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A10659 Three treatises of the vanity of the creature. The sinfulnesse of sinne. The life of Christ. Being the substance of severall sermons preached at Lincolns Inne: by Edward Reynoldes, preacher to that honourable society, and late fellow of Merton Colledge in Oxford. Reynolds, Edward, 1599-1676. 1631 (1631) STC 20934; ESTC S115807 428,651 573

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the evill spirit against Ahab and his Prophets that hee should goe forth with lying perswasions and should bee beleeved and prevaile according to that of the Apostle that God giveth over those that beleeve not the Truth but have pleasure in unrighteousnesse to strong delusions that they may beleeve a lye and that the God of this world doth blinde the eyes of those which beleeve not Lastly the Punishment of sinne is Eternall That wrath which in the day of the Revelation of Gods righteous Iudgement shall bee powred forth upon ungodly men The Saints are redeemed already in this life and are said to have Eternall Life but yet that great day is by an excellency called the day of Redemption because then that life which is here hid shall be then fully discovered So on the other side though the wrath of God be revealed from Heaven already against all unrighteonsnesse and Abideth vpon those that beleeve not yet after an especiall manner is the last day called a day of wrath because then the heapes treasures stormes and tempests blackenesse and darkenesse of Gods displeasure shall in full force seize upon ungodly men And this wrath of God is of all other most unsupportable First In regard of the Author It comes from God Now we know a little stone if it fall from a high place or a smal dart shot out of a strong bow wil do more hurt then a farre greater that is but gently laid on How wefull then must the case of those be who shall have mountaines and milstones throwne with Gods owne arme from Heaven upon them for though God in this life suffer himselfe to bee wrestled with and even pressed downe yet at last he shall come to shew forth the glory of his Power in the just condemnation of wicked men Secondly in its owne nature because it is most heavie and invincible All conquest over an evill must proceede either from Power which is able to expell it or from Faith and Hope that a man shall be delivered from it by those that have more power then himselfe what ever evill it is which doth either keepe downe Nature that it connot rise or hedge it in that it cannot escape is very intollerable Now Gods wrath hath both these in it First it is so great that it exceedes all the power of the Creature to overcome it heavier then mountaines hotter then fire no chaffe nor stubble shall stand before it and it shall be All within a man folded up in his very substance like the worme in the wood on which it feedes And secondly as it is heavie and so excludes the strength of nature to overcome it so is it infinite too and thus it excludes the hope of nature to escape it The ground of which infinitenesse in punishment is the infinite disproportion betweene the Iustice of God which will punish and the nature of man which must suffer Gods Iustice being Infinite the violation thereof in sinne must needes contract an infinite demerit and debt because in sinning we robbe God of his Glory which we must repay him againe Now the satisfaction of an Infinite debt must needes be Infinite either in degrees which is impossible For first nothing can bee Infinite in Being though it may in duration but onely God And secondly if it could yet a finite vessell were not able to hold an infinite wrath or else in some other infinitenesse which is either infinitenesse of worth in the person satisfying or for defect of that infinitenesse of time to suffer that whith cannot bee suffered in an infinite measure And this is the reason why Christ did not suffer infinitely in time because there was in him a more excellent i●…finitenesse of person which raised a finite suffering into the value of an infinite satisfaction though Scotus and from him some learned men have rendered another reason hereof because hee suffered onely for those who were to breake off their sinnes by Repentance Now then to conclude all In as much as sinne is by the Law made exceeding sinfull and death exceeding deadly not to legall but evangelicall purposes not to drive men to blaspheme or despaire but to beleeve not to frighten them from God but to drive them unto him in his Sonne for the Law comes not but in the hand of a mediator And in as much as this is the accepted time and the day of Salvation that now he commandeth All Men every where to repent because he hath appointed a Day in the which he will Iudge the World in righteousnesse whom hee doth now invite and beseech in mercy We should therefore be wise for our selves and being thus pursued and cast in the Court of Law flie to that Heavenly Chancery that Office of Mercie and mi●…gation which is set up in the Gospell and that while it is yet called to Day before the Percullis bee shut downe before the blacke flagge be hung out before the Talent of Lead seale up the measure of our wickednesse and the Irreversible decree of wrath be gone forth for we must know that God will not alwayes bee despised nor suffer his Gospell to waite ever upon obdurate ●…ners or his Sonne to stand ever at our dores as if he stood in need of our admittance But when there is no remedy but that we judge our selves unworthy of Eternall Life and stand in contempt and rebellion against his Court of Mercie he will dismisse us to the Law againe O Consider what wilt thou doe if thou shouldest bee dragg'd naked to the Tribunall of Christ and not bee able with all thy cries to obtaine so much