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A25241 Looking unto Jesus a view of the everlasting gospel, or, the souls eying of Jesus as carrying on the great work of mans salvation from first to last / by Isaac Ambrose ... Ambrose, Isaac, 1604-1664. 1680 (1680) Wing A2957; ESTC R33051 999,188 563

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life neither in thought word or deed that being endowed with the Power of Miracles he lovingly employed it in curing the lame and blind and deaf and dumb in casting out devils in healing the sick in restoring the dead to life that as he lived so he dyed for being unjustly condemned mocked stripped whipped crucified he took all patiently praying for his persecutors and leaving to them when he had no temporal thing to give them a legacy of love of life of mercy of pardon of Salvation When the Sermon is done and the Burial is finished let every Mourner go home and begin a new life in imitation of Jesus Christ O my soul that thou wouldst thus meditate and thus imitate that so thy meditation might be fruitful and thy imitation real I mean that thy life and death might be conformable to the life and death of Jesus Christ But of that hereafter SECT III. Of desiring Jesus in that Respect 3. LEt us desire after Jesus carrying on the work of our salvation in his death Jesus Christ to a fallen sinner is the chief object of desire but Jesus Christ as crucified is the chief piece of that object Humbled souls look after the remedy and they find chiefly in Christ crucified and hence are so many cryes after bathings in Christ's blood and hiding in Christ's righteousness active and passive Indeed nothing doth so cool and refresh a parched dry and thirsty soul as the blood of Jesus which made the poor woman cry out so earnestly I have an husband and Children and many other comforts but I would give them all and all the good that ever I shall see in this world or in the world to come to have my poor thirsty soul refreshed with that precious blood of the Lord Jesus Christ But what is there in Christ's blood or death that is so desirable I answer 1. There is in it the person of Christ he that is God-man man-God Heb. 1.3 The brightness of his father's Glory and the express Image of his Person it is he that dyed every drop of his blood was not only the blood of an innocent man but of one that was God as well as man God with his own blood purchased the Church Acts 20.28 now surely every thing of God is most desirable 2. There is in it a worth or price Christ considered under the notion of a sacrifice is of infinite worth now this sacrifice saith the Apostle he offered up Heb. 9.28 Heb. 9.28 He offered up not in Heaven as the Socinians would have it in presenting himself before God his Father but upon earth viz. in his Passion upon the Cross No wealth in heaven or earth besides this could redeem one soul and therefore the Apostle sets this against all corruptible things as silver and gold the things so much set by amongst the men of this world Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver 1 Pet. 1.18 and gold but with the precious blood of Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot 3. There is in it a merit and satisfaction the Scripture indeed doth not expresly use these words but it hath the sense and meaning of them As in that text Ephes 6.7 He hath made us accepted in the beloved to whom we have redemption through his blood I know there is a different notion in these words for merit doth properly respect the good that is to be procured but satisfaction the evil that is repelled but in Christ we stand not on these distinctions because in his merit was satisfaction and in his satisfaction was merit A great controversie is of late risen up Whether Christ's death be a satisfaction to Divine justice But the very words redeeming and buying do plainly demonstrate that a satisfaction was given to God by the death of Jesus Tit. 2 14. 1 Cor. 6.20 Rev. 5.9 He gave himself for us that he might redeem us ye are bought with a price and what price was that why his own blood Thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood i.e. by thy death and Passion Mat. 20.28 1 Tit. 2.6 This was the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that ransome which Christ gave for his Elect The Son of man came to give his life a ransome for many or as the Apostle He gave himself a ransome for all the word is here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies an adequate price or a counterprice as when one doth or undergoeth something in the room of another as when one yields himself a Captive for the redeeming of another out of Captivity or gives up his own life for the saving of another man's life so Christ gave himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a ransome or counterprice submitting himself to the like punishment that his redeemed ones should have undergone The Socinians tell us that Christ's sufferings and death were not for satisfaction to God but in reference to us that we might believe the truth of his Doctrine confirmed and sealed as they say by his death and that we might yield obedience to God according to the pattern that he hath set before us and that so believing and obeying we might obtain the remission of Sins and eternal Life But the Scripture goes higher in that mutual compact and agreement betwixt God and Christ we find God the Father imposing and Christ submitting to this satisfaction Isa 53.6 1. The Father imposeth it by charging the sins of his Elect upon Jesus Christ The Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all not the sins themselves not the evill in them or fault of them but the guilt and penalty belonging to them this God laid upon his Son and charged it upon him he charged it as a Creditor chargeth the debt upon the Surety requiring satisfaction 2. Christ undertook it He was oppressed Ver. 7. and he was afflicted or as some translate It was exacted and he answered i.e. God the Father required satisfaction for sin and Jesus Christ was our Surety answered in our behalf Ver. 12. He bear the Sins of many he bear them as a porter that bears the burthen for another which himself is not able to stand under he bear them by undergoing the punishment which was due for them he bear them as our Surety submitting himself unto the penalty which we had deserved and by that means he made satisfaction to the justice of God Surely Christs death was not only for confirmation of his Doctrine but for satisfaction to God 4. There is in it not only a true but a copious and full satisfaction Christ's death and blood is superabundant to our sins The grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant 1. Tim. 1.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was over-full redundant more than enough Many an humble soul is apt enough to complain Oh if I had not been so great a sinner if I had not committed such and such transgressions there might have been
should be offered and administred unto all Men without Exception 4. That certain singular Persons should be saved whom God fore-saw would Repent and Believe and Persevere This way is justly opposed by Others who deny God's Acts in Intention to be in the same order as we see them in Production In order of Material Existing it is granted that Christ is Revealed Promised and Exhibited after Sin and that we Repent Believe Persevere before we are Saved But in order of God's Intention Christ is before Sin and Salvation before Repentance Faith Perseverance The Apostle reckoned the Order in which Things exist thus 1. The World 2. You The Elect. 3. Christ 1 Cor. 3.22 23. 4. God 1 Cor. 3.22 23. But he gives us to understand the Order of Intention thus As First God intends His own Glory then Christ then the Elect then the World Certainly it is an hard thing to marshal the Eternal Immanent Acts of the Divine Understanding or Will into First Second Third Fourth All God's Projects are like Himself Tota simul perfecta possessio sui who is a whole and perfect Possession of Himself together and at once so as in Him considered there is no Prius nor Posterius in any of His acts but considered in Effects or in respect of us one thing may be said to be First Second or Third in Nature Time Being before or after another And thus in respect of us we say the End must be in Nature before the Means to the End Now the Permission of the Fall Repentance Faith Perseverance are used by God as Means to bring some to Salvation God therefore doth first project our Salvation and then the Means and both the End and the Means are the Product of God's Election or Predestination Here then is the Project That God will glorify His Grace to this end He will predestinate Christ in Christ He will choose some of the Sons of Men to Salvation whom Eccles 1.4 notwithstanding Sin He will make holy and without blame before Him in love This Project or Plot or Design of God will be further enlarged in the next Passage viz. His Counsels SECT V. The Counsel OF the Counsels of God concerning Man before all Worlds we read in several Texts Christ was delivered by the determinate Counsel of God For of a truth Acts 2.23 against thy Holy Child Jesus whom Thou hast anointed both Herod Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles Acts 4.27 28. the People of Israel were gathered together for to do whatsoever thy Hand thy Counsel determined before to be done Ephes 1.11 And thus the Members of Christ are said to Obtain an Inheritance being Predestinated according to the Purpose of Him who worketh all Things after the Counsel of His own Will Of this Counsel of God's Will we know but little now yet this will be made known when we come to Glory yea it will be a great Part of the Glory of Heaven for the Lord to make known the Counsel of His Will we now know his Will but we shall then know the Counsel of His Will praise Him to all Eternity for it This shall be the Glory of the Saints that they shall see into the Counsel of God's Will in chusing them and calling them and passing by others and letting others go In the mean-while thus far we may know for thus far He hath revealed Himself concerning His Counsels about Man from Everlasting 1. That Man should be a Reasonable Creature and because that very Creature is unavoidably subject to the Creator for He made all things for Himself Prov. 16.4 and all is to return that Glory to Him for which He made them therefore Man should serve Him as all other Creatures must only his Service should be after a reasonable manner out of Judgment Psal 119.30 Heb. 11.25 26. Discretion and Election Hence David is said to have chosen the Way of Truth Moses to have Chosen the Afflictions of God's People the Reproaches of Christ before the Pleasures of Sin or the Treasures of Egypt And hence it is that Holiness in the Phrase of Scripture is called Judgment He shall convince the world of Judgment John 16.11 Mat. 12.20 he shall bring forth Judgment unto Victory and hence it is that our Service is called a Reasonable Service God would not set any such determinating Law over the Operations of Man as over other Creatures that so he might truly work out of Judgment and stand or fall by his own Election 2. That if Man should deviate from this Reasonable Service and break the Law which God would give and which he himself should have an Original Power to perform that then he should incur the Displeasure of God and such a Curse and such a Penalty should be inflicted And here comes in the Fall of Man into God's Consideration He looks upon it as a wilful transgression of his Law and by how much the Law was more just and the obedience more easie by so much he judges the transgression more unreasonable and the punishment more certain and intolerable 3. That Sin should not pass Unrevenged and that for these reasons 1. Because of Gods infinite hatred thereof Hab. 1.13 He is of purer Eyes than to behold Evil He cannot look on Iniquity it provokes a Nauseousness and Abhorrency in him For all these are things which I hate Zach. 8.17 saith in the Lord They are a trouble unto me I am weary to bear them 2. Because of his truth Gen. 2.17 he hath said In the day thou eatest thereof thou s●al● surely die or thou shalt dying die die Temporally and die Eternally and surely God will in no wise abolish this Law Matth. 