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A10650 An explication of the hundreth and tenth Psalme wherein the severall heads of Christian religion therein contained; touching the exaltation of Christ, the scepter of his kingdome, the character of his subjects, his priesthood, victories, sufferings, and resurrection, are largely explained and applied. Being the substance of severall sermons preached at Lincolns Inne; by Edward Reynoldes sometimes fellow of Merton Colledge in Oxford, late preacher to the foresaid honorable society, and rector of the church of Braunston in Northhampton-shire. Reynolds, Edward, 1599-1676. 1632 (1632) STC 20927; ESTC S115794 405,543 546

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Thine they were and thou gavest them me Ioh. 17.6 My Father which gave them me is greater than all and none is able to plucke them out of my Fathers hand Ioh. 10.29 Thirdly Gods Oath which is the Seale of his irreversible decree and Covenant with Christ. Once have I sworne by my holinesse that I will not lye unto David His seede shall endure for ever and his Throne as the Sunne before me Psal. 89.35 36. Fourthly Christs owne Purchase and price which he paied for it The Apostle saith Christ died not in vaine and the vertue of his bloud lasteth to the end of the world for as his bloud was shed from the beginning of the world in regard of Gods Decree so doth it continue to the end in regard of its owne merit and efficacie so long as hee sitteth at the right hand of God which must be till the time of the restitution of all things the merit of his bloud shall worke amongst men Fifthly Christs owne Power to keepe inviolable the proprietie he hath gotten My sheepe heare my voyce and I give unto them eternall life and they shall never perish neither shall any man plucke them out of my hand Ioh. 10.27 28. Sixthly the Fathers Command unto his Son This is the Fathers will that of all which he hath given me I should lose nothing c. Ioh. 6.39 Seventhly Christs Love and Care The Church is his Spouse under his Coverture and protection and therefore as hee hath power and office so hee hath delight to preserve it still His Love is better able to helpe than the malice of the enemy is to hurt Eighthly Christs Intercession which is not for the world but for those whom God hath given him out of the world and those he demandeth of his Father who heareth him alwayes in the verture of that Covenant which betweene them was ratified on Gods part by a Promise and Oath and on Christs part by a Merit and Purchase Now Christs Intercession shall last till his returning to judge the world and therefore still he must have a Church for whom to intercede Lastly Christs owne Promise to be with the preaching of his Gospell that is to give it assistance and successe for the gathering together and perfecting of the Saints unto the End of the world Matth. 28.20 Here then may bee answered two great Questions First whether the Church may deficere faile upon the earth or no To which I answere That the Church may bee taken either mystically spiritually and universally And in that sense it can never faile but there must bee upon the earth a true Church of Christ not onely certitudine eventus by the certainety of the event which is on all sides agreed but certitudine causa too by a certaintie growing out of those irresistible causes upon which the being of the mysticall body of Christ on the earth dependeth Or it may be considered particularly in the severall parts and places of the world where the Gospell is planted and hierarchically and politically denoting a company of men professing the faith of Christ and reduc'd into a quiet peaceable composed and conspicuous governement and so wee affirme that there is no Church in the world so safe but that it may deficere faile and be extinguished out of its place The Church of the Jewes did and after them any may Else the Apostles argument even to the Roman Church it selfe which was then a famous Church throughout the world and of that passage in the Apostle Baronius makes a long boast were very weake when à majori ad minus hee thus argueth Be not high-minded but feare for if God spared not the naturall branches take heed lest he also spare not thee Thus we finde the ten tribes in their apostacie till they became Lo-ammi to be no more a people and their brethren after fall in their condition Wrath saith the Apostle is come to the uttermost upon them And hee telleth us that the man of sinne the Sonne of perdition should be revealed by Apostacie to note unto us that Antichrist was to be generated out of the corruption or falling away of some eminent Church and that by a mysterious and insensible declination A second question which may be made is this that since the Church doth not totally faile from off the earth whether that which remaineth thereof be alwayes visible To which wee answere That if wee take the Church for the spirituall and mysticall body of Christ which is indeed the House of God so it is in a sort still invisible because the qualities and principles which constitute a man in the body of Christ as Faith and the Spirit of Grace are invisible things Seene indeed they may be by an eye of Charitie in their fruits but not by an eye of certainety in their owne infallible being Secondly if wee take the Church for a company of men professing the true Doctrine of Christ wee answere that take the men in themselves so truly professing and impossible it is but their faith should shew it selfe in the fruits thereof for the kingdome of Christ is in the heart like leaven which will manifest it selfe in the whole lumpe and so we can in all even the worst ages of the Church shew some who have witnessed the truth against that deluge of ignorance errour and idolatry which had invaded the world like gray haires here and there mingled on a blacke head as if you single out fire from the ashes it will be seene by its owne evidence though it may be so raked up that it is not observed But then if we speake of these men in aggregato as concurring to make up a distinct external body or Church so we say that the professors of the truth may be so few and they persecuted traduced suppressed cried downe driven into the wildernesse without any apparant separated conspicuousnesse and governement of its owne as in the time of Constantius the emperour the publike professors of the Divinitie of Christs person against the damnable heresie of the Arrians were used as that in this sense we may justly denie the Church to have beene alwayes visible that is The few true professors of Christ in power and puritie to have had a free open uncontroled distinct ecclesiasticall body of their owne notoriously and in conspectu hominum different from that tyrannicall and pompous hierarchie under which they suffered for though Christ rule yet it is in the midst of his enemies and the enemies may be so many and Christs subjects in whom he rules so few that the corne may be invisible for the abundance of weeds amongst which it growes though in it selfe very apt to be seene And this giveth a full answer to that Question where Our Church was before the late Reformation began by Luther for that Reformation did not new-make the Church but purge it And that it stood in need of purging the Papists themselves were