mercie from any Mountaine as to live for ever under the weight and pressure of it When thou shalt peepe out of thy Grave and see Heaven and Earth on fire about thine eares and Christ comming in the flames of that fire to revenge on thee the quarrell of his Covenant Whither then wilt thou fly from the presence of him that sitteth on the Throne Let us therefore learne to Iudge our selves that wee may not be condemned of the Lord to fly to his Sanctuary before wee be haled to his tribunall Hee requires no great thing of us but onely to relinquish our selues and in humilitie and sincerity to accept of him and receive that redemption by beleeving in him which hee hath wrought by suffering for us this if in truth and spirit we doe all the rest will undoubtedly follow namely the life of our Faith here in an universall obedience and the end of our faith hereafter even the falvation of our Soules THE RAIGNE OF SINNE ROM 6. 12. Let not sinne therefore Raigne in your mortall bodi●…s that you should obay it in the lusts thereof AFter the doctrine of the state and guilt of sinne It will be needefull for the further Conviction thereof that sinne may appeare exceeding sinfull to shew in the next place the Power and the Raigne of sinne from which the Apostle in
his worship Thus all those phantasticall felicities which men build upon the Creature prove in the end to have been nothing else but the banquet of a dreaming man nothing but lies and vanitie in the conclusion Lastly They Deceive us likewise in respect of evill No Creatures however they may promise Immunitie and deliverance can doe a man any good when the Lord will be pleased to send evill upon him And yet it is not for nothing that a truth so universally confessed should yet bee repeated in the Scripture That silver and gold and corruptible things are not a fit price for the soules of men Doubtlesse the holy men of God forsaw a time when false Christs and false Prophets should come into the world which should set salvation to sale and make merchandise of the Soules of men as wee see at this day in popish Indulgences and penance and the like no lesse ridiculous then impious superstitions Neither is it for nothing that Salomon tells us That riches yea whole Treasures doe not profit in the day of death a speech repeated by two prophets after him For surely those holy men knew how apt wealth and greatnesse is to bewitch a man with conceits of Immortality as hath been shewed Who were they that made a covenant with death and were at an agreement with hell to passe from them but the scornfull men the Rulers of the people which had abundance of wealth and honour Who were they that did put far away the evill day in despight of the Prophets threatnings did flatter themselves in the conceite of their firme and inconcussible estate but they who were at ease in Sion who trusted upon the Mountaines of Samaria who lay upon beds of I●…orie and stretch'd themselves upon their couches But we see all this was but deceite they go captive with the first of those that go captive the banket of them that stretched themselves is removed All earthly supports without God are but like a stately house on the sand without a foundation a man shal be buried in his owne pride He that is strong shall be to seeke of his strength he that is mighty should deliver others shall be too weak for his own defence he that is swift shall be amaz'd and not dare to fly if he be a bowman at a great distance if he be a rider have a great advantage he shal yet be overtaken and he that is couragious adventures to stand out shall be faine to flye away naked at the last What ever hopes or refuges any Creature cā afford a man in these troubles they are nothing but froth vanity the Lord challenges derides them al. And the Prophet Esay gives a sound reason of it all The Egyptians are men and not God their horses are flesh not spirit when the Lord shal stretch out his hand both he that helpeth shall fall and he that is helpen shal fal down and they al shal faile together Before wee proceed to the last thing proposed here is a question to be answered If the Creatures be so full of Vexation It should seeme that it is unprofitable and by consequence unlawfull either to labour or to pray for them Which yet is plainely contrary to Christs direction Give us our daylie bread and contrary to the practice of the Saints who use to call for the fatnesse of the earth and dew of heaven peace of walls and prosperity of Palaces upon those whom they blesse To which I answere That which is evill by accident doth not prejudice that which is Good in it selfe and by Gods ordination Now the vexation which hath been spoken of is not an effect flowing naturally out of the condition of the creature but ariseth meerely by accident upon the reason of its separation from God who at first did appoint his owne blessed communion to goe along with his Creatures Now things which are good in themselves but accidentally evill may justly be the object of our prayers and endeavours And so on the otherside many things there are which in themselves alone are evill yet by the providence and disposition of God they have a good issue they worke together for the best to them that love God It was good for David that he had been afflicted yet wee may not lawfully pray for such evils on our selves or others upon presumption of Gods goodnesse to turne them to the best Who doubts that the calamities of the Church doe at this time stirre up the hearts of men to seeke the Lord and his face and to walke humbly and fearefully before him yet that man should be a curse and prodigie in the eyes of God and men who should still pray for the calamities of Sion and to see the stones of Ierusalem still in the dust Death is in it selfe an evill thing for the Apostle calles it an enemy 1. Cor. 15. yet by the infinite power and mercy of God who delights to bring good out of evill and beauty out of ashes it hath not onely the sting taken away but is made an entrance into Gods owne presence with reference unto which benefit the Apostle desireth to be dissolved and to be with Christ Phil. 1. 