5.8 One jot or tittle shall in no wise pass from the ●aw till all be fulfilled 3. Because of his terrour and fearful Majesty for God will have Men alwayes tremble before him and by his terrour to be perswaded from sinning 2 Cor. 5.11 Matth. 10.28 Knowing therefore the terrour of the Lord we perswade men and Fear him who is able to destroy bo●h Body and Soul in Hell I say unto you Heb. 12.28 29. f●ar him Let us have Grace whereby we may serve God acceptably with Reverence and Godly Fear for God is a Consuming Fire Upon these Reasons God is resolved Sin shall not pass unrevenged lest thereby His Justice should be securely abused his Hatred against Sin the less declared His Truth questioned and His dreadful Majesty by Men neglected 4. That every Man notwithstanding Sin should not be utterly destroyed and that for the●e Reasons 1. Because of that infinite Delight which the Lord hath in Mercy Why this Delight is it that so disposeth Him to pardon abundantly to exercise Loving-kindness on the Sons of Men Psal 103.8 Who is a God like unto Thee that pardonest Iniquity and passest by the Transgression of the Remnant of
counsel of his own will Ephes 1.11 And elsewhere the Apostle speaks of the manifold wisdom of God according to the eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord. And again he hath saved us and called us with an holy calling Ephes 3 1 2 Tim. 1.1 not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began All these hold forth this truth That God purposed in himself from all eternity to bring them whom he foreknew to life and to salvation This purpose of God in order of nature comes before predestination Ephes 1.11 in that we are said to be predestinate according to his purpose and yet it must needs follow after his foreknowledg and counsel for first he loves before he will purpose and every purpose is established by counsel yea without counsel purposes saith the wise man are disappointed why then first he counsels I speak after the manner of men and then he foreknows Prov. 20.18 P●ov 15.22 i.e. either he knows whom he will choose for God doth not blindly choose he knows not whom or else he sets his love to life on some he knows them with a knowledg of approbation and then he settles a purpose to bring them to life whom he so foreknows in that especial and unspeakable way This purpose of God speaks our stability and certainty of salvation in Christ when God once purposeth it is past altering Surely as I have thought so shall it come to pass and as I have purposed saith God so shall it stand Isa 14.24 you may write upon it that Gods purposes are immutable Would not Paul lightly alter purposes taken up by him when I therefore was thus minded saith he did I use lightness or the thing that I purpose 1 Cor. 1 1● do I purpose according to the flesh that with me there should be yea yea and nay nay would not Paul I say alter his purpose and will God think you alter his methinks this word speaks to me as if I heard God say from all eternity it is my purpose to save a remnant of mankind though all are lost by sin yet my wisdom hath found out a way to choose out some and though those some those few I have purposed to save stand in very slippery places yet I will be the same yesterday and to day and for ever Heb. 13 8 I foresee indeed many thousands of failings and exasperations to alter the purpose that I have towards my people I foresee their daily provocations of my justice I foresee their many lusts within and their many enemies without I foresee that grace inherent I will give them to be as mutable to all the progeny as in their father Adam and if I leave them in the hands of their own councel they cannot but depart daily from me even as water though it could be made as hot as fire yet being left unto it self it will quickly reduce work it self to its own original coldness again I foresee them in their best condition at full Sea at their highest tyde of grace to be as changeable and movable several ways as wheels to be as perplexed hindered and distracted in themselves as cross wheels in one another grace swaying one way and flesh another way and what stability can I think in such why yet says God yet I purpose to bring this little flock to heaven my purpose is in and from my self and I am God and not man and therefore I cannot repent nor call in the purpose which now I have have I said and shall not I do it have I spoken Numb 23.15 and shall I not make it good yes yes my purposes must stand and for this purpose I will set my Son betwixt my people and my self so that if they sin I will look on him and by that means I will see no iniquity in Jacob nor transgression in Israel and for this purpose I will joyn to the wheels the living creatures that when the living creatures go the wheels shall go Numb 23.21 and when the living creatures stand they shall stand and when the living creatures are lifted up from the earth the wheels shall be lifted up against them Ezek 1.21 for the spirit of the living creatures shall be in the weels my meaning is that my Saints shall not have their stability from themselves for they are like wheels but they shall have it from me and from my Son unto whom by the same spirit of life they shall be united Thus may I imagine the Lord from all eternity to say and speak and purpose with himself and surely his purposes must stand upon this account Rom 11.29 for the gifts and calling of God are without repentance SECT VIII The Decree THE Decree of God concerning mans salvation before the foundation of the world appears in these texts I will declare the decree saith God what was that why concerning Christ Psa 2.7 8 and concerning the Church thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee ask of me and I shall give thee the heathen for thine inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession It was Gods Decree to give out of Jews and Gentiles a Church to Christ and this Decree was made in that day of eternity when the Son of God was begotten of his Father This Decree in Scripture-phrase hath several titles 1. It is the very same with that which we usually call predestination for what is predestination but a Decree of God concerning the different preparations of Grace whereby some are guided infallibly unto salvation predestination is a Decree both of the means and end a Decree of giving Grace effectual unto some persons here and of bringing the same persons unto glory hereafter This Decree this predestination this golden chain of the means and end Rom. 8 30 is set down by the Apostle Whom he did predestinate them he also called and whom he called them he also justified and whom he justified them he also glorified As God hath predestinated some to life and glory so he hath predestinated them to be called and justified before they be glorified whomsoever the Lord hath decreed to save them hath he also decreed to sanctifie before they come to injoy that salvation Eccles 1.4 God have chosen us in Christ before the foundation of the world that we should be first holy and then hapy 2 Thes 2 13. See how these are twisted by the Apostle once and again God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth I have heard of some blasphemous reasonings if we are predestinate to be saved we may live as we list for howsoever we live though never so wickedly yet we shall be saved O fearful O devilish reasoning surely this comes from the Devil and not from God or his
even to them neither can a Sparrow fall to the ground nor an hair from thy head nor a leaf from the tree without the providence of our heavenly Father 3. Thou sayest I dare not believe I am astonished at Mat. 10.29 30. confounded in these thoughts of Gods eternal love it is too high for me I cannot believe it I answer herein thou sayst something I know it is an hard thing to believe these great things in reference to thy self But see now how God and Christ stoop and condescend to make thee believe God stands much upon this that the hearts of Saints should confide in him he accounts not himself honoured except they believe and therefore mark O my Soul how Christ suits himself to thy weakness what is it that may beget this Faith this confidence in thy Son what is it saith God that you poor creatures do one to another when you would make things sure between your selves why thus 1. We engage our selves by promise one to another And so will I saith God poor soul thou hast my promise my faithful promise I have made a promise both to Jews and Gentiles and thou art the one of these two sorts the promise is to you and to your children Acts 2 39. and to all that are afar off even as many as the Lord our God shall call Be only satisfied in that ground of thy hope that thou art called of God and then every promise of Eternal life is thine even thine Thou mayest find a thousand promises scattered here and there in the book of God and all these promises are a draught of that promise which was made from all Eternity and therefore it is so much the more sure it is as if Christ should say wilt thou have engagement by promise this is past long agoe my Father hath engaged himself to me before the World began yea and I have made many and many a promise since the World began Read in the Volume and thou wilt find here and there a Promise here and there a draught of the first Copy of that great Promise which my Father made unto me from all Eternity 2. When we would make things sure to one another we write it down And so will I saith God thou hast the Scripture the Holy Writ those Sacred Volumes of Truth and Life and therein thou hast the golden Lines of many gracious Promises are they not as the Stars in the Firmament of the Scripture thou hast my Bible and in the Bible thou hast many blessed glorious Truths but of all the Bible methinks thou shouldst not part with one of those promises no not for a World Luther observing the many promises writ down in Scripture expresseth thus the whole Scripture doth especially aim at this that we should not doubt but hope confide believe that God is Merciful Kind Patient and hath a purpose and a delight to save our souls 3. When we would make things sure to one another we set to our Seals And