Consider the Church in it selfe and so it is a very vast body but yet consider it comparatively with the other more prevailing malignant part of the world so it is but a little flock as many graines and measures of corne may lie hid under a greater heape of chaffe Secondly the Church now is many comparatively with the old church of the Iewes more are the Children of the desolate than of the married wife Esai 54.1 But not comparatively with the adversaries of the Church in generall Wee see of thirtie parts of the world nineteene are either idolatrous or Mahumetan and the other eleven serving Christ in so different a manner as if there were many Christs or many Gospels or many wayes to the same end Thirdly though Christ alwayes have a numerous offspring yet in severall ages there is observable a different purity and conspicuousnesse according to the different administrations and breathings of the Spirit upon his garden In some ages the Doctrine more uncorrupt the profession and acceptation more universall than in others In the Apostles times there were many borne unto Christ by reason of the more abundant measure of Spirit which was shed abroad upon them Tit. 3.6 In the times of the Primitive persecutions there were many likewise born because God would glorifie the foundations of his Church and the power of his Spirit above the pride of men In the first countenancing of it by Imperiall Laws and favors it was very generall and conspicuous because professed by the obedience and introduced by the power of those great emperors whom the world followed But after that long peace and great dignities had corrupted the mindes of the chiefe in the Church and made them looke more after the pompe than the purity thereof the mystery of iniquity like a weed grew apace and overspread the Corne first abusing and after that subjecting the power of princes and bewitching the Kings of the earth with its fornications Hence likewise wee may learne to acknowledge Gods mercy in the worst times in those ages wherin the Church was most oppressed yet many have yeelded themselves unto Christ. The woman was with Childe and was delivered even when the Dragon did persecute her Revel 12.1.4 and even then God found out in the wildernesse a place of refuge defence and feeding for his Church As in those cruell times of Arrianisme when heresie had invaded the world and in those blinde and miserable ages wherin Satan was loosed God still stirred up some notable instruments by whom hee did defend his truth and amongst whom hee did preserve his Church though they were driven into solitary places and forced to avoid the assemblies of Hereticall and Antichristian Teachers Wee learne likewise not to censure persons places or times God had seven thousand in Israel when Elias thought none but himselfe had been left all are not alike venturous or confident of their strength Nicodemus came to Christ by night and yet even then Christ did not reject him Therefore we must not presently censure our neighbours as cold or dead if they discover not immediatly the same measure of courage and publike stoutnesse in the profession of Christ with our selves some men are by nature more retir'd silent unsociable unactive men some by the engagement of their places persons and callings wherein they are of more publike and necessary use in the Church are put upon more abundant caution and circumspection in the moderate carriage of themselves than other men Paul was of himselfe very zealous and earnest in that great confusion when Gaius and Aristarchus were haled into the theater to have gone in unto the people in that their outrage and distemper but the wisedome of the Disciples and some of his chiefe friends is herin commended that they sent unto him desiring him that hee would not adventure into the theater and that they suffered him not Act. 19.30 31. It is a grave observation which Gregorie Nazianzen makes of that great champian and universall agent for composing the differences and distractions of the Church S. Basil that pro temporis ratione Haereticorum principatu by reason of the prevalencie of adversaries and condition of the times hee did in the controversies concerning the Deitie of the Holy Ghost abstaine from some words which others of an inferior ranke did with liberty and boldnesse use and that this hee did in much wisedome and upon necessary reasons because it was not fit for so eminent a person and one who had such generall influence by the quality of his place and greatnesse of his parts in the welfare of the Church by the envie of words or phrases to exasperate a countenanced enemie and to draw upon himselfe and in him upon the Church of God any inevitable and unnecessary danger And surely if the wisedome and moderation of that holy man were with the same pious affection generally observed that men when they doe earnestly contend for the truth once delivered which is the duty of every Christian did not in heate of argument load the truth they maintaine with such hard and severe though it may bee true expressions as beget more obstinacie in the adversarie and it may bee suspition in the weake or unresolved looker on differences amongst men might bee more soberly composed and the truth with more assurance entertained Againe wee have from hence an encouragement to goe on in the wayes of Christ because wee goe in great and in good Company many wee have to suffer with us many wee have to comfort and to encourage us As the people of Israel when they went solemnely up to meete the Lord in Sion went on from troope to troope the further they went the more companie they were mixed withall going to the same purpose so when the Saints goe towards heaven to meete the Lord there they doe not onely goe unto an innumerable Company of Angells and just men but they meete with troopes in their way to encourage one another All the discouragement that Elias had was that hee was alone but we have no such plea for our unwillingnesse to professe the truth and power of Religion now Wee are not like a lambe in a wide place without comfort or company but wee are sure to have an excellent guard and convoy unto Christs Kingdome And this use the Apostle makes of the multitudes of beleevers that wee should by so great a Cloud of witnesses bee the more encouraged in our patient running of that race which is set before us Heb. 12.1 Lastly It should teach us to love the multitudes the assemblies and the Communion of the Saints to speak often to one another to encourage strengthen one another not to forsake the assembling of our selves together as the manner of some is to concurre in mutuall desires to conspire in the same holy thoughts and affections to bee of one heart of one soule of one judgement to walke by one the same
the Lord is said to be at the Right Hand of his Church 485 Christs enemies kings 487 All praise and honour to bee given unto God for the Power and Office of Christ. 489 Christ is present and prepared to defend his people from their enemies 491 Christ in his appointed time will utterly overthrow his greatest enemies 493 Satans enmitie is in Tempting 494 Satans enmitie is in Accusing 495 How the Spirit of judgement overcommeth corruptions 495 How Christ overcommeth his potent adversaries in the world 498 There is a constituted time wherein Christ will be avenged of his enemies 502 1. VVhen sinne is growne to its fulnesse 503 which is knowne by its Vniversality 504 which is knowne by its Impudence 504 which is knowne by its Obstinacie 504 2. VVhen the Church is throughly humbled and purged 506 3. VVhen all humane hopes and expectations are gone 506 Christs victories are by way of pleading and disceptation 509 A torrent of curses betweene man and Salvation 515 The Necessity of Christs Sufferings 522 The Greatnesse and Nature of Christs Sufferings 521 522 The Power and vertue of Christs Resurrection 524 AN EXPOSITION OF THE HVNDRETH AND TENTH PSALME PSALME 110. vers 1. The Lord said unto my Lord Sit thou at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy footstoole CHRIST IESVS the Lord is the Summe and Center of all divine revealed truth neither is any thing to be preached unto men as an object of their faith or necessary element of their salvation which doth not some way or other either meete in him or refer unto him All Truths especially divine are of a noble and pretious nature and therefore whatsoever mysteries of his Counsell God hath been pleased in his Word to reveale the Church is bound in her ministerie to declare unto men And Saint Paul professeth his faithfulnesse therein I have not shunned to declare unto you all the Counsell of God But yet all this Counsell which elsewhere he ca●s 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the testimonie of God he gathers together into this one conclusion I determined not to know any thing amongst you that is in my p●eaching unto you to make discovery of any other knowledge as matter of consequence or faith but onely of Iesus Christ and him crucified And therefore Preaching of the Word is called preaching of Christ and Ministers of the Word Ministers of Christ and learning of the Word Learning of Christ because our Faith our Workes and our Worship which are the three essentiall elements of a Christian the whole dutie of man and the whole will of God have all their foundation growth end and vertue only in and from Christ crucified There is no fruit weight nor value in a Christian title but only in and from the death of Christ. The Word in generall is divided into the Old and New Testament both which are the same in substance though different in the manner of their dispensations as Moses veild differ'd from himselfe unveild Now that Christ is the substance of the whole New Testament containing the Historie Doctrine and Prophesies of him in the administration of the latter ages of the Church is very manifest to all The old Scriptures are againe divided into the Law and Prophets for the historicall parts of them doe containe either typicall prefigurations of the Evangelicall Church or inductions and exemplary demonstrations of the generall truth of Gods justice and promises which are set forth by way of Doctrine and Precept in the Law and Prophets Now Christ is the summe of both these they waited upon him in his transfiguration to note that in him they had their accomplishment First for the Law hee is the substance of it hee brought Grace to fulfill the exactions and Truth to make good the prefigurations of the whole Law The ceremoniall Law he fulfilled and abolished the morall Law hee fulfilled and established that his obedience thereunto might be the ground of our righteousnesse and his Spirit and grace therewith might bee the ground of our Obedience And therefore it is called the Law of Christ. 