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A85667 An exposition continued upon the sixt, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth chapters of the prophet Ezekiel, with useful observations thereupon. Delivered in severall lectures in London, By William Greenhill. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1649 (1649) Wing G1854; Thomason E577_1; ESTC R206361 436,404 591

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matter ibid. delightsom 190. sinning under mercies manifested aggravates 191. sins cause God to deale in fury 198. how to prevent it ibid. sin makes God and the creature our enemy 211. drives away God and lets in wrath ibid. sins of others to be mourned for 238 239. sins may provoke to utter destruction 249. what those sins are 249 250. open sins involve our selves and others 250 251. sin and judgement 270. sins of Gods people fetch the greatest severity 273. God deales equally with sinners 274. He punishes them in places and by persons they thinke not of 352. God from sin takes occasion to shew mercy 484. sinners of little account with God 487. whether doe sinnes hasten judgement 504 505. sins make way for judgement 522 Snare what it signifies 484 Sorrow expressions of it by smiting st●mping saying alas 28. its the fruit of sin 69. godly sorrow how knowne 69 70 Soule put for appetite 77 Spirit new supplies needfull 140. its called the hand of the Lord and why 145. the agent by which Christ works 147. makes knowne the sins of men 149. helps in studying c. ibid. directs inferiour motions 308. 320. is God 336. the Spirit of the Lord fell upon me what it notes 344 Spirit variously taken 424. new Spirit how meant 425. new qualities included in this new Spirit 425 to 427. new qualities why called a new Spirit 427 428. the promise of a new Spirit when fulfilled 428. whether wrought at once 429. this new Spirit is a great mercy ibid. how it acts where it is 430. to 433. acts in a new manner and how that is 433 434. new Spirit the worke of God 435 436. whether mans spirit can close with objects propounded to it 436. whether it is in mans power to work this Spirit in himselfe 437. Spirit shews things at a distance 471. men acted by the Spirit are fit to speake to the people 472 Standi●g what it impo●ts 216. standing in the gap what it meaneth 520 521. standing in battell what 522 Statutes of God the Saints way 457 Streights in them men will seeke to those they hated 122 Strength humane not to be confided in 71 Sudden judgements severe 360. Superstition men love to have of their own in worship 9. that is so steales away the heart 20. provokes God 150. Crosses set in high wayes to promote superstition 149. men ingaged therein grow worse 164. superstition stirres up God to fury 198. is pleasing 466 Sympathize the godly sympatize with the miseries of others 259 260. how to be so affected 260 T Tammuz 168 169 Temple was Gods and the Jewes ornament 86. the beauty of it 87. true majesty and excellency of it 88. the mystery of the gates and doores about it 146. the building of Temples East and West whence it sprung 187. Christ the Lord of the Temple 291. there his glory appeares ibid. 293 when Christ leaves the Temple nothing but judgement remaines 293 Things how taken in the Hebrew 472 Thoughts of men are different from Gods 497 Threat's a time of fulfilling them 505 length of time does not null them 497 Throne what it is 280. the various acceptions ibid. the Lord hath kingly power and a double throne 280. his throne the chief of thrones 281. his throne glorious himself much more ibid. Time God looks not upon it at we doe 34. in corrupt times great persons prophane 175. even in reforming times ibid. in the worst times God hath some faithfull 230. God hath times to punish 524 525. whom God finds then in sinne they cannot stand 525 526 Traditions of Fathers no warrant for worship 176 Trouble Christ specially cares for his in times of trouble 217 Trumpets of what use 63 Truth it s not confind to any sort of men 124. time noted when truths are given out 137. Truth loves the light 167 V Valour wherein true valour lyes 72 Violence 104. a spreading sin 191. a crying sinne 192. a leprosie ibid. a wasting sinne 490 Vision a vision in Babylon not so cleere as a vision in Sion 279. God hath his time to make knowne visions 314. the vision of the Prophet reall 471. visions soone expire ibid. every vision faileth that Proverb opened 493. events discover visions 503 Unbelief the cause of mans going from God 167 Unitie spoken of at large from 399. to 424. vid. oneness Unthankfulnes causeth upbraidings 93 W Waite those waite on God loose not by it 140 Walking in Gods statutes what it imports 453 Wayes what 35. Wayes and works of all knowne unto God 132 Weake to be lookt upon by the strong 376 Wealth the fuell of sinne 77 78. it wounds in the day of wrath 79 Wheels what meant by them 283. 