so will I saith God thou hast my Seal the Broad-Seal of Heaven my Sacraments the Seals of my Covenant and thou hast my privy Seal also the Seal of my Spirit Grieve not the Holy Spirit Ephes 4.30 whereby ye are Sealed unto the day of Redemption 4. When we would make things sure to one another we take Witnesses And so will I John 5.7 8. saith God thou shalt have witnesses as many as thou wilt witnesses of all sorts witnesses in heaven and witnesses on earth for there are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one And there are three that bear witness in earth the spirit and the water and the blood and these three agree in one 5. When we would make things sure to one another we take an oath And so will I saith God He. 6.17 God willing more abundantly to shew unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an oath q. d. there is no such need of an oath but I will be abundant to thee because I would have thee trust me and confide in me throughly and as I swear saith God so will I swear the greatest Oath that ever was I swear by my self God swears by God he could swear by no greater and therefore he swear by himself and why thus but for their sakes who are the heirs of promise Heb. 6.13 he knows our frame and members that we are but dust and therefore to succour our weakness the Lord is pleased to swear and to confirm all by his Oath 6. When we would make things sure to one another we take a pawn And I will give thee a pawn saith God and such a pawn as if thou never hadst any thing more thou shouldest be happy it is the pawn of my Spirit Who also hath sealed us 2 Cor. 1.22 and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts q. d. I will send my Spirit into your hearts and this Spirit shall be a pawn an earnest in your hearts of all the good that I intend to do for you for ever 7. When we would make things sure to one another something it may be is presently done as an ingagement of all that which is to come And thus will I deal with thee saith God who livest in these last of times why thou seest the greatest part of thy Salvation already done I made a promise from all Eternity of sending my Son into the World to be made a curse for sin yea and if thou believest for thy sin and this is the greatest work of all that is to be done to all Eternity Surely if I would have failed thee in any thing it should have been in this it is not so much for me now to bring thee to Heaven to save thy Soul as it was to send my Son into the World to be made a curse for sin but when I have done so great a work have been already faithful in that Promise how shouldst thou but believe my faithfulness in making good all other promises If a man should owe thee a thousand pound and pay thee nine hundred ninety and nine thou wouldst think surely he would never break for the rest why God hath paid his nine hundred ninety and nine and all the Glory of Heaven is but as one in comparison of what he hath done we may therefore well believe that he who hath done so much for us will not leave the little undone Come then rouse up O my Soul and believe thy interest in those eternal transactions betwixt God and Christ is not here ground enough for thy Faith if thou art but called the promise of God is thine or if thou darest not rely on this promise which God forbid thou hast his Indenture his Seal and Witnesses of all sorts both in Heaven and Earth or yet if thou believest not thou hast an Oath a Pawn and the
to God You see now what we mean by this writing of the Law within us 5. How are we taught of God so as not to need any other kind of teaching comparatively I answer 1. God teacheth inwardly In the hidden part thou hast made me know wisdom Psal 51.6 Psal 16.17 saith David and again I thank the Lord that gave me counsel my reins also instruct me in the night season The reins are the most inward part of the Body and the night season the most retired and private time both express the intimacy of divine teaching man may teach the brains but God only teacheth the reins the knowledge which man teacheth is a swimming knowledge but the knowledge which God teacheth Cathedram habet in coelis qui corda doces Aug. is a soaking knowledge God who commanded light to shine out of darkness hath shined into our hearts Mans light may shine into the head but Gods light doth shine into the heart His Chair is in Heaven that teacheth hearts saith Austin 2. God teacheth clearly Elihu offering himself instead of God to reason with Job he tells him My words shall be of the uprightness of my heart Job 33.3 and my lips shall utter knowledge clearly If ever the Word come home to an heart it comes with a convincing clearness So the Apostle Our Gospel came unto you not in word only but in power and in the Holy Ghost and in much full assurance The word hath a treble Emphasis 2 Thes 1.5 assurance full assurance and much full assurance here is clear work 3. God teacheth experimentally the soul that is taught of God can speak experimentally of the Truths it knows I know whom I have believed saith Paul 2 Tim. 1.12 I have experienced his faithfulness and all-sufficiency I dare trust my all with him I am sure he will keep it safe to that day Common knowledge rests in generals but they that are taught of God can say As we have heard so we have seen they can go along with every truth and say It is so indeed I have experienced this and that Word upon my own Heart In this case the Scripture is the Original and their Heart is the Copy of it as you have heard they can read over the Promises and Threatnings and say Probatum est David in his Psalms and Paul in his Epistles speaks their very Hearts and feels their very temptations and makes their very objections they can set to their Seal John 3.33 that God is true they can solemnly declare by their lives and conversations that God is true and faithful in his word and promises 4. God teacheth sweetly and comfortably Thou hast taught me saith David Psal 119.102.103 and then it follows How sweet are thy words unto my taste Yea sweeter than the Honey to my Mouth He rolled the word and promises as Sugar under his Tongue and sucked from thence more sweetness than Sampson did from his Honey-comb Luther said he would not live in Paradise if he must live without the Word Cum v●rbo in i●s●rr●●e ●●e est ●ie●re Luth 4. tom op●r ●a● but with the Word said he I could live in Hell When Christ put his hand by the hole of the door to teach the heart her bowels were moved and then her fingers drop upon the handles of the Lock sweet smelling myrrhe Cant. 5.5 The teachings of Christ left such a blessing upon the first motions of the Spouses heart that with the very touch of them she is refreshed her fingers drop myrrhe and her bowels are moved as the very monuments of his gracious teachings So in Cant. 1.3 Cant. 1.3 Because of the savour of thy Oynement thy Name is as an Oyntment poured forth therefore do the virgins love thee Christ in Ordinances doth as Mary open a Box of Oyntments which diffuseth a spiritual savour in Church-Assemblies and this o●ly the spiritual Christian feels Hence the Church is compared to a Garden shut up a Fountain sealed Cant. 4.12 wicked men are not able to drink of her delicacies or smell of her sweetness a spiritual Sermon is a Fountain sealed up the spiritual administration of a Sacrament is a Garden enclosed Sometimes O Lord thou givest me a strange motion or affection said Augustine which if it were but perfected in me Aug. l. 16. Confes c. 40. I could not imagine what it should be but eternal life Christians these are the teachings of God and in reference to this we shall no more teach every man his neighbour and every man his brother saying know the Lord. Gods teaching is another kind of teaching than we can have from the hands of men there is no man in the world can teach thus and therefore they whom God teacheth need not any other kind of teaching respectively or comparatively 6. What is the universality of this knowledge They shall all know m● from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord The meaning is that all that are in the Covenant of grace shall be so taught of God as that in some measure or other they shall every one know God inwardly clearly experimentally sweetly and savingly I know there are several degrees of this knowledge God hath several Forms in his School there are fathers for experience 1 Joh. 2.12 young men for strength and babes for the truth and being of Grace as one Star differeth from another in glory so also is the School of Christ But here I am beset on both sides 1. Many are apt to complain alas they know little of God! sweet babes consider 1. It is free grace you are stars though you are not stars of the first and second magnitude it is of the Covenant of grace that God hath let into your souls a little glimmering Case Correc instruct though not so much light as others possibly may have in point of holy emulation as one notes well we should look at degrees of grace but in point of thankfulness and comfort we should look at the truth and being of grace 2. If you know but a little you may in time know more God doth not teach all his lessons at first entrance Psal 119.130 it is true The entrance of thy Word giveth Light but this is as true that God lets in his Light by degrees it is not to be despised if God do but engage the heart in holy desires and longings after knowledge so that it can say in sincerity My Soul breaketh for the longing that it hath unto thy judgments at all times Psal 119.20 Others on the contrary ground themselves so learned from this very promise that they exclude all teachings of men The anointing say they teacheth us all things and we need not that any man teach us and they shall teach no more every man his neighbour and every man his brother 1 Joh. 2.27 Jer. 31.34 saying know the Lord for they shall all c. I