2 For the Prophets he is the Summe of them too for to him they give all witnesse He is the Author of their Prophesies they spake by his Spirit and he is the object of their Prophesies they spake of the grace and salvation which was to come by him So that the whole Scriptures are nothing else but a Testimonie of Christ and faith in him of that absolute and universall necessitie which is laid upon all the world to beleeve in his name It is not onely necessitas praecepti because wee are thereunto commanded but necessitas medii too because he is the onely Ladder betweene earth and heaven the alone mediator betweene God and man in him there is a finall and unabolishable covenant established and there is no name but his under heaven by which a man can be saved In consideration of all which for that I haue formerly discovered the Insufficiency of any either inward or outward principle of mans happinesse save only the Life of Christ I have chosen to speake vpon this Psalme and out of it to discover those wayes whereby the Life of Christ is dispenced administred towards his Church For this Psalme is one of the cleerest and most compendious prophesies of the Person and Offices of Christ in the whole Old Testament and so full of fundamentall truth that I shall not shunne to call it Symbolum Davidicum the Prophet Davids Creed And indeed there are very few if any of the Articles of that Creed which we all generally professe which are not either plainely expressed or by most evident implication couched in this little modell First the Doctrine of the Trinitie is in the first words The Lord said unto my Lord. There is Iehovah the Father and My Lord the Sonne and the sanctification or consecration of him which was by the Holy Ghost by whose fulnesse he was anointed unto the Offices of King and Priest for so our Saviour himselfe expounds this word Said by the sealing sanctification of him to his office Ioh. 10.34 35 36. Then wee have the Incarnation of Christ in the word My Lord together with his dignitie and honor above David as our Savior himselfe expounds it Matth. 22.42.45 Mine that is my Sonne by descent and genealogie after the flesh and yet my Lord too in regard of a higher sonship We have also the S●fferings of Christ in that he was consecrated a Priest v. 4. to offer up himselfe once for all and so to drinke of the brooke in the way Wee have his Eluctation and conquest over all his enemies and sufferings his resurrection he shall lift up his head his Ascension and Intercession sit thou on my right hand And in that is comprised his Descent into Hell by S. Pauls way of arguing That he ascended what is it but that hee descended first into the lower parts of the earth Eph. 4.9
and to compose those differences thereabouts which doe so much perplex the world Secondly for those places which in their meaning are easie to be understood but in their excellent and high nature hard to be beleeved as all Articles of faith and things of absolute necessitie are in their termes perspicuous but in their heavenly nature unevident unto humane reason the office of the Church is not to binde mens consciences to beleeve these truths upon her authoritie for wee have not dominion over the faith of men neither are we lords in Christs flock and how shal any scrupulous minde which is desirous to boult things to the bran be secure of the power which the Church in this case arrogates or have any certaintie that this society of men must be beleeved in their religion who will allow the same honor to no society of men but thēselves But in this case the office of the Church is both to labour by al good means to evidence the credibility of the things which are to be beleeved to discover unto men those essentiall and intimate beauties of the Gospel which to spirituall mindes and hearts raised to such a proportionable pitch of capacitie as are suteable to the excellency of their natures are apt to evidence and notifie themselves and also to labour to take men off from dependance on their owne reason or corrupted judgement to worke in their heart an experience of the Spirit of grace and an obedience to those holy truths which they already assent unto with which preparations and perswasions the heart being possessed will in due time come to observe more cleerely by that spirituall eye the evidence of those things which were at first so difficult so then the Act of the Church is in matters of faith an act of introduction and guidance but that which begetteth the infallible and unquestionable assent of faith is that spirituall taste relish and experience of the heavenly sweetnesse of divine doctrine which by the ministery of the Church accompanied with the speciall concurrence of almighty God therewithall is wrought in the heart for it is only the Spirit of God which writeth the Law in mens hearts which searcheth the things of God and which maketh us to know them Thirdly for those places which are difficult rather to be obeyed than to be understood The worke of the Church is to enforce upon the conscience the necessitie of them to perswade rebuke exhort encourage with all authority Which should teach us all to love the Church of Christ and to pray for the peace and prosperity of the walls of Sion for the purity spiritualnesse power and countenance of the Word therein which is able to hold up its owne honour in the minds of men if it be but faithfully published we should therefore studie to maintaine to credit to promote the Gospell to encourage truth discountenance errour to stand in the gap against all the stratagems and advantages of the enemies thereof and to hold the candlestick fast amongst us to buy the truth and sell it not betray it not forsake it not temper it not misguize it not This is to be a pillar to put the shoulder under the Gospell of Christ. And surely though the Papists boast of the word and name of the Church as none more apt to justifie and brag of their sobrietie than those whom the wine hath overtaken yet the plaine truth is they have farre lesse of the nature thereof than any other Churches because farre lesse of the pure service and ministration thereof for in stead of holding forth the Word of life they pull it downe denying unto the people of Christ the use of his Gospell dimidiating the use of his Sacrament breeding them up in an ignorant worship to begge they know not what in all points disgracing the Word of truth and robbing it of its certaintie sufficiencie perspicuitie authoritie purity energie in the minds of men And this is certain the more any set themselves against the light and generall knowledge of the Word of truth the lesse of the nature of the Church they have in them what-ever ostentations they may make of the name thereof The last thing observed in this second verse amongst the regalities of Christ was Imperium his rule and government in his Church by his holy Word maugre all the attempts and machinations of the enemies thereof against it Rule thou in the middest of thine enemies that is Thou shalt rule safely securely undisturbedly without danger feare or hazard from the enemies round about their counsels shall be infatuated their purposes shall vanish their decrees shall not stand their