467. going in between the wheels what it notes 283 284. standing beside the wheels what 295. wheels what they note 303. des●ribed explained 303 304. wheels ●like in all places 306. a coherence in their motions 307 constant in their motions 308 309. move not of themselves 320. nor disorderly or unseasonably ibid. Wicked men wise to promote superstition 149. consent in wickedness● 165. in streights will cry to God 199. devise mischief 337. consider not the evill day 339. 373. 476. oppose God 340. scoffe at the Word 340 341. Saints may rejoyce at the ruine of the wicked and in what respects 359. wicked men very secure 493. entertaine not threatnings 494. mock at truths 507 Word of God not in vaine 26. its ill to sli●ht is in prosperitie 122. priz'd in time of affliction 137. hath divers effects 362 363. the Word the r●ale to walke by 457. the Word of the Lord shall stand 505 506 Words sinfull words of a spreading nature 495. God takes notion of ungodly speeches ibid. words of the wicked contrary to Gods 497 Work Gods work done by secret means 300 301. those doe it should hide their hands 302. man not able to judge of Gods works 306. works prove grace 456. God will try all mens works 550 World worldly things little to be valued 58. all things therein have dependencie 305. a methodicall disposing of things in the world ibid. whether all things alike in all parts of the world 305. in what sense alike 305 306 Worship nothing in it pleases God but his own 10. that is of mans in worship steales away the heart 20. God must appoint it 90. unspirituall pleases not 111. worshipping of God is gainfull 140. the minde must be intent to discerne aright of worship 155. superstitious worship affects the eye ibid. th●se have a call to it may safely examine worship ibid. where pure worship is there is Gods presence 157. corruptions in worship cause the Lord to depart 158. 469. mischief of it ibid. men may have formes and God gone ibid. false worship a worke of darknesse 166. men leaving true worship f●ll upon any 171. false worship and filthinesse usually goe together 171 172. Jewes worshipt towards the West and why 147. Sun-worship ibid. whence it sprung 174. 176. Eastern
rending of the heart Joel 2.13 Plowing up of the fallow ground Jer. 4.3 Travelling in child birth Jsa 26.17 Pricking of the heart Acts 2.37 All which evidences that repentance is an heart businesse it workes strongly upon that and brings it up to loathing when the heart is truely penitent what it before loved and delighted in it loaths and abhorres the voyce of Ephraim repenting is Hos 14.8 What have I to doe any more with Idols I now loath them will not lift up mine eyes or hands unto them nor speake a word for them nor thinke of them Jer. 31.19 After that I was turned I repented I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed yea even confounded because I did bear the reproach of my youth I had sin'd in my former dayes with Idols false worship satisfied my lusts but now I am confounded with the shame and reproach of them Now I loath them and cannot indure them Isa 31.7 when they are turned unto God In that day shall every man cast away his Idols of Silver and Gold they cannot stand before Repentance no more then Dagon before the Arke After God had scourged and purged them with the Babilonish Captivity it s observed that they could never abide Idols more nor would suffer any to come up unto the Temple When Caius Galigula sent his Statue to Pretronius President of Judea to honour it with a place in the Temple the Jewes professed they would dye rather then behold that abomination in the Temple if that came there they would not come there if that liv'd they would dye This is the nature of true Repentance that what ever Errours false Worship wayes lusts things it delighted in before now it loaths as dung as filth and abhorres as Pestilentiall and deadly The Jewes repenting cursed their Idols and their owne madnesse in running a whoring after them Here be three evidences of the reality and truth of this Repentance First Their loathing themselves it s a hard thing to bring a man to selfe-loathing every man loves exalts himselfe and labours to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 somebody in the World Diotrephes affects preheminence but true Repentance will make the greatest loath himselfe Repentance sees what black defiled creatures they are Ezek. 20.43 You shall remember your wayes wherein you have beene defiled and shall loath your selves in your owne sight A repentant eye sees matter enough of selfe-abhorrence Job 7.5 When Job saw his sores filth and wormes in his flesh he loathed himselfe but not so much as when he saw the sinnes sores 42.6 and lusts of his heart then he