as one says well that had been Virgo decipiet not concipiet rather a deceiving of us than a conceiving of him 2. That of the Valentinian revived lately in the Anabaptists who hold that he had a true body but made in heaven and sent into the Virgin here on earth and if so that had been virgo recipiet not concipiet rather a receiving than conceiving yet I cannot but wonder how confidently the Anabaptists tell us that the Flesh of Christ came down from heaven and passed through the Virgin Mary as water through a Conduit-pipe without taking any substance from her Their objections are raised out of these Texts 1. No man ascendeth into heaven but he that came down from heaven John 3.13 even the son of man which is in heaven I answer first this speech must be understood firstly in respect of the God-Head which may be said in some sort to descend in that it was made manifest in the Manhood here on earth 2. This speech may be understood truly of the whole person of Christ to whom the properties of each Nature in respect of the communication of properties may be fitly ascribed but this doth no way prove that this flesh which he assumed on earth descended from heaven 1 Co. 15.47 48 2. The first man is of the earth earthy the second man is the Lord from heaven heavenly I answer 1. This holds forth that Christ was heavenly-minded as sometimes he told the Jews you are from below I am from above you are of the World I am not of this World Christ was not worldly-minded or swayed with the lusts of the Flesh John 8.23 John 15.19 or any way earthly affected as sometimes he could tell his Apostles ye are not of the world so much more might he say of himself that he was not of this world but his Conversation was in heaven Or 2. This holds forth that Christ was heavenly or from heaven in respect of the glorious qualities which he received after his Resurrection and not in respect of the substance of his Body many glorious qualities was Christ endowed with after he was raised I shall not now dispute them which he had not before and in respect of these he might be called heavenly or from heaven 3. This holds forth that Christ also was in some sort heavenly or from heaven in his humane nature in that the humane nature was united to the divine and withal in that the humane nature was formed by the holy Ghost so John's Baptism is said to be from heaven though neither he nor the water wherewith he Baptized descended from heaven but because he received it from God who is in heaven Christ was conceived as you heard by the Holy Ghost and in that regard his generation was divine and heavenly or from heaven 2. In way of comfort and incouragement Christ was thus conceived that he might Vse 2 sanctify our conceptions as the first Adam was the root of all Corruption so is the second Adam the root of all sanctification Christ went as far to cleanse us as ever Adam did to defile us what were our very Conceptions defiled by Adam in the first place Christ takes course for this you see he is conceived by the Holy Ghost and he was not idle whilst he was in the womb for even then and there he ea●e out the Core of corruption that cleaved close to our defiled natures so that now God will not account evil of that nature that is become the nature of his own deare Son O the Condescentions of our Jesus O that ever he would be conceived in the womb of a Virgin O that he would run through the Contumelies of our fordid Nature that he would nor refuse that which we our selves in some sort are ashamed of Some think it a reason why the Anabaptists and some others run into such Fancies and deny this Conception of Christ only to decline those soul indignities as they take them for the great God of heaven to undergo but certainly this was for us and for our sakes and therefore far be it from us to honour him the less because he laid down his honour for our sakes no no let us honour him more and love him more the lower he came for us the dearer and dearer let him be unto us consider in all these transactions Christ was carrying on the great work of our salvation otherwise he had never been conceived never had assumed to his Person humane Nature never had been Man SECT III. Of the Duplicity of Natures in Christ Isa 9.6 Gal. 4.4 3. THe duplicity of Natures in Christ appears in that he was truly God and truly Man To us a Child is born saith the Prophet there is a Nature humane and he shall be called the Mighty God there is a Nature divine God sent his Son saith the Apostle therefore truly God and this Son made of a Woman therefore truly Man one would have thought this truth would never have come into controversie in our days but these are the last days and that may take off the wonder In the last days shall come perillous times 2 Tim. 3.1 Men shall resist the Truth c. In the last days I know there will be abundance of Truth revealed Zech. 12.8 The Knowledg of the Lor● shall be as the waters that cover the Sea and every Child shall be as David And the Book that was sealed must be opened Dan 12.4 and knowledg shaall be increased but Satan even then will be busie to sow his Tares as God is in sowing of his Wheat then is Satan active to communicate errors when he sees God begin to discover truths he hopes in the heat of the Market to vent his own wares and I believe this is one reason why now the Devil sets on foot so many dangerous errors that so he may prejudice the hearts of God's People in the receiving and entertaining of many Glorious truths But that we may not pass over such a Fundamental Error as this some saying with Martian that he is God but not man and others with Arrius that he is man but not God I shall therefore confirm this truth of the two Natures of Christ against the Adversaries of both sides And 1. That Christ is true God both apparent scriptures and unanswerable Reasons drawn from scriptures do plainly evince 1. The scriptures call him God In the beginning was the word and the word was with God Dan. 12.4 John 1.1 Heb. 1.8 John 20 28. Acts. 20.8 1 John 3.16 1 John 5.20 1 Tim. 3.16 and the word was God And unto the son he saith Thy Throne O God is for ever And Thomas answered and said unto him My Lord and my God and take heed to your selves and to all the flock To feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his own Blood And hereby perceive we the Love of God because he laid down his life for
deserved but which is the comfort of us miserable sinners she looks at what he suffers and in how woful and wretched a case he is Her Plea was thus What Lord hast thou made all Men in vain wilt thou now destroy him for whom thou madest the World shall the housholder be cast out and thrown into prison and there remain till he hath paid the utmost Farthing shall all the Men and Women in the World from first to last be damned for ever and ever alas What profit is in their Blood What will it avail to crowd Men and Devils together in Hell-flames Will not those Devils the grand Enemies of God rejoyce at this And what then will become of thy great Name on Earth Is not this thy Name The Lord the Lord Merciful and Gracious Long-suffering and abundant in Goodness and Truth keeping Mercy for Thousands forgiving Iniquity Transgressions and Sins What will the Lord undo his Name Will the Lord cast off for ever And will he be favourable no more Is his Mercy clean gone for ever Will he be no more entreated hath God forgotten to be gracious Hath he in Anger shut up his tender Bowels With these and such like holy whisperings or mutterings did Mercy enter into Gods bowels and make them yern and melt again into compassions But 2. Truth must be heard as well as Mercy and she layes in matter of exception and her Plea was thus What is God but his Word Now this was thy word to Adam In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death and this was thy word to all the Sons of Adam 〈◊〉 17. 〈◊〉 8.10 the soul that sinneth that soul shall die And God may not falsifie his word his word is truth falsifie truth That may not be all men are liars but God is true even truth it self This Plea of Truth is seconded by Righteousness and thus she bespeaks God shall not the Judge of all the world do right Thou hast declared thy self over and over to be just and righteous 〈◊〉 15. 〈◊〉 19.13 〈◊〉 6.5 7. 〈◊〉 ●5 17 O Lord God of Israel thou art righteous Righteous art thou O Lord and upright are thy Judgments Thou art righteous O Lord which art and wast and shall be Even so Lord God Almighty true and righteous are thy Judgments Yea the Lord is righteous in all his wayes and holy in all his works and wherein consists this righteousness but in rendring to every one according to his due And what is the sinners due 〈◊〉 ● 23 but Death The wages of sin is Death What shall not those sinners die the Death That were as before to make Truth false so here to do Right Wrong These were the Controversies at that time so that Peace could not tell how to speak a prevailing word amongst them nay the controversie grew so high that they made it their own cases what shall become of me said Mercy if God spare not sinners and what shall become of me said Justice if God do spare sinners what shall become of me said Mercy If God will shew no mercy And what shall become of me said Justice if God will do no Justice why alas perish said Mercy if thou wilt not pity if man die I die also and I perish said Justice if thou wilt have mercy surely I die if man die not To this it came and in these terms brake up the Assembly and away they went one from another Truth went to Heaven and was a Stranger upon Earth Righteousness went with her and would not so much as look down from Heaven Mercy she staid below still for where should Mercy be if not with the miserable As for Peace she went between both to see if she could make them meet again in better terms in the mean while our Salvation lies a bleeding the Plea hangs and we stand as Prisoners at the Bar and know not what shall become of us for though two be for us yet two are against us as strong and more stiff than they so that much depends upon this meeting for either they must be at peace between themselves or they cannot be at peace with us nor can we be at peace with God Many means were made before Christs time for a blessed meeting but it would not be Sacrifice and Burnt-Offering thou wouldst not have Heb. 10.5 these means were not prevalent enough to cause a meeting Where stuck it you will say Surely it was not long of Mercy she was easie to be intreated she looked up to Heaven but Righteousness would not look down and indeed here was the business Righteousness must and will have satisfaction or else Righteousness should not be Righteous either some satisfaction for sin must be given to God or she will never meet more better all men in the World were damned than that the Righteousness of God should be Unrighteous And this now puts on the great transaction of our Saviours Birth Well then our Saviour is born and this birth occasions a gracious meeting of the Attributes such an attractive is this Birth this Bud of Christ that all meet there indeed they cannot otherwise but meet in him in whom all blessed Attributes of God do meet It is Christ is Mercy and Christ is Truth and Christ is Righteousness and Christ is Peace 1. Christ is Mercy thus Zacharias prophesied Luke 1.78 That through the tender Mercy of our God the day-spring or Branch from on high hath visited us And God the Father of Christ is called the Father of mercies as if Mercy were his Son who had no other Son but his dearly boloved Son in whom he is well pleased 2 Cor. 1.3 John 14.6 2. Christ is Truth I am the Way and the Truth and the Life That Truth in whom is accomplished whatsoever was prefigured of the Messiah God shall send forth his Mercy and his Truth Psal 57.3 Psal 64.7 Exod. 34.6 Deut. 32.4 Psal 86.15 John 1.14 17. Jer. 23.6 Mal. 4.2 1 Car. 1.30 Heb. 7.2 Isa 9.6 Eph. 2.14 2 Thes 3.16 And O prepare Mercy and Truth And this is his Name the Lord the Lord abundant in Goodness and Truth He is a God of Truth saith Moses plenteous in Mercy and Truth saith David full of Grace and Truth saith John for the Law was given by Moses but Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ He is Truth by Name and Truth by Nature and Truth by Office 3. Christ is Righteousness This is his Name whereby he shall be called the Lord our Righteousness And unto you that fear my Name shall the Son of Righteousness arise with healing under his Wings And Christ of God is made unto us Wisdom Righteousness and Sanctification and Redemption And according to his Type Melchisedech this was his Style King of Righteousness 4. Christ is Peace This is his Name wherewith he is called wonderful Councellor the Mighty God the everlasting Father the Prince of Peace And Christ