persecutions shall but sow the bloud of Christ and the ashes of Christians the thicker they shall see it and gnash with their teeth and gnaw their tongues and be horribly amazed at the emulation and triumph of a Christians sufferings over the malice and wrath of men The kingdome of Christ is two-fold His kingdome of glory of which there shall be no end when hee shall rule over his enemies and tread them under his feet and his kingdome of grace whereby hee ruleth amongst his enemies by the scepter of his Word And this is the kingdome here spoken of noting unto us that Christ will have a Church and people gathered unto him by the preaching of his Gospell on the earth maugre all the malice power or policie of all his enemies Never was Satan so loose never heresie and darknesse so thicke never persecution so prevalent never the taile of the Dragon so long as to sweepe away all the Starres of heaven or to devoure the remnant of the womans seed The gates of hell all the policie power and machinations of the kingdome of darknesse shall never root out the Vine which the Father hath planted nor prevaile against the body of Christ. His Gospell must be preached till the worlds end and till then he will be with it to give it successe Though the Kings of the earth stand up and the Rulers gather together against the Lord and his Christ yet they imagine but a vaine thing and hee that sitteth in heaven shall laugh them to scorne The grounds of the certainetie and perpetuitie of Christs Evangelicall Kingdome is not the nature of the Church in it selfe consider'd either in the whole or parts for Adam and Evah were a Church at first a people that were under the law of obedience and worship of God and yet they fell away from that excellent condition And the Prophet tels us that except the Lord had left a very small remnant the Church had beene all as Sodom and like to Gomorrah But the grounds hereof are First The Decree ordination and appointment of God Psal. 2.7 Acts 10.42 Hebr. 3.2 and wee know what ever men project the counsell of the Lord must stand Secondly Gods Gift unto Christ Aske of mee and I wil give thee the heathen for thine inheritance c. Ps. 2.8
Zech. 2.5 And this is the ground of all the Churches comfort that more is with them than against them the enemies have combinations and confederacies of men but the Church hath Immanuel God with them Esai 8.9 10. none can pull Christ from the right hand of God or from the right hand of his people that is none can take away either his power or his love from his people The Church and truth can never bee crush'd and overthrowne no more than a rocke with the raging of the waves they are Heavenly things and therefore nothing of earth or hell can reach to corrupt them It was but a vaine attempt of the Gyants to build a tower to heaven The world was made that there might be therein a Church to worship and contemplate that God which made it therefore in the creation God never rested till he came to a Church to note that that was the end thereof and therefore it is easier to pull downe the world and to shake in peeces the frame of nature than to ruine the Church The Church hath Christ for her husband hee to whom all knees must bend hee whom every tongue must confesse hee who will subdue all things to himselfe so she hath Love Power and Iealousie all three very strong things on her side And therefore the onely way to be safe is to keepe Christ at our right hand to hold fast his truth worship and obedience for so long as we have Immanuel all adverse power is but flesh and all flesh is but grasse withered in a moment when God will blow upon it Note thirdly Christ in his appointed time will utterly overthrow the greatest enemies of his Kingdome and deliver his Church from under the sorest oppressions There is not any one argument in the holy Scriptures more frequently repeated than this of Christs victories prefigured they were in the deliverances of Israel out of Egypt 1 Cor. 10.2 4. In the deliverance of the Arke out of the waters 1 Pet. 3.21 22. in the deliverance of the Iewes from Babylon Revel 14.8 Esai 11 10-12.15 To note that in the sorest extremities and greatest improbabilities God will shew himselfe jealous for his people This victorie is expressed by treading of a wine-presse Esai 63.1 6. when there are none to helpe when the Church is brought to sorest extremities though multitudes meete against her as many as the grapes in a vintage they shall all be but as Clusters of grapes he shall squeeze out their bloud like wine and make his Church to thresh them Lam. 1.15 Revel 14.20 Ioel 3.12 Mic. 4.13 By the dissipation of smoke out of a Chimnie they shall bee as the smoke out of the Chimnie Hos. 13.3 As Athanasius used to say of Iulian the Apostate that hee was but Nubecula quae citò transiret a little cloud which would quickly be blowne away smoke when it breakes out of a Chimnie with a horrible blacknesse threatneth to blot out the Sunne and to invade and choake up all the ayre but a little blast of winde scattereth it and anon nothing thereof appeares By fire consuming thornes and briars Esai 10.17 While they be folded together as thornes and while they are drunken as drunkards that is while they have plotted their counsels and confederacies so curiously that no man dares so much as touch them and while they are drunken with the pride and confidence of their own strength they shall then be devoured as stubble that is fully dry Nahum 1.10 Esai 27.4.31.9 Therefore the Scripture calleth Christ a Man of war Exod. 15.3 Because he is furnished with all Arts of victory Power invincible as a Lion amongst shepheards so is he amongst his enemies Esai 31.4 wisedome unsearchable which must stand v. 1 2. If hee purpose none can disappoint him Esai 14.27 Authority by the least intimation to gather together all the forces of the world against the enemies of his Church If he but hisse unto them they presently come in troops Esai 5.26.7.18 He can command helpe for his people Psal. 44.4 Psal. 71.3 Ier. 47.7 and if that should faile he can create helpe for his people as hee did for Israel when hee wrought miracles to deliver them Psal. 106.22 We may more profitably consider the truth and comfort of this point by discovering it in the severall enemies of Christ and his people First the great enemie of the seed of the woman is the Serpent that great red Dragon whose names are all names of enmity The Accuser the Tempter the Destroyer the Devourer the Envious man furnished with much strength and mightie succour legions of principalities and powers attending on him and with much wisedome which the Scripture calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the wiles and traines and craftines of Satan And his Arts of destroying men are two To tempt and to accuse His Temptations are twofold either unto Sinne or unto discomfort either to make us offend God or to make us disquiet our selves either to wound us or to vexe us And in all these his Arts Christ our Captain will tread him under our feet and will give his Church the victory at the last either by Arming us with sufficiency of grace and faith in his Victories putting us by his Spirit in minde of his Temptations which taught him compassion towards us who are so much weaker and encouraging our hearts to cry out unto him who is our mercifull and compassionate high priest like a ravished woman in our extremities as Paul did 2 Cor. 12.8 9. stirring up our faith to lay hold on him when we are in darkenesse and our spirit of Adoption to cry unto him when wee are in danger and our spirit of wisedome to solve the objections to discerne the devices of Satan and to prepare and arme our hearts accordingly to wrestle with him Or else by rebuking of him pulling in his chaine and chasing him away and as our second undertaking the combate in person for us when he is ready to prevaile Zech. 3.1 2. Thus he overcommeth him as a Tempter and ever giveth some either comfortable or profitable issue out of them He likewise overcommeth him as an Accuser Satan accuseth the Saints either by way of complaint and na●ration of the things which they have done Revel 12.10 which the Apostle calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his laying of crimes to the charge of men Rom. 8.33 and thus Christ overcommeth him by his Intercession and in the hearts of his Saints by making them judge and accuse themselves that they may be able to cleere themselves too 1 Cor. 11.31 2 Corin. 7.11 Or hee accuseth by way of suspition or preconjecture as hee did Iob Iob 1.9 10 11. and herein likewise Christ overcommeth him in his servants by permitting him to tempt and vexe them that they may come the purer out of the fire and by putting a holy suspition and jealousie into them over their owne hearts which may still bee a meanes to prevent them against evils that