23. Now notwithstanding this goodnesse which death by accident brings along with it yet being in it selfe a Destructive thing we may lawfully in the desires of our soule shrinke from it and decline it Example whereof we have in the death of Christ himselfe which was of all as the most bitter so the most pretious and yet by reason of that bitternesse which was in it hee prayes against it presenting unto his Father the desires of his Soule for that life which he came to lay downe as his obedience to his Father and love to his Church made him most willingly embrace death so his love to the integritie of his humane nature and feare of so heavy pressures as he was to feele made him as seriously to decline it And though the Apostle did most earnestly desire to be with Christ yet he did in the same desire decline the common rode thither through the darke passages of death 2. Cor. 5. 4. Vnlawfull indeed it is for any man to pray universally against death because that were to withstand the Statutes of God Heb 9. 27. but against any particular danger wee may as Ezechiah did 1. King 20. 1 2. reserving still a generall submission to the will and decrees of God For we are bound in such a case to use all good meanes and to pray for Gods blessing upon them which amounts to a prayer against the danger it selfe So then by the Rule of contraries though the Creatures be full of vanitie and vexation yet this must not swallow up the apprehension of that goodnesse which God hath put into them nor put off the desires of men from seeking them of God in those just prayers which he hath prescribed and in those
heart upon thine Asses for the desire of Israel is upon thee Why should a Kings heart be set upon Asses so may I say why should Christians hearts be set upon earthly things since they have the desires of all flesh to fix upon I will conclude with one word upon the last particu lar How to use the Creatures as Thornes or as vexing things First Let not the Bramble be King Let not earthly things beare rule over thy affections fire will rise out of them which will consume thy Cedars emasculate all the powers of thy Soule Let Grace sit in the throne and earthly things be subordinate to the wisdome and rule of Gods Spirit in thy heart They are excellent servants but pernicious Masters Secondly Be arm'd when thou touchest or medlest with them Arm'd against the Lusts and against the Temptations that arise from them Get faith to place thy heart upon better promises enter not upon them without prayer unto God that since thou art going amongst snares he would carry thee through with wisedome and faithfulnesse and teach thee how to use them as his blessings and as instruments of his glory Make a covenant with thine heart as Iob with his eyes have a jealousie and suspicion of thine evill heart lest it be surpriz'd and bewitched with finfull affections Thirdly touch them gently doe not hug love dote upon the Creature nor graspe it with adulterous embraces the love of mony is a roote of mischiefe and is enmity against God Fourthly use them for Hedges and fences to relieve the Saints to make friends of unrighteous Mammon to defend the Church of Christ but by no meanes have them In thy field but onely About it mingle it not with thy Corne least it choake and stifle all And lastly vse them as Gedeon for weapons of Iust revenge against the enemies of Gods Church to vindicate his truth and glory and then by being wise and faithfull in a little thou shalt at last be made ruler over much and enter into thy Masters Ioy. FINIS THE SINFVLNES OF SINNE Considered in the State Guilt Power and Pollution thereof By EDWARD REYNOLDS Preacher to the Honourable Societie of Lincolns Inne PAX OPVLENTIAM SAPIENTIA PACEM FK LONDON Imprinted by Felix Kyngston for Robert Bostocke 1631. THE SINFVLNESSE OF SINNE ROM 7. 9. For I was alive without the Law once but when the Commandement came Sinne revived and I died WEE have seene in the foriner Treatise that man can finde no Happinesse in the Creature I will in the next place shew That he can find no happinesse in Himselfe It is neither about him nor within him In the Creature nothing but vanitis and vexation in Himselfe nothing but Sinne and Death The Apostle in these words sets forth three things First The state of Sinne Sinne Revived Secondly the Guilt of Sinne I Died or found my selfe to be a condemn'd man in the state of perdition Thirdly the evidence and conviction of both When the Commandement came which words imply a conviction and that from the spirit First a conviction for they inferre a conclusion extremely contradictory to the conclusions in which Saint Paul formerly rested which is the forme of a conviction Saint Pauls former conclusion was I was alive but when the commandement came the conclusion was extremely contrary I Died. Secondly It was a spirituall conviction For Saint Paul was never literally without the Law but the va●…le till this time was before his eyes he is now made to understand the Law in its native sense and compasse the Law is spiritual v. 14. and he is enabled to discerne it spiritually Absurd is the Doctrine of the Socinians some others That unregenerate men by a meere natur all perception without any divine superin●…us'd light they are the words of Episcopius and they are wicked wordes may understand the whol●… Law even all things requisite unto faith godlines Foolishly confounding and impiously deriding the spirituall and divine sense of holy Scriptures with the grammatical construction Against this we shall need use no other argument then a plaine Syllogisme compounded out of the very words of Scripture Darknesse doth not comprehend light Ioh. 1. 