is our Peace who hath made both one and hath broken down the middle Wall of Partition between us And therefore prayes the Apostle now the Lord of Peace himself or the Lord himself who is Peace give you peace alwayes by all means And according to his Type Melchisedech as he was King of Righteousness so also he was King of Salem which is King of Peace Thus Christ is Mercy Heb. 7.2 and Christ is Truth and Christ is Righteousness and Christ is Peace Now where should all these meet but in him who is them all Surely there they meet and at the meeting they all ran first and kissed the Son and that done Truth ran to Mercy and embraced her and Righteousness to Peace and kissed her they that so long had been parted and stood out in difference now they meet and are made Friends again O the blessed effects of this Birth of Christ it is Christ that reconciled them and that reconciled us and them He reconciled all things saith the Apostle whether they be things in Earth or things in Heaven Col. 1.20 Now is Heaven at peace with it self and Heaven and Earth at peace one with another and that which glues all and makes the Peace is this Birth of Christ the budding of this Vine Truth shall Bud out of the Earth and then Mercy and Truth shall meet together c. 3. For the Blossom The nature of Vines is in its season to Blossom or to bear sweet flowers Pharaoh's Butler you know dreamed of a Vine that not only budded but Blossomed Her Blossomes shot forth and thus Christ our Vine Gen. 40.10 both Budded and Blossomed he was full of the sweetest Flowers now what were these Flowers and Blossoms of Christ but his virtues and blessed graces In this only Christ differs from the Vine in that in him was seen not only one sort or kind of Flowers but every kind Bern. de passione Dom. Bernard reckons up the violet of humility the lilly of chastity the rose of patience the saffron of abstinence I may not so far enlarge my self but in reference to his Birth I cannot but admire at his humility patience and infinite condescentions that the Creator should become a creature though an Angel it were a great Gulf which no created understanding could measure but that he should reject Angels and take the Seed of Abraham that he should be made lower than the Angels who is God over all that he would be conceived who is the uncreated wisdom in the dark Prison of the Womb who is the Light of the World and that of a Woman the weaker first sinning sex who is the holy one and power of God that he would be born who beareth all things the Lord of all of a lowly handmaid in fulness of time who is eternity in the night-time who is the Son of Righteousness in the Winter who gives life and heat in a time of publick taxation who is Lord of Lords and that not at Rome the Lady of Nations nor at Jerurusalem the Glory of the East but at Bethlehem the least of the Thousands of Judah not in a Palace prepared nor in his Mothers House but in an Inn not in the best Room nor in any Room of the House but in a Stable of Beasts not attended there with a royal Guard but with Joseph and Mary not adorned in Robes but swadled in Clouts not stately Enthronized but laid in a Manger nor lastly his Birth Proclaimed by the Kings at Arms but by poor Shepherds That the Word should be an infant not able to speak a word that life should be mortal that Power should be subject to a poor Carpenter that the Lord of the Covenant should be Circumcised that the God of the Temple should be presented in the Temple that Wisdom should be instructed infiniteness should grow in stature that the feeder of all things should be fed that all these are preludes and but beginnings of his sufferings O wonderful condescention O admirable patience O rare humility how strange are the Blooming Blossoms of this Vine 4. For the Fruit the nature of Vines is to cast sweet savours but to bear sowr Grapes Christ that was blameless before God and Man yet bore the heavy burden of our sin O the sweetness of his savours because of the savour of thy good Ointments thy Name is an Ointment poured forth Cant. 1.3 whether by savours we mean his words the very Officers of the Jews can say Never Man speak like this Man or whether by savours we mean his deeds Jo● 7.46 his very Enemies confess him a just Man so Pilate's Wife could send her Husband word Have thou nothing to do with that just Man the wise Men that brought their Offerings give him Gold Matth. 27.19 Mat. 2.11 Frankincense and Myrrhe Gold is given him as to a potent King Frankincense as to a gracious God and Myrrhe as to an holy Priest He is a King to rule a God to save and a Priest to mediate thus far he casts sweet savours but digest them better and they prove sowr Grapes a King he was but mockt with the Title Mat. 27.29 Phil. 2.7 Hail King of the Jews a God he was but he emptied himself He made himself of no Reputation an holy Priest he was but such a Priest as must offer up himself for a Sacrifice The wise men that came from the East they saw his Infirmity and yet adore his power they saw his infancy yet adore his wisdom they saw his poverty yet adore the riches of his mercy they saw him whom they enquired after Where is he that is born King of the Jews Mat. 2.2 The very Title cast sweet savours but it bears sower Grapes he is a King that 's a title of honour but he is King of the Jews that 's a word of reproach All along his life you may see these two sweet savours but sowr Grapes vidisti vilia audi mirifica saith Ambrose the things you see are mean but the things you s●e and hear are wonderful mean it was to see a sort of Shepherds wonderful it is to see a troop of Angels mean it was to hear one say laid in the Cratch below wonderful it is to hear many sing Glory to God on high mean it was to see him man wonderful it is to know him God Here 's a little Child fainting and groaning yet a powerful God ruling and commanding hungry himself to shew our nature yet feeding five thousand to shew his power dying on the Cross as the Son of Adam disposing of Paradise as the Son of God As it was said of Bethlehem Minima non Minima the least of the thousands Micah 5.2 Not the least of thousands Mat. 2.6 So we say of this Bethlehemite Minimus non Minimus he shall sit upon the Throne of David Isa 9.7 Yet he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows Isa 53.4 His Kingdom is an
Question and therefore I shall not amuse my self in giving any account of it only these remain as sure truths 1. That the things communicated to our inward man I mean those inward motions and suggestions to holiness and obedience are frequently and usually by the administration of Angels 2. That the same things communicated to our inward man are ever originally and primarily from the Spirit of Christ and hence it is that commonly we put them all on that score we give them all to Christs Spirit 3. That 't is proper to the spirit to enlighten the understanding and to determine the will effectually the Angels are but Cisterns the spirit is the fountain the Angels may speak and move us to our duties but the blessing the efficacy is of the Spirit and in this respect we leave to Christ and his Spirit the all in all Well then O my soul consider especially in Church assemblies and in the enjoyment of Ordinances the especial presence of Christ in the presence of his spirit and in the presence of his Angels What dost thou feel any stirrings actings movings in thy spirit dost thou feel any quickening warming feeding cherishing healing Gen. 28.16 17 mollifying melting comforting strengthening in thy inward parts say then Surely the Lord is in this place this is none other but the House of God this is the gate of Heaven O here is the Spirit and here are the Angels ascending and descending and therefore avoid Sathan avoid all prophane thoughts and earthly-mindedness avoid dulness deadness drousiness avoid looseness lasciviousness and all irreverence 1 Cor. 11.10 because of the Angels and because of the Spirit and because of the especial presence of Christ which encauses them both 6. Consider the the Preaching of Christ O the admirable Sermons of this great Prophet the Spouse tells us His Lips like Lillies dropped sweet smelling Myrrh his Doctrine was sweet as the Lillies and sound as the Myrrh His Lipps were like Lillies Cant. 5.13 as certain odoriserous Lillies that cast forth a sweet smelling savour they were full of Heavenly Grace and sweetness Grace saith the Psalmist was poured into his lips Psal 45.2 and they dropped sweet-smelling Myrrh the nature of this Herb is to keep from putrefaction as it is sound it self so it makes other things sound Error is of a putrifying nature corrupting and defiling the soul but the Doctrine of Christ keeps the soul sound it is the souls preservative it keeps the soul free from all corruption and defilement See here the prophetical office of Christ held forth in similitudes his lips were ever dropping distilling publishing sweet and sound truths Read and peruse those Sermons he hath left on record yea ruminate and meditate on them in order to piety and an holy life How sweet was the first Sermon of Christ Repent Matth. 4.17 John 3.3 for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand And how Spiritual was that Sermon of Christ Except a man be born again he cannot see the Kingdom of God It may be thou art a Doctor a Master of Israel thou art a learned Schollar thou art a man of parts and abilities in other things it may be thou hast read so long in the Bible thou hast heard so many and so many Sermons c. but ah miserable soul it may be all the work is to do still within Come say this Sermon of Christ to thine own soul Vnless I be born again I cannot enter into Heaven born again O Lord what is that was ever such a thing done upon me was ever I cast into the pangs of a new birth and continued I in those pangs untill Christ Jesus was formed in me are old things done away and are all things now become new is the old man the old lusts the old conversation quite abandoned and left are my principles new my aims and ends new my life and conversation new Thus might I paraphrase on all the Sermons but I intend brevity only consider O my soul as if this Sermon and all the rest had been preached to thee Reallize Christ standing by thee Heb. 12.25 and opening his mouth and teaching thee thus and thus surely there is a speaking of Christ from Heaven See that ye refuse not him saith the Apostle that speaketh from Heaven And besides he hath his Ministers here on earth and they are daily Preaching over these Sermons of Christ again and again they Preach such things as were first spoken by the Lord himself Heb. 2.3 2 Cor. 5.20 1 Tim. 4.15 they beseech and pray thee in Christ's stead O then meditate on these things and give thy self wholly to them that thy profitting may appear to all 7. Consider the miracles of Christ in pursuance of the Doctrine delivered in his blessed Sermons Here 's a world of matter to run over such miracles are done by Christ as never man did before Moses indeed smote the Rock and the waters gushed out but he could not turn Water into Wine Elisha raised a Child that was dead to life but Jesus raised