his sufferings which are expressed by stripes Esai 53.5 and our resurrection with him noted in the budding of a dry rod. Or lastly noting the sanctifying and fruitfull vertue of his word which is the rod of his strength Vpon it also was the Mercie seate to note that in Christ is the foundation of all that mercie and atonement which is preached unto men But in two things principally did it signifie Christ unto our present purpose First It was overlaid within and without with gold and had a Crowne of gold round about it Exod. 25.11.37.2 denoting the plentifull and glorious Kingdome of Christ who was crowned with glorie and honor Heb. 2.7 Secondly it had rings by which it was carried up and downe till at last it rested in Salomons Temple with glorious and triumphall solemnitie Psal. 132.89 2 Chron. 5.13 So Christ while he was here upon earth being anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power went about doing good Act. 10.38 and having ceased from his workes did at last enter into his rest Heb. 5.10 which is the heavenly Temple Revel 11.19 Now this carrying of the Ark into his resting place denotes two things First a finall conquest over the enemies of God For as the moving of the Ark signified the acting and procuring of victorie Iosh. 6.11 20. So the Resting of the Ark noted the Consummation of Victorie And therefore the Temple was built and the Ark set therein in the dayes of Salomon when there was not an emendicated or borrowed peace depending upon the courtesie of the neighbor nations but a victorious and triumphall peace after the great victories of David and tributarie subjection and homage of all the Canaanites which were left in the Land 2 Chro. 8.7 8.9.26 2 Sam. 7.9.12 Psal. 68.29 Secondly it notes the conferring of gifts as we see in that triumphall song at the removall of the Arke being also a prediction both of that which literally hapned in the raig●e of Salomon and was mystically verified in Christ Psal. 68.18 Thus Christ our Prince of peace being now in the Temple of God in heaven hath bound hell sinne and death captive and hath demolished the wals of Iericho or the Kingdom of Satan throwne him downe from heaven like lightning and passed a sentence of judgment upon him And hath received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost and given gifts unto men Act. 2.32 35. before his entring into his rest it was but a promise and they were to waite at Ierusalem for it Act. 1.4 but after his departure and intercession at his Fathers right hand it was powred forth in abundance upon them Ioh. 14.16.16.7 And we are to note that as it began with his sitting there so it continueth as long as he shall there sit It is true all Holy Scripture which God ordained for the gathering of his people and for the guidance of them in the militant Church is already long since by the Spirit dictated unto holy and selected instruments for that purpose inspired with more abundance of grace and guided by a full and infallible Spirit but yet we must note that in those holy writings there is such a depth of heavenly wisedome such a sea of mysteries and such an unsearchable treasure of puritie and grace that though a man should spend the longest life after the severest and most industrious manner to acquaint himselfe with God in the revelations of his word yet his knowledge would be but in part and his holinesse after all that come short of maturity as the enemies are not all presently under Christs feete but are by degrees subdued so the Spirit is not presently conferred in fulnesse unto the members of Christ but by measure and degrees according to the voluntary influences of the head exigences of the members So much of the Spirit of grace and truth as we have here is but the earnest and hansell of a greater summe Ephes. 1.14 The seed and first fruits of a fuller harvest 1 Ioh. 3.9 Rom. 8.23 Therefore the Apostle mentions a growing change from glorie to glorie by the Spirit of God 2 Cor. 3.18 Wee must not expect a fulnesse till the time of the restitution of all things till that day of redemption and adoption wherein the light which is here but sowen for the Righteous shall grow up into a full harvest of holinesse and of glory But here ariseth a question out of the seeming contradiction of Holy Scripture It is manifest that the Spirit of Christ was in the Church long before his Ascension The Prophets spake by him 1 Pet. 1.11 The ancient Iews vexed him Esai 63.10 Iohn Baptist was even filled with the Spirit to note a plentifull measure for the discharge of his Office Luk. 1.15 and yet S. Iohn saith That the Holy Ghost was not yet given because Christ was not yet glorified Ioh. 7.39 To this I answere that the Fathers were sanctified by the same Spirit of Christ with us difference there is none in the substance but onely in the accidents and circumstances of effusion and manifestation As light in the Sunne and light in a starre is in it selfe the same originall light but very much varied in the dispensation It was the same truth which was preached by the Prophets and by Christ but the Apostle observes in it a difference sundry times and in sundry manners hath God spoken by the Prophets but unto us by his Son that is more plentifully and more plainly unto us than unto the Fathers Heb. 1.1 Ioh. 16.25 Therefore though it be true that Abraham saw Christs day as all the Fathers did though he haply being the Father of the faithfull more than others in which respect Eusebius saith of them that they were Christians really and in effect though not in name yet it is true likewise that many Prophets and Righteous men did desire to see and heare the things which the Apostles saw and heard but did not Matt. 13.17 namely in such plaine and plentifull measure as the Apostles did They saw in glimpses and morning stars and prefigurations but these the things themselves They saw onely the promises and those too but afarre off Heb. 11.13 these the substance and gospell it selfe neere at hand in their mouth and before their eyes and even amongst them Rom. 10.8 Gal. 3.1 Ioh. 1.14 1 Ioh. 1.2 3. They by Prophets who testified before-hand these by eye-witnesses who declared the things which they had seen and heard Act. 1.8.22.10.41 Therfore it is said that Christ was a Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world and yet in the end of the world that he appeared to take away sinne by the Sacrifice of himselfe Heb. 9.26 to note that the Fathers had the benefi● but not the perfection of the promises Heb. 11.40 for the Apostle every where makes perfection the worke of the Gospell 1 Cor. 2.7 Eph. 4.13 Heb. 6.1 So then after Christs sitting on the right hand of power the Holy Spirit was more
present and things to come all are yours saith the Apostle Death it selfe and persecutions are amongst the legacies of Christ unto the Church and a portion of all that goodnesse with which in the Gospell shee is endowed It containes the glory of Gods power and strength for it is the Power of God unto salvation as hath beene declared It containeth the glory of Gods grace The grace of his favour towards us and the grace of his Spirit in us The Law was given by Moses but grace came by Christ that is favour in stead of Gods fury and strength in stead of mans infirmitie for because man was unable to fulfill the Law therefore the Law came with wrath and curses against man but in the Gospell of Christ there is abundance even a whole kingdome of grace the Apostle saith that by Iesus Christ grace raigned there is grace to remove the curse of the Law by Gods favour towards us so that on all sides the Law is weake unable by reason of mans sinne to save and unable by reason of Gods favour to condemne and there is grace to remove the weaknesse of man by Gods Spirit in us for though our owne spirit lust unto envie or set it selfe proudly against the Law of God yet hee giveth more grace that is strength enough to overcome the counterlustings of the flesh against his will and to enable us in sincerity and evangelicall perfection