5. 〈◊〉 men are Darkenesse Eph. 5. 8. 4. 17. 18. Act. 26. 18. 2. P●…t 1. 9. yea Held under the power of darkenesse Col. 1. 13. and the word of God is light Psal. 119. 105. 2. Cor. 4. 4. therefore unregenerate men cannot understand the ●…d in that spirituall compasse which it carries There is such an asymmetry and disproportion betweene our understandings and the brightnesse of the word that the Saints themselves have prayed for more spirituall light and vnderstanding to conceive it That knowledge which a man ought to have for there is a knowledge which is not such as it ought to be doth passe knowledge even all the ●…ength of meere naturall reason to attaine unto peculiar to the sheep of Christ. Naturall men have their principles vitiated their faculties bound that they cannot understand spirituall things till God have as it were ●…nplanted a ●…ew understanding in them framed the heart to attend and set it at liberty to see the glory of God with open face Though the vaile doe not keepe out Grammaticall construction yet it blindeth the heart against the spirituall light and beauty of the Word We see even in common sciences where the conclusions are suteable to our owne innate and implanted notions yet he that can distinctly construe and make Grammar of a principle in Euclide may be ignorant of the Mathematicall sense and use of it much more may a man in divine truths bee Spiritually ignorant even where in some respect hee may be said to know For the Scriptures pronounce men ignorant of those things which they see and know In divine doctrine obedience is the Ground of knowledge and Holinesse the best qualification to understand the Scriptures If any m●…n will doe the will of God he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God The 〈◊〉 will he teach his way and ●…eale his secret to them that feare him to babes to those that conforme not themselves to this evill world To understand then the words we must note first that there is an opposition between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those two Clauses in the Text Once and When the Commandement came It is the conceite of some that the latter as well as the former is meant of a state of unregeneration and that Saint Paul all this Chapter over speaketh in the person of an unregenerate man not intending at all to shew the fleshlinesse and adherency of corruption to the holiest men but the necessitie of righteousnesse by Christ without the which though a man may when once the Commandement comes and is fully revealed will good hate sinne in sinning doe that which he would not
and are therefore altogether undisposed to Continue or hold fast the truth A man in his lusts is like a man in a disease not long well in one way but is ever given to changes and experiments and as he changeth so doth he ever new shape the scripture and dragge it downe to the patronage of his owne wayes So that the Law in a wicked mans heart is like a candle in a foule lanterne or as a straight oare in troubled water or the shining of light through a color'd glasse wried and chang'd into the image of the corrupted minde wherein it lies The Law in it selfe is Perfect right pure sure and faithfull holy just and spirituall lively and operative and men by nature are unlike all this degenerate and crooked wavering and unfaithfull deceiving and being deceived unholy carnall and impure fleshly minded dead and reprobate to every good worke Such a great disproportion is there betweene Nature and the Law 3. Because it doth not Drive us out of our selves for a Remedie The sublimest philosophie that ever was did never teach a man to denie himselfe but to build up his house with the old ruines to fetch stones and materials out of the wonted quarrie Humiliation confusion shame selfe-abhorrencie to be vile in a mans owne eyes to be nothing within himselfe to be willing to owne the vengeance of almighty God and to judge our selves to justifie him that may condemne us and be witnesses against our selves are vertues knowne only in the booke of God and which the learnedest Philosophers would have esteemed both irrational and pusillanimous things 4. Because naturall judgement is so throughly distorted and infatuated as to count evill good and good evill light darkenesse and darkenesse light to perswade a man that he is in a right way when the end thereof will be theissues of death that he is Rich and in need of nothing when in the meane time he is miserable poore blinde and naked Platoes community Aristotles Vrbanitie and magnanimity Ciceroes blinding the eyes of the Iudges and his officious dissimulation and compliancie the Stoicks apathie and officious lies that so much admired stoutnesse or rather sullennesse of those rigid Heathen that puld out their owne eyes that they mighy bee chaste and kild themselves to be rid of evill times nay more the Pharisies strictnesse the zeale and unblameablenesse of Paul the devotions of obstinate Iewes all the strength of civill morall formall shewes and expressions of goodnesse though specious in the eyes of men yet in the eyes of God that seeth not as manseeth they are all but sinfull and filthy losse and dung Lastly because nature in particular men never knew nor had experience of a better estate and therefore must needs bee ignorant of that full Image in which it was created and unto which it ought still to be conformable As a man borne in a dungeon is unable to conceive the state of a Palace as the Childe of a Noble man stolne away and brought up by some lewd Begger