one who had been dead four days yea who was buried and corrupted Elias and Samuel and all the Prophets and the succession of the high Priests in both the Temples put all together never did so many and so great miracles as Jesus did he turned water into Wine he healed the Noble-mans Son even at the point of death he cured the Leaprous by his touch he made the lame man to walk and the crooked limbs to become straight he made habitual diseases and inveterate of eighteen years continuance and once of thirty eight years to disappear at his speaking even as darkness at the brightness of the Sun John 9.23 he fed thousands of People with two small fishes and five loaves he cast out Devils and commanded them whithersoever he pleased he restored sight to the blind in a word he did such miracles as no man else ever did and the poor blind man proved it by instance of himself It was never heard that any man opened the Eyes of one that was born blind O my Soul consider of these miracles and believe that Doctrine which was ratified with Arguments from above how shouldst thou but assent to all those mysterious truths which were so strongly confirmed by an Almighty hand What dost thou think a meditation needless in this respect art thou fully satisfied of the truth of Scriptures It is well I hope thou art and yet who knows how soon thou mayst be put to it by an enemy or a strong temptation One can tell us in print Some are now talking of a tolleration of all Religions and some desire that the Jews may have a free commerce amongst us it is good therefore to be well armed at this point and the best Argument to prove the verity of the Gospel next to the inward testimony of the Spirit is this demonstration or common place of the miracles of Christ Luke 6.13 Mat. 28.19
should be defiled the very prophane can learn to be superstitious in lesser matters how many amongst us will make conscience of outward Ceremonies as of eating meats observing dayes but as for the weightier matters of the Law Judgment and mercy they leave them undone 3. Christ is most falsly accused of Sedition seduction and usurpation it were indeed to be wished that they who take upon them the name of Christianity were guiltless of such crimes but let them look to it who are such This I am sure was Christ's Rule and Practise Be subject to every constitution and authority of man 1 Pet. 2.13 Rom. 13.2 for the Lord's sake If any dare to resist the Power that is of God they shall receive to themselves damnation Nor can we excuse our selves because our Governours are not Godly for all the Governours to whom Christ and his Apostles submitted themselves and to whom all those strict precepts of duty and Obedience related in the New Testament were no better for ought I know than Tyrants Persecuters Idolaters and Heathen-Princes 4. Christ is examined only of his usurpation Art thou the King of the Jews the men of this world mind only worldly things the Apostles so describes them Phil. 3.19 who mind earthly things Pilate regards not Christ's Doctrine but he is afraid lest he should aspire the Kingdom and concerning this our Saviour puts him out of doubt My Kingdom is not of this world As Pilate and Christ so Worldlings and Christians are of different Principles they mind earthly things but our Conversation saith the Apostle is in heaven our conversation i.e. the aim and scope of our hearts in every action Ver. 20. is only for heaven whatsoever we do it should some way or other fit us for Heaven we should still be laying in for heaven against the time that we shall come and live there we should have our thoughts and hearts set upon heaven so it is said of holy Mr. Ward that being in the midst of a Dinner very contemplative and the People wondering what he was musing about he presently breaks out for ever for ever for ever and though they endeavoured to still him yet he still cryed out for ever for ever for ever Oh eternity to be for ever in heaven with God and Christ how shall this swallow up all other thoughts and aims and especially all wordly careful sinful thoughts aims or ends 2. Pilate having dismissed Jesus this hour is concluded with a sad disaster of wicked Judas then Judas which betrayed him when he saw that he was condemned Mat. 27.3 repented himself c. Now his conscience thaws and grows somewhat tender but it is like the tenderness of a Boyle which is nothing else but a new disease there is a repentance that comes too late Esau wept bitterly and repented him when the Blessing was gone the five foolish Virgins lift up their voices aloud when the gates were shut and in hell men shall repent to all eternity and such a repentance was this of Judas about midnight he had recieved his mony in the house of Annas and now betimes in the morning he repents his bargain and throws his mony back again the end of this Tragedy was that Judas died a miserable death he perished by the most infamous hands in the world i. e by his own hands he went and hanged himself And as Luke he fell headlong and burst asunder in the midst and all his Bowels gushed out Mat. 27.5 In every passage of his death we may take notice of God's Justice and be afraid of sin it was just that he should hang in the air who for his sin was hated both of heaven and earth and that he should fall down headlong who was fallen from such an height of honour and that the Halter should strangle that throat through which the Voice of treason had founded and that his Bowels should be lost who had lost the bowels of all pity piety and compassion and that his Ghost should have its passage out of his midst he burst asunder in the midst and not out of his lips because with a kiss of his lips he had betrayed his Lord our blessed Jesus Here 's a warning-piece to all the world Vse who would die such a death for the pleasure of a little sin or who would now suffer for millions of Gold that which Judas suffered and yet suffers in hell for thirty pieces of silver Now the Lord keep our souls from betraying Christ and from despairing in God's mercy through Christ Amen Amen I see one sand is run I must turn the Glass now was the seventh hour and what were the passages of that hour I shall next relate SECT II. Of Christ's Mission to Herod and the Transactions there Luke 23.7 ABout seven in the Morning Jesus was sent to Herod who himself also was at Jerusalem at that time The reason of this was because Pilate had heard that Christ was a Galilean and Herod being Tetrarch of Galilee he concludes that Christ must be under his Jurisdiction Ver. 8. Herod was glad of the honour done to him for he was desirous to see Christ of a long season because he had heard many things of him and he hoped to have seen some Miracle done by him That which I shall observe in this passage is Ver. 9. 1. Herod's questioning of Jesus Christ 2. Christ's silence to all his questions 3. Herod's derision and Christ's dismission back again to Pilate Luke 23.8 1. Herod questioned with him in many words what those words were are not expressed only we have some conjectures from Luke 23.8 q. d. What! art thou he concerning whom my Father was so mocked of the Wise men and for whose sake my Father slew all the Children that were in Bethlehem I have heard thou hast changed water into Wine and hast multiplyed Loaves whereon so many thousands fed come do something at my request which elsewhere thou hast done without request of any come satisfie my desire work now but one Miracle before me that I may be convinc'd of thy Divinity I dare not deliver these words as certain truths because of that silence that is in Scripture only we read that he hoped to have seen some Miracle done by him Herod could not abide to hear his Word and to bear his yoke but he was well content to see the works and miracles of Jesus Christ 2. Whatever his questions were he answered him nothing many reasons are given in for this Ver. 9. as 1. Because he enquired only in curiosity and with no true intent or end Prov. 26.4 Jam. 4.3 concerning which saith the wise man Answer not a fool according to his folly And ye ask and receive not saith James because ye ask amiss 2. Because Christ had no need of defence at all let them go about to Apologize that are afraid or guilty of death as for Christ he despiseth their Accusations
vile unto thee Whipping is so unworthy a punishment that only children bondslaves and rogues were used to be corrected therewith especially if they exceeded the number of forty stripes 2 Cor. 11.24 when Paul was thus used he tells us Of the Jewes five times received I forty stripes save one Theophilact sayes they would not exceed that number lest Paul should have become infamous and ever after uncapable of publick office and hoping they might have regained him they would not brand him with that note of infamy O then if one stripe above forty was so infamous amongst the Jews what shame what infamy was this when so many scores hundreds and thousands of stripes as some reckon them were laid on Jesus Christ and yet our Lord doth not disdain to undergo them for our sakes he bears in his body those wounds and stripes that we had deserved by our sins 2. For the pain this kind of punishment was not only infamous but terrible no sooner the Souldiers had their commission but they charged and discharged upon him such bloody blows as if he had been the greatest offender and basest slave in all the World Nicep l. 1. c. 3. Nicephorus calls these whippers bloody Hang-men by the fierceness of whose whipping many had dyed under their hands Bosq de pass Domini pag. 840. The manner of their whipping is described thus After they had stripped him they bound him to a pillar whither came six young and strong Executioners Scourgers Varlets Hang-men saith Jerome to scourge him and whip him while they could whereof two whipped him with rods of thorns and when they had wearied themselves other two whipped him with ropes or whip-cords tyed and knotted like a carters whip and when they were tyred the other two scourged off his very Skin with wires or little chains of Iron and thus they continued till by alternate and successive turns they had added stripe upon stripe and wound upon wound latter upon former and new upon old that he was all over in a gore blood Isa 53.5 The Scripture tells us that He was wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was laid upon him and with his stripes we are healed he was wounded bruised chastised whipped with stripes if you would know with how many stripes some reckon them to the number of the Souldiers Six hundred and sixty or a thousand stripes others reckon them according to the number of the bones compacted in mans body which say Anatomists are two hundred and sixty and Christ having received for every bone three stripes according to the triple manner of his whipping they amounted in all to seven hundred and eighty stripes others reckon them to five thousand above the forty which the Jews were commanded not to exceeed in And the truth is if the whole band of Souldiers were the whippers of Christ as some would have it I cannot see but his stripes might be more than so when the Son of an Israelitish woman blasphemed God the Lord said to Moses Levit. 