abhorred himselfe and all had excellency in it before he though fit to be buryed under dust and ashes Secondly For the evils which they have committed not for the evils which their sinnes had deserved or God had inflicted did they loath themselves but for the evill of their owne wayes so that they did mourn for sin as sin not for the evill of sinne but for the evill in sin which is the contrariety of it to Gods will the offence of Divine Majesty its burdening God himselfe breach of union between him and their soules its violation of his Law it pollutes the soule hardens the heart turnes the Gospell of Christ all mercies and meanes of Grace to our hurt and is a foundation of eternall Ruine It was the evill of sin and not of punishment that David prayed against 2 Sam. 24.10 17. Psal 51.2 Thirdly It s impartiall and universall They shall loath themselves for the evils which they have committed in all their abominations It s not one or two but all comes into question when the heart is in a penitent way Ezek. 20.43 Then shall you remember your wayes and all your doings wherein you have beene defiled and yee shall loath your selves in your owne sight for all your evils that you have committed Sinnes great or small in any place with any person or thing but especially of worship come into fall under censure and are abhorr'd Manasseh when he was humbled in Babylon he loathed his practises in Zyon and took away all the Altars that he had built in the Mount of the House of the Lord and in Jerusalem and cast them out of the City 2 Chron. 33.15 Let us look back see the evill of our wayes especially in worship and loath our selves for the evill of them all that we have defiled Gods Name Ordinances our selves with Altars Crucifixes Cringings conformity to the Impositions Innovations of men Subscriptions Oaths of Canonicall obedience supporting of a false and Tyrannicall Government in the Church of Christ have been contented under a dull formall way of worship c. Ezek. 43.11 If they be ashamed of all that they have done shew them the forme of the House and the fashion thereof Shame for false corrupt worship opens a door for sight of and entrance in of true and pure worship 1. That before men are afflicted and humbled for their sin Obser Ver. 10. they refuse and sleight the Word of God let his Prophets come and Preach powerfully and terribly unto them lay Gods Judgements before them they mind it not at least tremble not but they shall know they have refused my word and messengers the time is comming they shall be in Babylon be sorely afflicted and then they shall know as for the precedent time their hearts were stout against God his truth his servants and they were secure Who hath beleeved our report saith Isaiah 53. chap. 1.2 and Chap. 44.4 I have laboured in vain I have spent my strength for naught his hearers sleighted his Prophesies So in Zech. 7.11 12. They refused to hearken and puld away the shoulder and stopped their eares that they should not heare Yea they made their hearts as an Adamant stone least they should heare the Law and the words which the Lord of Hosts hath sent in his spirit by the former Prophets 2. That a heart under affliction broken for sinne and loathing its selfe for its owne sinnes will give due honour to the Word of God submit to it acknowledge him and his Prophets Then shall they know c. That is when they have smarted in the Captivity been cut to the heart for their sinnes loathed themselves for all the evils of them even then shall they know Affliction opens mens eyes blows beget braines and men come to see their Ingratitude towards God their abuse neglect contempt of meanes what great losse they have made thereby and so mourne for each prize the Word tremble at threatnings close with promises subject to commands honour the Lord and his Prophets The truest Penitent doth most abhorre himselfe his lusts his errours his owne wayes and the more abhorrencie of these the more complacency in Truth and the God of truth such an one understands the dealings of God acknowledges the Majesty of God in his Ordinances the equity of God in his Judgements the mercies of God in his deliverances