cannot conceive or suspect the honour of his blood so utterly unable is corrupted nature that hath bin borne in a wombe of ignorance bred in a hell of uncleannesse enthrall'd from the beginning to the prince of darkenesse to conceive or convince a man of that most holy and pure condition in which hee was created the least deviation where-from is sinne unto him Now then since Nature cannot thus convince the spirit in the Commandement must We have no inward principle but these two We grant there is a difference to be made betweene the illumination and Renovation of the spirit men may be illightned and yet not sanctified as a false Starre or an ignis fatuus may have light without influence or heate yet withall it is certaine too that it is impossible to know sinne in that hatefulnesse which is in it with such a knowledge as begets hatred and detestation of it or to know divine things with such a knowledge a●… is commensurate to them such as in their spirituall and immediate purity they are apt to beget but that knowledge must worke admiration delight love endeavours of conformity unto so heavenly truths No comprehension of things divine without love Ephes. 3. 17. 18. the reason why God gives men over to strong delusions to beleeve lyes is because they did not receive the love of the truth that they might be saved 2. Thes. 2. 10. 11. This conviction then of sinne the spirit worketh First by revealing the Rule Secondly by opening the condition of the state of sinne Thirdly by giving a heart experimentally and reflexively to understand all or by shaping and framing the heart to the Word and so mingling them both together The Apostle saith that By the Commandement sinne revived By the life of sinne I understand the strength of it and that is twofold A strength to condemne and a strength to operate or worke in a man obedience to it selfe a strength to hold a man fast and to carry him its owne way Sin is a body and hath earthly members Col. 3. 4. which are very active vigorous the Apostle speaketh of a holding propertie which it hath Rom. 7. 6. and this strength hath the sinewes of all strength in it It is a Lord and so it hath the strength of power to command and it is a husband and so it hath the strength of love to perswade and prevaile First it is a Lord and Master in which respect it hath these tyes upon us First a Covenant there is a virtuall bargaine betweene lust and a sinner Esay 28. 15. we make promise of serving and obeying sinne Ioh. 8. 34. Rom. 6. 16. and that returneth unto us the wages of iniquitie and the pleasures of sinne 2. Pet. 2. 15. Heb. 11. 25. Secondly love unto it as unto a bountifull and beneficiall Lord. Sinne exerciseth authority over us and yet we account it our benefactor Hos 2. 5. 12. 13. Iob 20. 12. 13. Thirdly an easie service the worke of sinne is naturall the instruments all ready at hand the helpers and fellow-servants many to teach to encourage to hasten and lead on in the broad way Fourthly in sinne it selfe there is a great strength to enforce men to its service First it is edg'd with malice against the soule arm'd with weapons to fight against it and enmity is a great Whetstone to valour Secondly it is attended with fleshly wisedome suppported with stratagems and deceits hastened and set on by the assistance of Satan and the world Eph. 4. 22 Heb. 3. 13. Thirdly it hath a Iudicature and regiment in the heart it governes by a Law it f●…nds forth lusts axnd temptations like so many edicts into the soule and when we object the Law of God against the service
but Gods Love and Mercy is the onely reason of making promises The Lord did not set his Love upon you nor choose you saith Moses to Israel because ye were more in number then any people but because the Lord Loved you that is the ground of making the promise and because he would keepe the oath which he had sworne to your fathers that was the ground of performing his promise For thy Words sake and according to thine owne heart saith David hast thou done all these great things According to thine owne heart that is ex mero mot●… out of pure and unexcited love thou didst give thy Word and Promise and for thy Word sake thou hast performed it not for any thing that was in mee for wh●… am ●… O Lord or what is my house hast thou brought me hitherto Thou wilt performe saith the Prophet the Truth to Iacob and the mercy to Abraham which thou hast sworne unto our fathers from the dayes of old Why Truth to Iacob and Mercy to Abraham We must note the promise after a sort began in Abraham therefore he is call'd the Father of the Faithfull and when God makes a promise it is onely out of Mercie but the Promise was continued unto ●…a cob who being Abrahams seede was an hei●…e of the Promise and so the inheritance which was out of mercy given unto Abraham did out of Truth and fidelitie descend unto Iacob the seede of Abraham and therefore we shall finde Covenant Mercy and Oath ioyned together in the Scripture to note unto us both the ground of making the Covenant Mercy and the ground of performing the Covenant made the Truth and Fidelity of God Thy God shall keepe unto thee the Covenant and the Mercy which he sware unto thy fathers saith Moses To performe the Mercy promised to our fathers and to re member his holy Covenant The oath which he sware to ou●… father Abraham c. saith Zachary in his song Th●… wee see that the Promises are the tokens and fruits o●… Gods meere Love And in that regard they are apt to cleanse or to moue us to any dut●…e which God requires of us For Love and mercy being by faith apprehended are strong arguments to love and feare God againe is love him because he loved us and they shall feare th●… Lord and his goodnesse the goodnesse of the Lord begetteth feare and that is all one as to