24.14 Bring forth him that hath cursed without the camp and let all that heard him lay their hands upon his head and let all the congregation stone him now Christ had said before all the band that he was the Son of God which they called Blasphemy and therefore why might they not all according to this Law lay their hands upon him and fall upon him if not with stones which now was turned into whipping yet with rods whip-cords and little chains I shall not contend about the number of his stripes but this is certain that the souldiers with violence and unrelenting hands executed their commission they tore his tender flesh till the pillar and pavement were purpled with a shower of blood and if we may believe Bernard They plowed with their whips upon his back and made long furrows and after that they turned his back upon the pillar and whipt his belly and his breast till there was no part free from his face unto his foot A scourging able to kill any man and would have killed him but that he was preserved by the Godhead to endure and to suffer a more shameful death We may read here a Lecture of the immense love of God in Christ to us poor Gentiles he is therefore whipped that he might marry us to himself Vse and never reject us or cast us off we read of a Law in Moses that if a man took a wife and hated her and gave occasions of speech against her and brought an evil name upon her undeservably that then the Elders of the City should take that man and chastise him Deut. 22.18 19. and she should be his wife he might not put her away all his dayes There is a great mystery in this ceremony for that man say some was Christ who by his incarnation betrothed unto himself the Gentile Church but he seems to hate her and to give an occasion of a speech against her and to bring an evil report upon her as Into the way of the Gentiles ye shall not go and into the City of the Samaritans ye shall not enter Mat. 10.5 Mat. 15.26 and it is not meet to take the Childrens bread and to cast it unto dogs And now he is accused before the Elders now he is whipt and chastised and commanded by his Father to take her to his wife and not to put her away all his dayes I know there is much unlikeness in this mystery for Christ was not whipt for calling the Church adulterous that indeed was chast but he was whipt to present the Church as a chaft Virgin to his Father that indeed was adulterous Oh he loved the Church and gave himself for it Eph. 5.25 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 this was the meaning of Christ's whipping Isa 53.5 The chastisement of our peace was upon him and with his stripes are we healed Come then and let us learn to read this love-letter sent from Heaven in bloody characters Christ is stripped who cloathed the Lillies of the Field Christ is bound hand and foot his hands that multiplied the Loaves and his feet that were weary in seeking the stragling sheep Christ is scourged all over because all over we were full of wounds and bruises Isa 1.6 and putrifying sores and there was no way to cure our wounds but by his wounds our bruises but by his bruises our sores but by his sores O read and read again Christ is whipped belly back side from his shoulders to the soles of his feet the lashes eating into his flesh and cutting his very veins so that as some say with much confidence though I know not with what truth the gashes were so wide that you might have seen his ribs and bones and very inwards what
Tiberias First Christ appears and works a Miracle he discovers himself to be Lord of Sea as well as Land at his word multitudes of Fishes come to the Net and are caught by his Apostles nor is this Miracle without a Mystery Mat. 13.47 The Kingdom of Heaven is like a drawn net cast into the sea which when it is full men draw to land what is this divine trade of ours but a spiritual fishing the world is a sea souls like fishes swim at liberty in this deep and the nets of wholesome doctrine are they that draw up some to the shore of grace and glory 2. Upon this Miracle The Disciple whom Jesus loved said unto Peter it is the Lord. John is more quick-eyed than all the rest he considers the Miracle and him that wrought it and presently he concludes It is the Lord O my soul meditate on the mystery of this discovery if ever soul be converted and brought home to Christ it is the Lord but oh whither is Christ gone that we have lost so long his converting presence Oh for one Apparition of Jesus Christ till then we may preach our hearts out and never the nearer do what we can souls will to hell except the Lord break their career Ministers can do no more but tell thus and thus men may be saved and thus and thus men will be damned He that believeth on the Son hath eternal life John 3.36 and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life but when they have said all they can it is only God must give the blessing Oh what is preaching without Christ's presence One hearing what mighty feats Scanderbag's Sword had done he sent for it and when he saw it Is this the Sword said he that hath done such great exploits what 's this sword more than any other sword O sayes Scanderbag I sent thee my Sword but not my arm that did handle it so Ministers may use the sword of the Spirit the Word of God but if the Spirits arm be not with it they may brandish it every Sabbath to little purpose when all is done if ever any good be done it is the Lord. No sooner John observes the Miracle that a multitude of fishes were caught and taken but he tells Peter of a blessed discovery it is the Lord 3. Upon this discovery Peters throws himself into the Sea O the fervent love he carries towards Christ if he but hear of his Lord he will run through fire and water to come unto him so true is that of the Spouse Many waters cannot quench love neither can the floods drown it Cant. 8.7 if a man would give all the substance of his house for love it would utterly be contemned If I love Christ I cannot but long for communion and fellowship with Christ Vbicunque fueris O domine Jesu c. Aug. Wheresoever thou art O blessed Saviour give me no more happiness than to be with thee if on the earth I would travel day and night to come unto thee if on the Sea with Peter I would swim unto thee if riding in triumph I would sing Hosanna to thee but if in glory how happy should I be to look upon thee Christ's Apparitions are ravishing sights if he but stand on the shore Peter throws himself over-board to come to Christ why now he stands on the pinacles of heaven wasting and beckoning with his hand and calling on me in his Word Rise up my love my fair one and come away O my soul make haste Cant. 2.10 in every duty look out for another Apparition of Jesus Christ when thou comest to hear say Have over Lord by this Sermon and when thou comest to pray say Have over Lord by this Prayer to a Saviour neither fire nor water floods nor storms death nor life principalities nor powers height nor depth nor any other creature should hinder thy passage to Christ or separate thy soul from Christ Consider what I say 2 Tim. 2.7 8. saith Paul and the Lord give thee understanding in all things remember that Jesus Christ of the seed of David was raised from the dead according to my Gospel that Christ was raised is a gospel-Gospel-truth ay but do thou remember it do thou consider it and the Lord give thee understanding in all things SECT III. Of desiring Jesus in that respect 3. LEt us desire after Jesus carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in his resurrection What desire is we have opened before some call it the wing of the soul whereby it moveth and is carried to the thing it expecteth to feed it self upon it and to be satisfied with it But what is there in Christ's resurrection that should move our souls to desire after it I answer 1. Something in it self 2. Something as in reference unto us 1. There is something in it self had we but a view of the glory dignity excellency of Christ as raised from the dead it would put us on this heavenly motion we should fly as the Eagle that hasteth to eat The object of desire is good Heb. 1.8 but the more excellent and glorious any good is the more earnest and eager should our desires be now Christ as raised from the dead is an excellent object the resurrection of Christ is the glorifying of Christ yea his glorifying took its beginning at his blessed resurrection now it was that God highly exalted him and gave him a name above every name Phil. 2.9 c. and in this respect how desirable is he 2. There is something in reference unto us As 1. Rom. 4.25 He r●se again for our justification I must needs grant that Christ's death and not his resurrection is the meritorious cause of our justification but on the other side Christ's resurrection and not his death is for the applying of our justification as the stamp adds no vertue nor matter of real value to a piece of gold but only it makes that value which before it had actually appliable and currant unto us so the resurrection of Christ was no part of the price or satisfaction which Christ made to God yet is it that which applies all his merits and makes them of force unto his Members Some I know would go further Lucius a learned Writer saith that Justification is therefore attributed to Christ's resurrection because it was the compleat and ultimate act of Christ's active obedience and from hence inferreth that remission of sin is attributed to his passive obedience and justification or imputation of righteousness to his active obedience Goodwin no way inferiour to him Rom. 8.34 faith that justification is put upon Christ's resurrection with a rather who is he that condemneth it is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again not but that the matter of our justification is only the obedience and death of Christ but the form of our justification or the act of pronouncing us righteous by that his
