20 And let all this that hath been spoken tend to weaken the security of the Flesh but not the Joy of Faith Let it batter down all your false confidence and carnal security by which you are apt to deceive your own Souls and make you build more surely for Heaven Consider 1. God may see that which your selves or men do not For he seeth not as man seeth Others look upon appearance you your selves may be blinded with your own self-love but God knoweth all things seeth all things therefore though thou hast a Name yet perhaps art dead Rev. 3.1 And though we know nothing by our selves yet we are not thereby justified 2 Cor. 4.4 2. How dreadful it is to know our Errour by the Event rather than by a Search The foolish Virgins said to the wise Give us of your Oyl for our Lamps are gone out They began to see their defect when it was too late The foolish Builder that built his House upon the sand his Building made as fair a shew as any but it fell and great was the fall of it So is the Hope of the Hypocrite when God cometh to take away his Soul then they will see and bewail their deceits of Heart but have no time to remedy them Many think they have Godliness enough while they live but when they come to die they will find it little enough and all their false hopes will leave them ashamed 3. We have need again and again to bring the grounds of our Confidence into the sight and view of Conscience that we may be sure they will hold weight Psal. 44.18 Our heart is not turned back neither have our steps declined thy way 2 Cor. 1.12 This is our rejoycing the testimony of our Conscience At least when you suspect your selves how do you make a shift to quiet your Consciences Is it upon solid grounds and such as will bear weight in the day of Christ Many are strongly conceited of themselves when there is little ground for it Luke 13.24 Many shall seek to enter but shall not be able Rev. 3.17 Thou thoughtest that thou wert rich and increased with goods when thou art poor and wretched and blind and naked In a poor case to meet the Bridegroom but they thought themselves in a happy Condition 2 VSE To excite you to this Duty Take these Considerations First Your Cure is not fully wrought you are not yet brought home to God 1 Pet. 3.18 Christ also suffered for sin the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God Secondly To keep to your first beginnings after a long time of growth is to be Babes still Heb. 5.12 13 14. When for the time ye ought to be teachers ye have need to be taught the first Principles of the Oracles of God and are become such as have need of Milk