the Temple into consideration and the calamity befell them in regard thereof with the cause of it The Temple here is described First by it's appellation It 's his Ornament Secondly by it's qualification It s Beautifull Thirdly From it's end set for Majesty or from the manner set in Majesty Fourthly The Author Hee set it The calamities befell it and them are First Rejection or separation of it I have set it farre from them Secondly Tradition of it into hands of others And they are set out to be First Strangers Secondly The wicked of the Earth v. 21. Thirdly Depredation It shall be for a prey and for a spoyle Ibid. Fourthly Prophanation They shall pollute it Ibid. Fifthly Aversion and that of the face of God v. 22. My face will I turne also from them Sixthly Contamination of the Sanctum Sanctorum They shall pollute my secret place The cause of all these evils is set downe in the 20 Verse They made the Images of their abominations and of their detestable things therein As for the beauty of his Ornament he set it in Majestie Some Expositors interpret these words not of the Temple but of their Silver Gold Jewels and such like precious things with which they were deckt as a Bride for which they should have been dutifull and thankfull but they abused all to Idolatry pride and service of their lusts and so provoked God to take all from them Others expound them onely of the Temple Jonathas Rabbi David de Templo interpretantur Maldonat to whose judgment I incline and that upon these considerations First It s sayd Hee set it which takes off the conection of this Verse with the former had it been meant of their Gold Silver c. it should have run Plurally They cast their Silver in the streets they shall not be satisfied and so they set the beauty of their Ornament for pride whereas its Hee set not the people but God And if it be urged He set their Gold Silver the beauty and Ornament of his people in Majesty or for Excellency it suits not with what follows They made Images of their abominations and detestable things therein it should have been thereof 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in e● Montan Piscat Jun. Polan if that had been the sense but it s therein agreeable with the Originall and so choise Expositors render it Secondly Those words in the 21 Verse referre more properly to the Temple then to their Silver and Gold holy things are subject to pollution more then common Some to helpe this Interpret the word for pollute to kill and make the sense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They shall kill their Captives and so referre it to the men not their Wealth or if to Wealth then they render it vilifie they shall vilifie their Silver and Gold they have made their beauty and ornament but I see no cause why the sense of the word should be changed in this verse When it s taken for polluting in the next verse they shall pollute my secret place 4. In this 22. verse he speaks of the secret place the holy of holies which was in the Temple and hence to mee is an argument that he spake of the Temple The beauty of his Ornament These words are a metaphoricall description of the Temple whereby it s likened to a beautiful garment which becomes the party wears it or to any precious thing that adorns the body Exod. 33.4 No man did put on him his ornament That is his chiefe apparell and other precious things which might adorn the body Ornaments were choise things 2 Sam. 1.24 Judges 8.26 The Hebrew word signifies choise robes silken vailes costly chaines crownes c. What ever excellency may be fastned to the body or garments of a man such an ornament was the Temple to God and to the Jews First to God It was his dwelling place Psalm 74.7 And no mean one Isa 60.7 Hee cals it the house of his glory So great was the glory of it that in comparison thereof the second Temple was nothing Hag. 2.3 There multitudes of his people met prayed whence it 's named an house of prayer Isa 56.7 There they sang praises Psal 150.1 and God there inhabited the praises of Israel Psal 22.3 There they sacrificed 2 Chr. 11.16 And it was an house of sacrifice thither did Kings bring presents unto the Lord Ps 68.29 Kings did honor the place garnished the Temple with great gifts Selucus King of Asia of his own revenues bare all the costs belonging to the servic● of the sacrifice 2 Mach. 3.2 3. By his worship there he was distinguished and made knowne from all false Gods there the Saints desired to dwell to behold the Lords beauty Psal 27.4 And see his power Psal 63.2 There every one speaks of his glory Psal 29.9 The earth is full of the glory of God but the Temple is fuller there is the chiefe brightest glory glory that affects every eye heart and tongue all these are ornaments and honour to God 2. To the Jewes If we should look at the structure only it was one of the stateliest and most magnificent buildings that ever the world had there were 150000. workmen employed about it 1 Kings 5.15 16. And 7. yeares in building Chap. 6.37 38. The Apostles wondred at the goodly stones and glory of the second Temple Luke 21.5 which were inconsiderable to those of the first Hag. 2.3 In this respect it was a great ornament to Jerusalem and the Jewish Nation But it was the house of the great God Ezra 5.8 The house called by his name Jer. 7.11 Th●re he made his people joyfull and accepted their offerings Isa 56.7 There they had fatnesse Psal 36.8 Loving-kindnesse Psal 48.9 Help in their distresses Psal 20.2 In Ezek. 24 21.25 you have these expressions 1. It 's cal'd their strength 2. The excellency of their strength 3. The desire of their eyes 4. That which their soules pittyed least it should be destroyed 5. Their glory 6. The joy of their glory all which shew the Temple was an ornament to them The beauty of his Ornament The Temple was beautifull Isa 64.11 Our holy and beautifull house is burnt up with fire There was a material beauty in it as you may read 1 Kings 6. and 2 Chron. 