and God be Omnipotent that he can do and can have whatsoever he pleases then Christ being one God with his Father he must needs prevail it is but ask and have let him ask what he will 5. That Christ is God's darling upon this very account because he intercedes for his People Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life John 10.17 that I might take it again I lay it down by suffering and I take it again by rising ascending up into heaven and interceding there and therefore doth my Father love me O the love of God to Christ and of God in Christ to all his Saints God so loved the world that he gave his Son and Christ so loved the world that he gave himself and now again because Christ gave himself and his gift is as a sweet smelling savour unto God therefore God loves Christ O what a round of love is here God loves Christ and Christ loves us and the Father loves Christ again for loving of us there is not an act of Christ in his work of our redemption but the Father looks on it with love and liking Mat. 3.17 Isa 53.11 at his baptism lo a voice came from Heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased at his death He seeth of the travel of his soul and he is satisfied at his ascension he heareth of the intercessions of his soul and he is delighted Christ's intercessions are God's musick and therefore as sometimes Christ spoke to his Spouse Cant. 2.14 so God speaks to Christ Let me see thy countenance let me hear thy voice for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance is comely Now Christ's intercessions must needs prevail when God love's Christ for his intercessions sake if before the world was made Prov. 8.29 30. the Son was his Fathers darling for it is said When he appointed the foundations of the earth then I was by him and as one brought up with him and I was daily his delight In the Original delights intimating that the eternal Son was variety of delights to his Father O then what delights what variety what infinite of delights hath God in Christ now interceding for us what a dear darling is Christ to God when not only he stands by him but he represents to him all the Elect from the beginning to the end of the World q. d See Father look on my breast read hear all the names of those thou hast given me as Adam and Abraham and Isaac and Jacob of the Twelve Tribes and of the Twelve Apostles of all the Martyrs Professors and Confessors of the Law and Gospel I pray for them I Pray not for the World but only for them for they are mine methinks I hear God answer What my Son and what the Son of my womb and what the Son of my vows hast thou begotten me thus many Sons and are all these mine why then ask what thou wilt and have what thou pleasest I am as strongly inclined and disposed to give thee grant as thou wouldst have it it is my joy my delight my pleasure to save these souls and surely the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in thy hands 6. That Christ is God's Commander I speak it with reverence as well as petitioner it is a phraze given to the servants of God command ye me and may we not give it to the Son of God Christians God is as ready to do us service as if we had him at command Isa 45.11 1 John 5.14 This is the confidence that we have in him that if we ask any thing according to his will he heareth us and in this sense we may boldly say that God the Father is as ready to hear Jesus Christ as if he had him at command not that in deed and reality he commands God but that in deed and truth he commands all below God and he commands all in the stead of God And to this purpose is that voice of God I have set my King upon my holy hill of Zion Psalm 2.6 and why my King I dare not say he is God's King as if God were Christ's inferior or Christs subject God forbid why then my King I answer he is God's King because appointed by God or he is God's King John 5.22 because he rules in the stead of God The Father judgeth no man but hath committed all Judgment unto the Son God hath given away all his prerogatives unto Jesus Christ so that now the King of Saints can do what he will with God and with all the world only it follows Ask of me and I will give thee the heathen for thine inheritance as if the Father should have said I cannot deny thee and yet O my Son I would have thee ask do what thou wilt in Heaven Earth and Hell I have not the heart indeed I have not the power to deny thee any thing onely acknowledg this power to be originally in my self that all that honour the Son may honour the Father and all that honour the Father may honour the Son These are the terms betwixt God the Father and God the Son Oh then how powerfull and prevailing are Christs intercessions with his Father if he ask who hath power to command there is little question of prevailing in his suit We have heard in our days of a suit managed with a petition in one hand and a sword in the other and what the effect is all now can tell As a King who sues for peace backt with a potent Army able to win what he intreats for must needs treat more effectually so Christ sueing to his Father for his Saints with a power sufficient to obtain what he sues for he must needs effect what his desires may be it is well observed that Christ is first said to sit at God's right hand and then to intercede he treats the salvation of sinners as a mighty Prince treats the giving up of some Town which lyes seated under a Castle of his that commands the Town or he treats the salvation of sinners as a Commander treats the surrendring of a person already in his hands it is beyond God's power I speak i● with submission to deny his Son in any thing he asks Exod. 32.10 if the Lord sometimes cryed out to Moses like a man whose hands are held Let me alone how much more doth Christ's intercession bind God's hands and command all in Heaven Earth and Hell hence we say that God the Father hath divested himself of all his power and given the keys into Christ's own hands I am he that liveth and was dead Rev. 1.18 and behold I am alive for evermore Amen and have the keys of hell and death there is no man goes to Hell but he is lockt in by Jesus Christ and there is no man goes to Heaven but he is lockt in there by Jesus Christ he hath the keys of all men's eternities hanging
and Powers that captive wicked men at their pleasure even they must be judged by those whom they formerly soyled so then there is no question but they shall judge Only how the Saints shall judge together with Christ is a very deep question For my part I am apt to think that it shall not be directly known ere it be seen or done I shall only relate what others say to this point and so leave you to your liberty of judging what is right 1. Some say that the Saints shall judge the World by presenting their persons and actions by comparing their good examples with the evil examples of all the Reprobates Jude 15. and so they shall convince and condemn the World Behold the Lord cometh with Ten thousand of his Saints to execute judgment upon all and to convince all that are ungodly among them This I conceive to be a truth yet surely this is not all truth 2. Others say that the Saints shall judge the World by way of indicting impleading accusing witnessing c. And I conceive it may be thus too the Saints of the Law more especially accusing the breakers of the Law by the Law Do not think that I will accuse you to the Father John 5.45 there is one that accuseth you to the Father there is one that accuseth you even Moses in whom ye trust And the Saints of the Gospel more especially judging the prophaners of the Gospel Rom. 2.16 by the Gospel in that day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my Gospel This likewise is truth but I believe as yet we have not the whole truth Psal 58.10 3. Others say that the Saints shall judge the World after the manner of exaltation glorying and rejoycing to see the vengeance The Righteous shall rejoyce when he seeth the vengeance he shall wash his feet in the blood of the wicked But this their exulting being a constant and perpetual act not for a time but for eternity methinks this present act should be yet somewhat more Rev. 16.17 Rev. 19.1 2. 4. Others say that the Saints shall judge the World by way of assession assent vote suffrage comprobation and the like subordinate and conformable acts And I heard another out of the Altar say even so Lord God Almighty true and righteous are thy judgments And after these things I heard a great voice of much people in heaven saying Allelujah salvation and glory and honour and power unto the Lord our God for true and righteous are his judgments this certainly is truth and commonly so received yet neither is this all truth 5. Others say that the Saints shall judge the World i.e. Christ in the Saints and the Saints in Christ He in them by those Infallible principles of Divine Justice which are imprest in them and they in him by those inseparable bounds of union whereby they wholly relate to him or he and they together as head and members the act of the head imputed to the members and the act of the members acknowledged by the head his Judiciary Act especially as from his Mediatorship and Manhood having a peculiar influence upon them and their Judiciary act in a perfect conformity though not any absolute proportion having a peculiar reference to him And methinks those Texts of Mat. 19.28 Jude 14.15 speak there of Christs and of the Saints judgment as of one joynt act Oh what terror will be to all wicked men when not only Christ but all the Saints shall say of them away with them away with them let them be damned You that are Fathers it may be that your Children will thus sentance you I remember when the Jews told Christ that he cast out Devils through Belzebub the Prince of Devils Mat. 12.7 he answered If I through Belzebub cast out Devils by whom do your Children cast them out therefore they shall be your judges They liked well enough of the Miracles of their Children who were the Disciples of Christ but they could not endure them in Christ and therefore he tells them that their Children whom God hath converted and to whom he had given power to do the same works as he did even they should be their judges to Condemn them And so it may be with you if any of your Children be converted to the Lord and you remain still in a natural estate your very Children shall be your judges and condemn you to Hell But of that anon 6. In this doom which Christ and his Saints shall pass on Reprobates our Saviour tells us of some reasonings betwixt him and them I was an hungred saith Christ and ye gave me no meat I was thirsty and ye gave me no drink c. Mat. 25.42.44.45 Then shall they answer Lord when saw we thee hungry or a thirst or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison and did not minister unto thee and then shall he answer them verily I say unto you inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these ye did it not to me As if Christ should have said time was that I was under reproach misery calamity necessity I lay at your doors like Lazarus full of sores and as I thought nothing too much for you so I expected also something from you but oh cruelty to see thy Christ an hungred and not to feed him to see thy Christ a thirst and not to cool or quench his thirst to see thy Christ a stranger and not to give him a nights lodging to see thy Christ naked and not to cover him with a garment who would gladly have covered thee with the robe of righteousness the garment of Salvation O monstrous inhumane heart O prodigious wretch who among the Heathens ever dealt thus with their Idols have any of the Nations starved their Gods turned them out of doors and must I only be slighted away Reprobates you had no mercy on me and now I laugh at your calamity surely he shall have judgment without mercy that hath shewed no mercy They stand wondering at this and cannot remember that ever they saw Christ in such a condition Why Lord say they when saw we thee an hungred or thirsty or naked art thou not he that rose again from the dead and ascended on high and ever since hast been exalted above the highest Cherubims a name being given thee above every name at which name to this day but especially now on this day every knee doth bow of things in heaven and things in earth Phil. 2.9 10. and things under the earth how then could we see thee in such a condition is not this thy second coming in glory and were we alive at thy first coming in humility how can this be oh how shouldst thou charge us with unkindness to thy self surely if we had known thee in need we would have given thee of thy own thou shouldst never have wanted what things we enjoyed but thou shouldst