to fulfill the commands of the Law Lastly it containeth in some sort the glory of Gods heavenly kingdome in that therein are let in the glimpses and first fruits the seales and assurances thereof unto the soule by the promises testimonies and comforts of the Spirit And therefore it is frequently called the Gospell of the kingdome and the mysteries of the kingdome of God namely that kingdome which beginneth here but shall never end As if a man borne in Ireland bee afterwards transplanted into England though he change his countrey he doth not change his King or his Law but is still under the same government so when a Christian is translated from earth to heaven he is still in the same kingdome in heaven it is the kingdome of glory mended much by the different excellencie of the place and preferment of the person in earth it is the same kingdome though in a lesse amene and comfortable climate the kingdome of the Gospell These and many other the like things are the glorious matters which the Gospell containeth Here then wee see how and wherein we are to looke upon God so as that wee may abide his glory and bee comforted by it wee must not looke upon him in his owne immediate brightnesse and essence nor by our sawcie curiosities prie into the secrets of his unrevealed glory for he is a consuming fire an invisible and unapprochable light we may see his back-parts in the proclaiming of his mercy and wee may see the hornes or bright beames of his hands in the publishing of his Law but yet all this was under a cloud or under the biding of his Power His face no man can see and live Wee must not looke upon him onely in our selves Though wee might at first have seene him in our owne nature for we were created after his Image in righteousnesse and true holinesse yet now that Image is utterly obliterated and we have by nature the Image onely of Satan and the old Adam in us we must not looke upon him onely in mount Sinai in his Law lest the fire devoure us and the dart strike us thorow we can finde nothing of him there but rigour inexorablenesse wrath and vengeance But we must acquaint our selves with him in his Sonne wee must know him and whom he hath sent together there is no fellowship with the Father except it be with the Sonne too we may have the knowledge of his Hand that is of his workes and of his punishments without Christ but we cannot have the knowledge of his bosome that is of his counsels and of his compassions nor the knowledge of his Image that is of his holinesse grace and righteousnesse nor the knowledge of his presence that is of his comforts here and his glory hereafter but onely in and by Christ we may know God in the World for in the Creation is manifest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which may bee knowne of him namely his eternall power and God-head But this is a barren and fruitlesse knowledge which will not keepe downe unrighteousnesse for the wise men of the world when they knew God they glorified him not as God but became vaine in their imaginations and held that truth of him which was in the Creation revealed in unrighteousnesse Wee may know him in his Law too and that in exceeding great glory when God came from Teman and the Holy One from mount Paran whereabout the Law was the second time repeated by Moses his glory covered the heavens and the earth was full of his praise his brightnesse was as the light c. But this is a killing knowledge a knowledge which makes us flie from God and hide our selves out of his presence and fight against him as our sorest enemies and come short of his glory therefore the Law is called a firy Law or a fire of Law to shew not onely the originall thereof for it was spoken out of the middest of the fire but the nature and operation of it too which of it selfe is to heap fire and curses upon the soule and therefore it is called the ministration of Death 2 Cor. 3.7 But now to know the glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ is both a fruitfull and a comfortable knowledge wee know the patterne we must walke by we know the life we must live by we know the treasure wee must be supplied by we know whom wee have beleeved wee know whom wee may be bold with in all straits and distresses wee know God in Christ full of love full of compassion full of eares to heare us full of eyes to watch over us full of hands to fight for us full of tongues to commune with us full of power to preserve us full grace to transforme us full of fidelity to keepe covenant with us full of wisdome to conduct us full of redemption to save us full of glory to reward us Let us therefore put our selves into this Rocke that Gods goodnesse may passe before us that he may communicate the mysteries of his kingdom and of his glory unto us that by him our persons may be accepted our prayers admitted our services regarded our acquaintance and fellowship with the Lord increased by that blessed Spirit which is from them both shed abroad in his Gospell upon us Now lastly the Gospell of Christ is glorious in those ends effects or purposes for which it serveth And in this respect principally doth the Apostle so often magnifie the glory of the Gospell above
of wit joyned with ambition and impatiencie of repulse in vaste desires which hath anciently beene the ground of many heresies and schismes Nothing hath ever beene more dangerous to the Church of God than greatnesse of parts unsanctified and unallaid with the love of truth and the Grace of Christ. Secondly envie against the paines and estimation of those that are faithfull This was one of the originals of Arrius his cursed heresie his envie against Alexander the good bishop of Alexandria as Theodoret reports Thirdly impatiencie of the spiritualnesse and simplicitie of the holy Scriptures which is ever joyned with the predominancie of some carnall lust whereby the conscience is notoriously wasted or defiled Hee that hath once put away a good conscience and doth not desire truth in order and respect to that that thereby his conscience may be illightened purified and kept even towards God will without much adoe make shipwracke of his faith and change the truth for any thriving errour And this impatiencie of the Spirit of truth in the Scriptures is that which caused heretikes of old to reject some parts and to adde more to the Canon of sacred Scriptures and in these dayes to super-adde traditions and apocryphall accessions thereunto and in those which are pure and on all sides confessed to use such licentious and carnall glosses as may hale the Scripture to the countenancing and conformitie of their lusts and prejudices rather than to the rectifying of their owne hearts by the Rule of Christ. Secondly men preach themselves when they make themselves the Object of their preaching when they preach selfe-dependencie and selfe-concurrencie making themselves as it were joynt-saviours with Christ such was the preaching of Simon Magus who gave out that himselfe was some great one even the great Power of God Of Montanus and his scholars who preached him for the Comforter that was promised Of Pelagius and his associates who though they did acknowledge the Name of Grace to decline envie and avoide the curse of the great Councell of Carthage yet still they did but shelter their proud heresies under equivocations and ambiguities Of the Massilienses in the times of Prosper and Hilarie and of some ancient Schoolemen touching pre-existent congruities for the preparations of Grace and co-existent concurrencies with the Spirit for the production of Grace Of the papists in their doctrines of indulgences authoritative absolution merits of good workes justification and other like which doe all in effect out-face and give the lye unto the Apostle when hee calleth Christ an able or sufficient Saviour Thirdly men preach themselves when they make themselves the end of their preaching when they preach their owne parts passions and designes and seeke not the Lord when out of envie or covetousnesse or ambition or any other servile or indirect affection men shall prevaricate in the Lords Message and make the Truth of God serve their owne turnes When men shall stand upon Gods holy mount as on a theater to act their owne parts and as on a step to their owne advancement when the truth of God and the death of Christ and the kingdome of heaven and the fire of hell and the soules of men and the salvation of the world shall be made bas●ly serviceable