3.6.8 He garnished the house with precious stones for beauty and the gold was gold of Parvaim all was overlaid with fine gold which made it glorious there was a spiritual beauty in it Psal 96.6 Strength and beauty are in his Sanctuary There was the beauty of holinesse Psal 29.2 There was beautiful order beautiful worship beautiful ordinances and a most beauteous God Psal 27.4 Whose glorious presence and lovely truths drew the eyes and hearts of the godly thither Isa 2.3 Come let us goe up to the mountain of the Lord and he will teach us of his wayes Hence Sion the Mount where the Temple was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is
in Heaven and in their owne hearts These were justified for going out of Sion into Babylon surely then God will not condemne men for comming out of Babylon into Sion When we left Rome and Romish trash we had good warrant for it and so Luther who took the first step thence For indulgencies troubled Luther ●nd when he Preached against them the Romish Priests d d alto fastu disdaine his Preaching he heard the way of truth blasphemed saw men were forced to new Articles of Faith and himselfe was compelled to submit to S●tanicall Doctrine these were just causes to induce Luther to leave the Romish Babylon And therefore he was unjustly excommunicated by Pope Leo in whose Bull this is made the cause Mort. Grand impost p. 335. because he denyed the Church to have power to create new Articles of faith But the Lord hath justified his separation from them and ours since him th●ir Idolatrous Masse their corrupt Doctrines denying of the Cup to the people c. are just grounds for us and others to leave them for if Rome be a Church We have not left the word of God the Apostles of Christ or Churches they instituted but wee are gone ab hypocritarum contagione Alsted it s not onely subject to errours as other Churches are but more subject to erring then any other Church Christian and the most Schismaticall of all Christian Churches and the onely Church against which there is a Prophesie in the Gospell of falling from the Faith which three last things that learned man Morton shews and he hath a section its the 7. of his 15. Ch. to shew what may be judged necessary causes of separation from any particular Churches as obstinacy of errour in Teachers affected ignorance obduration of people Idolatry in Gods worship tyranny and persecution against the true and syncere professors to which I conceive this may further be added that if a Church be so defiled that the Members of it cannot partake of the Ordinances without sinne having used all meanes for redresse they may justly depart so it be in a peaceable manner and God will justifie them 8. Where much may be pretended for truth of Churchship there may be no Church Same mak● notes of the true Church 1. Succession There can be no true succession without true Doctrine Stapleton those at Jerusalem in Ezekiels dayes Priests and people succeeded Aron Eli and other Priests and Levites that were faithfull but at this time they were both Priests and people become fearfully Idolatrous Frustra allegatur successio personarum ubi non est successio formae 2. Carnall seed They were of kin to Jeremiah Ezekiel Daniel and other godly ones in Babylon they were Abrahams The Saracens are from Hagar and Abraham though for honour they chose to be cal'd from Sarah yet these are not the true Church Davids seed yet this made them not a true Church therefore Jeremiah cals Judah a harlot Chap. 3.8 3. Multitudes here were a greater multitude at J●rusalem then in Babylon but what were they A multitude of Idolators oppressors scoffers persecutors and such materialls are fitter to make a Tower of Babel then a Temple in Sion Multitudo vesparum non apum 4. They dwell at Jerusalem in Judea the holy City the holy Land but they had defiled both with their abominations and neither of those added any holinesse to them Men at Jerusalem and of Jerusalem were worse then those in Babylon I●s not Jerusal●m or the locall bounds of Judea can make these the true Church 5. Prosperity outward pompe greatnesse glory these men at Jerusalem had what the World and creatures could afford them plenty honour liberty Unity among them Vnity in idolatrie oppression and they in Babylon were poor Captives despised villified scorned