cleanse and purifie for the feare of the Lord is cleane and pure There is an uncleane feare like that of the Adulteresse who feareth her husband lest hee should returne and deprehend her in her falsenesse to him but the true feare of the Lord is cleane like that of a chaste spouse who feareth the departure of her Love There are none so destitute of humanity as not to answere Love for Love Secondly Promises are the Efficient causes of our Purification as they are The grounds of our Hope and expectations Wee have no reason to Hope for any thing which is not promised or upon any other conditions then as promised Hope is for this reason in Scripture compared to an Anker both sure and stedfast because it must have something of firmenesse and stabilitie to fasten upon before it can secure the Soule in any tempest To hope without a promise or upon any promise otherwise then it stands is but to let an Anker hang in the water or catch in a Wave and thereby to expect safetie to the Vessell This argument the Apostle useth why we should not cast away our confidence or slacken our hope because there is a Promise which by patience and doing the Will of God we may in due time receive and which is a firme foundation for our Confidence to ●…est upon So Abraham is said to have beleeved against hope in hope that hee should be the father of many nations and the ground of that hope is added According to that which was spoken to that word of Promise ●…o shall thy se●…de be And else where he is said to have looked for a City which had foundations that is a Citie which was built upon the Immutable stabilitie of Gods ●…ath and Promise Thus we see Promises are the grounds of our Hop●… and Hop●… is of a cleansing nature The Grace of God saith the Apostle teacheth as to deny 〈◊〉 and worldly lusts and to live ●…oberly righteously and Godly in this present World the reason whereof is presently enforced Looking for that blessed Hope and the Glorious appearing of the great God And againe He that hath this hope in him saith S. Iohn namely to bee like him at his comming Purifieth himselfe even as He is Pure Hee that hopeth to be fully like Christ hereafter and to come to the measure of the stature of his fulnesse will labour to his uttermost to bee as he was in this World For a man hopes for nothing de futuro which he would not presently compasse if it were in his power No man is to bee presum'd to Hope for the whole who hates any part or to expect the fulnesse who rejects the first fruites of the Spirit He that loveth not his brother whom hee hath seene how can hee love God whom he hath not seene That is He that cannot endure nor looke on that little glimpse and ray of Holynesse which is in his brother in one of the same passions infirmities and corruptions with himselfe will much lesse be able to abide the light of the Sonne of righteousnesse and that most orient spotlesse and vast Holynesse which is in him The same reason holdes here he that cannot endeavour to purifie himselfe here doth never truely hope to be like Christ hereafter He that directs his course towards Yorke can never bee presumed to hope that hee shall by that journey get to London when he knowes or might easily be informed that it is quite the other way And the truth is no wicked man hath any true or a●… saint Peter cal●… it lively Hope to come to Heaven Blind presumptions ignorant wishings and wouldings hee may have but no true Hope at all For that ever supposeth some knowledge and preapprehension of the Goodnesse of that which is Hoped for and there is nothing in Heaven which wickedmen do not hate as very evill to them the Presence of the most Holy God the purity and brightnesse of his Glory the Company of Christ Iesus and his Saints c. If they might be suffered first to have a view of it and see what is there doing what Divine and Holy imployments take up all the thoughts desires and powers of the blessed company there they would abhorre no place more Hope begets Love whom having not seene ye love saith the Apostle Hope to bee like Christ hereafter will worke a love and desire to expresse so much as wee can of his Image here Hee that longs for a thing will take any present
him shall God destro●… for the temple of God is holy which temple ye are He promiseth to be Our Father and make us his people and this also is a strong argument why wee should purifie our selves and as obedient children not fashion our selves according to the former lusts in ignorance but as he who hath called us is holy so should we be holy in all manner of conversation And if we call him father who without respect of persons judgeth according to every mans workes we should passe the time of our sojourning here in feare Ye are a chosen generation saith Saint Peter a royall priesthood a holy nation a peculiar people that you should shew forth the vertues of him who hath called you out of darknesse into his marvellous light When yee were of the world ye were then strangers to the Covenant and aliens from the house and Israel of God but now being become Gods houshold ye are strangers and pilgrimes in the present world and should therefore abstaine from the lusts of the flesh which are sensuall and worldly things Those that are a peculiar people are a purged people ●…oo He will purifie to himselfe a peculiar people that they may be zealous of good work●…s The consideration of which things should make us labour to settle our hearts to beleeve love and prize the promises to store up and hide the word in our hearts to have it Dwell richly in us that in evill times and dayes of temptation wee may have some holdfast to relie upon In times of plenty security and peace men go calmely on without feare or suspicion but when stonnes arise when God either hides his face or le