and contributary to the boundlesse pride of an Atheisticall Diotrephes Such as these were they who in the times of Constantius the emperor poisoned the world with Arrianisme in the times of S. Cyprian provoked persecutions against the Church and in the times of Israel ensnared the tenne Tribes till they were utterly destroied and blinded the two Tribes till they were led away captive by the Babylonians so horrid are the consequences of taking away the Gospell of Christ from him and making it the Rod not of his strength but of our owne pride or passion Wee must therefore alwayes remember that the Gospell is Christs owne and that will encourage us to speake it as we ought to speake First with authoritie and boldnesse without silence or connivence at the sinnes of men Though in our private and personall relations we are to shew all modestie humilitie and lowlinesse of carriage towards all men yet in our masters businesses wee must not respect the persons nor bee daunted at the faces of men Paul a prisoner was not affraid to preach of righteousnesse and temperance and judgement to come before a corrupt and lascivious Prince though it made him tremble Secondly with wisedome as a Scribe instructed to the kingdome of heaven This was Saint Pauls care to worke as a wise master-builder When Christs enemies watched him to picke something out of his mouth wherby they might accuse him wee finde so much depth of wisedome in the answeres and behaviours of Christ as utterly disappointed them of their expectations and strooke them with such amazement that they never durst aske him questions more So should wee endeavour to behave our selves in such manner as that our ministerie may not be blamed nor the truth of God exposed to censure or disadvantages for sacred truthes may bee sometimes either so unseasonably or so indigestedly and uncoherently delivered as may rather open than stop the mouthes of gain-sayers and sooner discredit the truth than convert the adversary The Apostle saith that we are to make a difference to save some with compassion others with feare This is to speake a word in due season and as our Saviour did to speake as men are able to heare to presse the Word upon the conscience with such seasonable and sutable enforcements as may bee most likely to convince those judgements and to allure those affections which we have to doe withall It is not knowledge in the generall but the right use thereof and wise application unto particulars which winneth soules The tongue of the wise useth knowledge aright This is that heavenly Craft wherewith the Apostle caught the Corinthians as it were by guile such Art he useth towards the Philosophers of Athens not exasperating men who were heady and confident of their owne rules but seeming rather to make up the defects which themselves in the inscription of their Altar confessed and to reveale that very God unto them whom they worshipped but did not know Therefore wee finde him there honouring their owne learning and out of that disputing for a resurrection and against idolatry to shew that Christian Religion was no way against that learning or rectified reason which they seemed to professe The like art hee used towards king Agrippa first presuming of his knowledge and credit which he gave to the Prophets and then meeting and setting on his inclinable disposition to embrace the Gospell like the wisedome of the servants of Benhadad unto Ahab They did diligently observe whether any thing would come from him and did hastily catch it and they said Thy Brother Benhadad And the like wisedome he used every where hee denied himselfe his owne
faine to confesse and declare to the world in their Councell of Trent Onely herein is the difference The Councell pretended a Reformation in points of Discipline and manners and wee made a Reformation in points of Doctrine too When Christ purged the Temple of buyers and sellers it was the same Temple after which before When a man separateth the wheate from the chaffe it is the same corne which before In these corrupter ages then the pure Professour of Christ who denied not his faith did dwell where Satan had his seate The members of Christ were amongst the Rulers of Antichrist Wee are not another Church newly started up but the same which before from the Apostles times held the common and necessarie grounds of Faith and Salvation which grounds being in latter ages perverted and over-turned by Antichristianisme have beene by valiant Champions for the faith of Christ therefrom vindicated who have onely pruned the Lords Vine and picked out the stones and driven out the bores out of his Vineyard but have not made either one or other new Now this point that Christ ruleth in the midst of his enemies is ground of great confidence in his Church in as much as shee subsisteth not upon any corruptible strength of her owne but upon the Promise decree oath power and love of God things invincible by all the Powers of darkenesse Let the enemies rage never so much they cannot dis-throne Christ nor extinguish his Gospell for it is an everlasting Gospell It is but as the comming forth of a Shepheard against a Lion as the Prophet compareth it For either Christ is unable to protect his people and that is against Saint Iude Hee is able to keepe you from falling and to present you faultlesse c. or else he is unwilling and that is against Saint Paul This is the will of God even your sanctification Or else both his Power and his will are suspended upon expectation of humane concurrence or nullified and disappointed by us and that is against the influence of his Grace which giveth us both the will and the deed against the mercie of his gracious promise I will be mercifull to their unrighteousnesse and their sinnes and their iniquities will I remember no more I will heale their back-slidings I will save them freely against the immutabilitie of his Covenant and holy nature I am God and not man I change not therefore the sonnes of Iacob are not destroied Now besides this generall observation the words afford some particular notes which I will but briefly touch As first That Christs kingdome in this world is Regnum Crucis a Kingdome beset with enemies of all other the most hated and opposed They that submit unto it must resolve to be herein conformable to their head a Crosse was his Throne and Thornes were his Crowne and every one which will live godly must suffer persecution and through many afflictions enter into his Masters Kingdome Quod erat Christus erimus Christiani No marvell if the world hate the Church of Christ for it hated him first In his word he is resisted disobeyed belied and if it were possible silenced and corrupted in his officers mocked and misused in his subjects persecuted and reviled in his Spirit thrust away and grieved in his worship neglected and polluted in all his wayes slandered and blasphemed The Reasons of which strange entertainement of the Kingdome of Christ are first because it is a New Kingdome which enters into the world by way of chalenge and dispossession of former lords and therefore no wonder if it finde opposition Secondly it is an invisible unconspicuous unattended desolate and in appearance ignoble kingdome It began in the forme of a servant in the ignominie of a Crosse none of the Princes of this world none of the learned of this world to countenance or helpe set it up but amongst them all esteemed as an offensive and foolish thing Thirdly it is an universall kingdome Nec parem patitur nec superiorem Christ will admit of no Consorts or Corrivals in his Government Body and Soule and Spirit hee will have wholly and throughout unto himselfe And this amongst others is given for the reason why when Tiberius proposed Christ unto the Romane Senate with the priviledge of his owne suffrage to be worshipped they rejected him because hee would be a God alone If hee would exempt some of the earthly members from his subjection let lust have the eye or folly the eare or violence the hand or covetousnesse the heart or any other evill affection share with him he would be the easier tolerated but when he will be absolute and nothing must remaine in our hearts but as his vassall to be spoiled subdued condemned and crucified by him if the whole state of sinne must bee ruined and the body destroied no wonder if the world cannot away with him Fourthly which is the Summe of all It is a heavenly Kingdome a spirituall Kingdome My Kingdome