ones the glory of the Church is internall not externall a●d what glory had the mourners in Jerusalem 6. The Temple and worship of it had these men at Jerusalem the Captives had no Temple no sacrifices no prosperity no holy Land or City no multitudes no succession yet they were the Church of God and not those for God is wro●h with them of Jerusalem for thinking themselves the Church when as they were none and un-Churching the other when as they were the true Church and are cal'd by God the house of Israel and it further appeares that those of Jerusalem were not the true Church because they were destinated to destruction and as sore judgements as ever people were Chap. 5.9 10. and six slaughter-men designed to slay them utterly Chap. 9. The truth of Churchship is to be fetched from other things It s Caetus fidelium saith our Article such as professe Christ and his Gospell and practice answerably such as are orderly united and observe Divine order in the things of God The word may be truly Preached to those are no Church and the seales administred to those are a false Church as at this time Circumcision and the Passover Ordinances are food and maintenance of the Church rather then marks of it Ephes 4.12 the Apostles and other Officers in the Church were given 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the joyning together of the Saints and putting them as members of the body in their right places Vt omnia apte inter se cohaereant Col. 2.5 6. 9. It s Gods mind and will that those are strong highly favoured of God should look at those under beneath them as Brethren there were many in Babylon questionlesse who were meane in knowledge low in naturals weake in faith tainted with some errours and corruptions of Jerusalem if not of Babylon yet saith God Thy Brethren thy Brethren Where there is any thing of God or Christ though many and great infirmities accompany and cloud the same we should look upon them as Brethren When Christ saw a little morall good in the young man he look'd upon him and lov'd him Mark 10.21 and shall we see any spirituall good in any and not love them and use them as Brethren Looke onely at the good and graces are in one another and not at the weaknesses You can eye a little Gold in much earth and why not a little grace Gal. 6.2 Beare yee one anothers burdens and so fulfill the Law of Christ We must answer for stumbling at the infirmities of the godly and also for neglect of their graces if their corruptions doe alienate their graces should allure it s more honourable and Christian to love them for bearing Christs Image then for being of our judgement VERS 16. Therefore say Thus saith the Lord God although I have cast them farre off among the Heathen and although I have scattered them amongst the Countries yet will I be to them as a little Sanctuary in the Countries where they shall come AT this Verse begins comfort for the Captives they were cast out rejected and insulted over by their Brethren fill'd with sad thoughts of their condition but here Heaven opens and
corruption of nature Ephesians 2.3 Fulfilling the desires of the flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The wills of the flesh Paul acknowledgeth nothing to be in the wills of men naturally but fleshly corruption and whatsoever that put them upon that they did and with delight fulfilling the wills of the flesh but when this new spirit comes it alters the will breakes the principle of stubbornnesse in it purges the pollution and corruption out of it and makes it plyable unto the will of God Ezek. 36.27 I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walke in my Statutes Gods spirit will so alter our spirits so transforme and renew them that they shall be inclined to and carryed on in the obeying of Divine Statutes Before they went on in the wayes of sin with strength constancy and delight now they move with new strength constancy and delight in that which is good this new spirit bowes the will to the Law of righteousnesse so that it obeys and commands well 3. The affections are renewed Ezek. 36.26 A new heart also will I give you That is your affections which are now corrupt and inordinate shall be changed and regulated they shall of sinfull be made holy of earthly be made heavenly of unrighteous become righteous Ephes 5.9 The fruit of the spirit is in all goodnesse righteousnesse and truth When the spirit of Christ comes and makes our spirits new there is truth for the understanding goodnesse for the will and righteousnesse for the affections and Gal. 5.22 23. the fruits of the spirit referre most to the affections as Love joy long-suffering gentlenesse meeknesse temperance Now the old affections and lusts of the flesh are crucified Gal. 5.24 and the new affections are set on things above Col. 3.2 4. The conscience is