ts out his displeasure or throwes men upon any extremities then there is no hope but in our a●…ker no stay nor reliefe but in Gods promises which are setled and sure established in heauen and therfore never reversed or cancelled in the earth And if this faithfull and sure word had not bin Da●…ids delight comfort if he had not in all the changes chances of his owne ●…ife remembred that al Gods promises are made in heaven where there is no inconstancie nor repentance he had perished in his affliction Though David by a propheticall spirit foresaw that God would not make his house to grow but to become a dry and wither'd stocke of ●…esse yet herein was the ground of all his salvation and of all his desire that the Lord had made with him an Everlasting Covenant order'd in all things and 〈◊〉 that he had 〈◊〉 by his hol●…nesse that he would not faile David so that it was as possible for God to be unholy as for the Word of promise made unto David to fall to the ground be untrue Now that wee may the better apply the Promises to our selves and establish our hearts in the truth and fidelity of God by them wee may make use of these few Rules amongst divers others which might be given First Promis●…s generally made and so in medio for all or particularly to some are by the ground of them equally appliable to any in any condition unto which the promises are ●…utable All the promises are but as one in Christ as lines tho●…gh severall in the circumference doe meete as one in the center Take any promise and follow it to its originall and it will undoubtedly carry to Christ in whom alone it is Yea and Amen that is hath its truth certainety and stability all from him Now the Promises meeting in Christ cannot be severed or have a partition made o●… them to severall men for every beleever hath All Christ Christ is not divided any other wise then the exigence of mens present estates doth diversifie them and so fit them for such promises as now to others or at other times to themselves would be unseasonable and unapp●…able The Lord in aslenting to Salomons prayer made a generall promise to any man or to all the people that what prayer or supplication soever should be made towards his temple he would heare in heaven and forgive c. 〈◊〉 bei●…g after in distresse applied this generall to hi●… 〈◊〉 present 〈◊〉 when the children of Ammon 〈◊〉 and Mount Seir came to turne Israel out of their possessions The Lord made a particular promise 〈◊〉 Ioshua that he would be with him to blesse his enterprises against the Cananites and to carry him through all the difficulties and hazards of that holy warre a●…d Saint Paul applies the promise to all the faithfull in any straites or distresses of life as the Lord himselfe had before applied it from Moses to Ioshua Let your conversation be without covetousnesse for as God was with Ioshua so will he be with thee He will not faile thee nor forsake thee Christ made a particular promise unto Peter I have prayed for thee that thy faith faile not And the same in effect he applies to All his I pray that thou wouldst keepe them from the ev●…ll And the consequent words to Saint Peter make it good When thou art con verted strengthen thy brethren that is comfort and revive them by thine owne experience that when they are brought ●…nto the like case with thee they may have the benefit of the same intercessor and the sympathy and compassion of the same Saviour who deliver'd thee As our Saviour saith in matter of dutie What ●… 〈◊〉 ●…nto you I say unto All so we may say of him in matter of mercy What he promiseth unto any he promiseth unto al●… in an equall estate It is good therefore to observe the truth of God in his Promises to others and when we finde our selves reduced unto their condition to apply it unto our selves that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures may have hope This is the counsell of Saint ●…awes Take my brethren the Prophets for an exam●…le of suffering affliction and of patience yee have heard of the patience of ●…ob and ye have seene the end of the Lord that the Lord is very pittifull ●…nd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And saint Paul assures us that for this cause God comforted him in his tribulation that he might be able to comfort them who might be in any trouble with the comfort wherewith ●…ee himselfe had beene comforted by God A poore Christian might object A●…as If I were an Apostle if I had such graces such services such wayes of glorifying God as Paul had I might hope for the same power and providence of God in my afflictions as he findes But I am a poore ignorant unfruitfull and unserviceable creature who doe more blemish then adorne my profession of the Gospell of Christ and shall I looke for such care from God as saint Paul Beloved the members in the body would not so argue If I were an eye or a tongue one of the noblest parts of the body haply some compassion and remedy might be