is not of this world and therefore no marvell if the divels of hell and the lusts of the flesh doe set themselves against him Note secondly even there where Christs Throne and Kingdome is set up hee hath enemies Satan hath his seate even where Christ dwelleth Men may say they are Jewes and are not but of the Synagogue of Satan and men may say they are Christians and are not but of the kingdome of Satan too A Wenne in the body seemeth to belong unto the integrity of the whole when indeed it is an enemie and thiefe therein Ivie about a tree seemeth to embrace it with much affection when indeed it doth but kill and choake it Men may take upon them the profession of Christians and like a Wenne bee skinned over with the same out-side which the true members have may pretend much submission worship and ceremony unto him and yet such is the hellish hypocrisie of the heart the same men may haply inwardly swell and rancle against the power of his truth and Spirit This people saith the Lord draw neere me with their mouth and honour mee with their lips but have removed their heart farre from me and their feare towards mee is taught by the precepts of men In the Apostles times there were false brethren and false teachers who crept in to spie out and betray the libertie of the Church and privily to bring in damnable heresies and to speake lies in hypocrisie that is under the pretext of devotion and carnall humilitie to corrupt the Doctrine of Christ and under a forme of Godlinesse to denie the Power thereof Therefore Antichrist is called a Whore because hee should seduce the Christian world with much expression of love and creepe peaceably and by flatteries into the kingdome of Christ of these severall enemies of Christ under the profession of his name and worship some are Christians but not in purity as heretikes some not in unity as schismatikes some not
they called thee an out-cast saying This is Sion whom no man seeketh after Ier. 30.17 see Ier. 50.11 Ezek. 25.3.28.6 9. Obad. v. 3 4. when the high wayes were waste and the way-faring man ceased and the enemie regarded no man Now saith the Lord will I arise now will I be exalted c. Esay 33.8 11. when the enemies help forward the affliction of Gods people and by their pride and insultation doe double the misery which is upon them then will the Lord returne to them in mercies and be sore displeased with his enemies Zech. 1.15 16. Esay 40.2.47.5 6. Secondly when Gods people are throughly humbled and purged for God useth wicked men but as his staffe or weapon as his fire or fan to correct and purge them Esay 10.12 He intendeth not in his punishments such severity against them as against their enemies if the rod be for the childe the fire is for the rod Esay 27.7 8.9 When men are so smitten that they can returne to him that smiteth them and not revolt more and more for God will not throw any more darts at those who are sunke and dead already when they are stirred in their hearts joyntly to seeke the Lord and to meet him in the way of his judgements and to compassionate and favour the dust of Sion then is the day of his wrath for when Gods time to deliver a people is come he will more abundantly stirre up the hearts of his people to pray for it Psal. 102.16.17 Dan. 9.2.3 whereas when he will destroy a people hee will not suffer his Saints to pray Ier. 14.11 Thirdly when all humane hopes and expectations are gone when a people is so pilled and broken that they have no courage meanes succours or probabilities left then is Gods time to deliver his Church and to punish his enemies The Lord shall judge his people and repent himselfe for his Servants when hee seeth that their power is gone Deut. 32.36 Psal. 68.20 109·31 In one word when the preparations and premises as it were unto Gods glory are best ordered and put together then is the day of his wrath come The Church then need not to bee cast downe with the insultation of her enemies since Christ is the same yesterday and to day and for ever such as hee was ever to his Church such hee is still If hee have delivered his Church from the pride of her enemies heretofore his power truth watchfulnesse compassion is the same still and by faith in them wee may rebuke Satan wee may chide away the weaknesse and feare of our owne hearts wee may rejoice against those that insult over us when they rage most wee may hope their time is short and that it is but the biting of a wounded beast Therefore wee finde the Saints in Scripture arme themselves against present dangers with the consideration of what God hath done for his Church in times past Psal. 68.7 8 74.13-18 Esai 51.9 10 11. Habak 3. And in the confidence of the same truth and power breake forth into a holy scorne of their enemies Mich. 7.8 9 10. Esai 50.8 9. In the sorest extremities wee may fix our faith on God and hee delighteth to bee depended upon alone when all outward helpes and probabilities faile see Esai 41.17 18. Hab. 3.17 18. A million of men came against Asa one of the hugest hoasts of men that were ever read of yet by relying on God they were all delivered into his hand and the reason is added because God hath eyes and strength or as hee is described Revel 5 6. Seven hornes and seven eyes much wisedome and much power to shew himselfe valiant in the behalfe of those that walke uprightly 2 Chron. 16.8 9. Wee should learne likewise to rejoyce and triumph with all thankfulnesse of heart when Christ subdueth the enemies of his Kingdome and giveth deliverance and refreshment to his people When hee maketh his hand knowen to his servants and his fury to his enemies then should all they that love Hierusalem rejoyce Esai 66.10 Thus the Church after they were delivered from the malice of Haman instituted days of joy and feasting Ester 9.22 It is a signe of an evill heart against the peace and prosperity of the Church of Christ to envie or slight or thinke basely of the instruments and wayes whereby Christ delivereth it as wee see in Tobiah and Sanballat Nehem. 4.2 3. Lastly wee should learne wisedome to lay hold on the times and seasons of Gods peace because hee hath a day of wrath too to apprehend the offers and opportunities of grace Christ had been at the Churches dore and had knocked for admittance but neglecting that season hee was gone and much shee suffer'd before shee could finde him againe Cant. 5 2-7 When the Lord speaketh unto us in his ordinances and by the secret motions and perswasions of his holy Spirit wee should not deferre nor put him off as Felix did Paul to some other time but pursue the occasion and set our selves to doe every duty in Gods time There is a time for every worke and it is beautifull onely in its time and therefore fit it is that wee should observe wisely the signes and nature of the times Matth. 16.2 And accordingly proportion our devotions for the Church and our selves It is the worst losse of time to let slip the seasons of grace and spirituall wisedome till it may bee Gods time of mercy is passed over If thou hadst knowen in this thy day the thing that concerne thy Peace But now thy day is over and my day of wrath is come they are now hidden from thine eyes Hee shall judge amongst the Heathen By heathen we are to understand the same with Enemies vers 1. and People Esai 63.6 Meaning all the armies and swarmes of Christs enemies either spirituall or secular The word Gentiles was a word of great contempt and detestation amongst God people as the word Iew is now amongst us a proverbiall word to cast reproach and shame upon men Therefore the Apostle saith of the Ephesians that in times passed they had been Gentiles in the flesh Eph. 2.11 As if by being Christians they had ceased to bee Gentiles or rather that word had ceased to bee a terme of reproach So that Gentile was a word of scorne as Samaritan Ioh. 8.48 or Canaanite Ezek. 16.3 or Publican Matth. 18.17 Luk. 18.11 And therefore wee finde those two still joyned together Publicans and sinners and so the Apostle joyneth these two words Gentiles and sinners Gal. 2.15 So then the word Heathen is added by David to the enemies of Christ to render them the more odious and to expresse their more abject and hatefull condition and therefore when God would cast notable reproach upon his people hee calleth them Sodomites and Gentiles Esai 1.10 Ezek. 2.3 So then the meaning is his most abject and hatefull enemies that are unto him as Iewes and Samaritans hee shall judge that is hee shall