renewed before it s defiled and acts according to that false or dimme light is in the understanding but when this new spirit comes in the conscience is awakened purged and acts upon Divine grounds Heb. 10.22 Having our hearts sprinkled from an evill conscience the holy Ghost like water which washeth away the filth of the body cleanseth the conscience from the blindnesse impurity and deadnesse which are in it so that it being indued with new qualities becomes a pure 2 Tim. 1.3 and good conscience 1 Tim. 1.5 and acts new not in a naturall but sanct●fied manner 5. The memory is renued and made able to reteine good things before like a Streiner it lets the Milke goe and kept the haires and draffe like a Boulter it let the fine flower goe and keepes the bran but having a new quality in it its retentive of good 1 Cor. 15.2 Yee are saved by the Gospell if you keep in mem●●y what I have Preached they had memories in●bled to doe it many a poore soule that is converted when it comes to practice remember truths better then those of able memories These renewing and refining qualities make up the new man and here are cal'd a new spirit Spirit 1. Because they are from the spirit that is the authour of them John 3.6 That which is borne of the spirit is spirit It hath the qualities and graces of the spirit the spirit begets its owne likenesse in the soule as a Father doth in the body 2. In opposition to the flesh these new qualities are contrary to those of corrupt nature which the Scripture calls Flesh and therefore fitly cal'd Spirit Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh 3. For that they make us spirituall they have such operations in us and honours us with such a denomination 1 Cor. 2.15 He that is spirituall judgeth all things 4. Because they are chiefly seated in the most spirituall part of a man the soule and faculties of it are the subject thereof New 1. In opposition to the old corruptions were in man before which the Scripture cals the Old man Ephes 5.22 Put off the old man which is corrupt And Vers 23. Be renewed in the spirit of the mind and put on that new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse Here it s called the new man which is the same with the new spirit in oppoisition to the old man 2 For that it comes a new way into man had not Adam sinned we should not have needed such Ordinances as now we have to worke this new spirit in us it s not by generation but regeneration it s not from nature art afflictions Ordinances but the spirit in Ordinances 3. Because it s wrought anew in us no man hath ought of this new spirit in him naturally but an old and contrary spirit Rom. 8.7 The wisedome of the flesh is enmity to God This is totally new wrought and therefore is called a Creation Ephes 4.24 4. From the effect it makes us new 2 Cor. 5.17 If any man be in Christ he is a new creature 1 Pet 2.2 These indued with this new spirit are cald new borne babes 5. Because it s ever vigorous fresh and lively not decaying so I finde the words new interpreted by a late Divine and apply'd to the new man and he thinks the new Heavens and the new Earth spoken of Mr. Balls in his Covenant of grace p. 195. Isa 65.17.66.22 Rev. 21.1 Whatsoever is meant by them that the title new seemes to import the admirable excellencie and continuance thereof never to alter or decay but to remaine before the Lord. Quest Whether was this promise fullfilled among the Jewes or in times of the Gospell Answ Many of the Fathers refer the fullfilling of it unto the times of the Gospell but it being primarily made unto the Jewes we have just cause to thinke that it was in part fullfilled amongst them after their returne from Babylon so gracious a promise beeing given out by God made knowne by Ezekiel it s not likely they would neglect having bin so soarly afflicted in Babylon but would improve and presse the Lord for the accompl●shment of it and without dispute many of them had this new spirit for after they came againe to Jerusalem they had such a hatred of Idols and love to truth that they stood out to death for the law and religion of their God as it recorded in the Maccabee Quest 2. Whither is this new Spirit given or wrought all at once Answ This new spirit consists in those new qualities which are put into man and the severall qualities are wrought in at once but they are wrought up by degrees A man hath all graces at once in semine radice habitu and this grace is call'd The Law in the minde Rom. 7.22 the Law written in the heart Hebr. 8.10 The Divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 Christ formed in us Gal. 4.19 The inward man Rom. 7.23 Seed 1 Joh. 3 9. Now this seed this inward man this Christ this Divine nature are growing this law receives addition 2 Pet. 3.18 Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our