end that so we may receive a Crowne of Life For God doth not fulfill his promises in us onely but by us too and those things which in regard of his Word are his promises are also in regard of his commaund our Duties And therefore we must take the promises in that Connexion and dependencie which they have amongst themselves Fourthly promises though alwayes necessary are yet most usefull in Extremities and therefore it is best for us to store up of all sorts though wee see no present use of some particulars yet we know not what time may bring forth what wayes God my please to try us by Secondly It is best to acquaint our hearts with those which are most generall pretions fundamentall wherein Gods Power and Goodnesse is principally seene and from them it will be easie to inferre the rest As Iob argues from the finall resurrection to a deliverance from the dunghill And David from the deliverance of his Soule from Hell to the deliverance of his feete from falling And Habakuk from the deliverance out of Egypt and the wildernesse to the deliverance out of Babylon And Abraham from a miraculous generation in a dead wombe to a miraculous restitution of Isaak from the dead againe And Paul from a deliverance out of the mouth of the Lion to a deliverance from every evill worke Some notable act of Gods mercy and providence may bee applyable to severall more particulars because experience worketh hope Thirdly It is good to bring a mans selfe to a view of extremities in himselfe to keepe fresh in his eye the nakednesse poverty and utter disability that is in him to further his owne happynesse and that will fitte him to goe with Patience and Faith through any other exigencies which he may bee brought to There is as little ground why a sinner should beleeve and trust God for the forgivenesse of his sinnes as Hope fōr any comfort and support in his distresses If a man can therefore now keepe before him a distinct view of the filthynesse of his sinnes and that anguish and extremities which it brings and live by Faith in the remission of them he will bee much the more fitted to trust and leane on God in the middest of any other distresses There is not so much evill so much unremoveablenesse and unmitigablenesse in any 〈◊〉 or misery as there is in sinne and therefore if we can trust God for pardon purging and extinguishing of sinne we may much more trust him for the supporting of us under or del●…vering us from any other evill Fifthly experience of Gods Wisedome Truth and Power in some promises will settle and establish the heart in dependance and expectation of the like in others Sense doth corroborate and confirme Faith And this wee shall observe to be a very frequent argument in Holy Scriptures to conclude Gods favour for the present or future by his proceedings past When the Israelites were afraid of the Anakims and Giants of the Land this was Moses his argument Dread not neither bee afraid of them the Lord your God which goeth before you hee shall fight for you according to all that he did for you in Egypt before your eyes and in the wildernesse c. And againe I commanded Iosua saith he at that time saying Thine eyes have seen all that the Lord your God hath done unto these two Kings So shall the Lord doe unto all the kingdomes whither thou passest So David argued against G●…liah The Lord did deliver me from a Lyon and a Beare therefore he will deliver me from this Philistime And S. Paul The Lord hath delivered from a sentence of Death and doth deliver therefore I trust that hee will deliver So the faithfull argue in the Prophet Art not thou hee that didst cut Rahab and wound the Dragon that didst dry the Sea the waters of the d●…pe and mad●…st a passage through the d●…pths of the Sea for the ransomed to passe over Ther●…fore the Redeemed of the Lord shall returne and come with singing unto Sion c. These and sundry the like examples were written for our learning that wee also through comfort of the Scriptures might have hope that wee might learne to store up the passages of Gods providence in our lives that they may bee for presidents and rules in after times Men are apt to sinke under the present sense of any evill that presseth them because they doe not looke ba●…kward to Gods former wayes of mercy towards them whereas if men could thus argue I have knowne a famine and felt a pinching season so long agone and I did then out-live it and Gods providence cared for me and ●…arried mee through that plunge and distresse I have felt a sore disease and beene in the mouth of the Grave and yet I live to prayse Gods power The buffets of Sathan have heretofore bruized my soule and I have beene even drencht in mine owne sorrowes and swallowed up of despairing and uncomfortable thoughts and yet out of them all the Lord hath delivered me and let his countenance shine upon me againe And hee is the same God still as full of compassion to com●…iserate my calamities as full of power to effect as full of wisedome to contrive as ful of fidelity to performe his owne Promises as hee was before And therefore I will waite upon him in the wayes of his owne mercy and rest in the constancie immutability indeficiencie of that God with whom there is no variablenesse neither shadow of changing I say if men could thus learne to comfort their hearts by their experiences and review of Gods former proceedings they might with the more quietnesse and silent affections expect the salvation of the Lord againe Sixthly The same thing in temporall and inferior blessings may belong to one man only ex largitate out of that generall providence which causeth the S●…nne to shine on the good and the bad alike and to another ex promisso out of Gods promise because god●…ynesse hath the promises of this life as w●…ll as of that to come Now there is a vast difference betweene these two to have a thing onely out of patience and forbearance and to have it out of engagement and promise For by the promise there is a discharge of all the forfeitures incumbrances vexations perplexities which attended the same thing As in temporall so in spirituall and theologicall respects there is a great difference in Tenures touching the same things The wicked in the earthly things they enioy are wholly Tenants at will they have no engagement at all from God they may be thrust out every houre for all their right was forfeited in Adam and restored unto them only by a Generall providence during Gods good pleasure as a condemned malefactor till the time of his execution hath some thing allowed him out of favour but may at pleasure bee cut off from it But the faithfull have all things by